Damayanti
![''Hamsa Damayanti'' by [[Raja Ravi Varma]] depicting Damayanti conversing with the [[hamsa (bird)|divine swan]] about Nala.](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/00/Ravi_Varma-Princess_Damayanthi_talking_with_Royal_Swan_about_Nala.jpg)
Damayanti is the princess of ancient Vidarbha Kingdom and the daughter of King Bhima. She falls in love with Nala after hearing about his virtues from a divine swan. She chooses him in a swayamvara (self-choice ceremony), even rejecting gods who had disguised themselves as Nala. Their happiness is short-lived when Nala, influenced by the malicious deity Kali, loses his kingdom in a game of dice and is forced into exile. Overcome with despair and shame, he abandons Damayanti in the forest. Undeterred, she endures great hardships and eventually reaches her father’s court. Determined to find Nala, she devises a plan to draw him out by organizing a second swayamvara. The plan succeeds, and they are joyfully reunited. Nala then regains his kingdom, and the two are restored as the rightful king and queen of Nishadha.
Damayanti has been adapted in various Hindu texts by numerous authors across multiple Indian languages. Along with Nala, she is the central figure in ''Naishadhiya Charita'', a 12th-century Sanskrit epic written by Sriharsha. This work is one of the five ''mahakavyas'' (great epic poems) in the canon of Sanskrit literature. Provided by Wikipedia
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