Chakravyuha -The Most Deadliest and Brilliant Military Formation
Chakra means “spinning wheel” and “vyuha” means formation. Hence, chakravyuha means the puzzled arrangement of soldiers that keeps moving in the form of a spinning wheel. Rotation of soldiers is very similar to helix of a screw commonly seen in watches.
In order to make Chakravyuha, the Commander has to identify soldiers who will form this formation. The number of soldiers to be deployed and the size of the Chakravyuha is calculated as per the resistance estimated. Once drawn, the foremost soldiers come on either side of the component to be captured, engage briefly and then move ahead.
The formation was used in the battle of Kurukshetra by Dronacharya, who became commander-in-chief of the Kaurava army after the fall of Chakra means “spinning wheel” and “vyuha” means formation. Hence, chakravyuha means the puzzled arrangement of soldiers that keeps moving in the form of a spinning wheel.
The ‘Chakravyuh’ in Mahabharat was an excellent formation made up of a large number of soldiers standing together in a spiral shape, which became harder to conquer as a person reached to the inner layers.
By the time the last bit of soldiers arrive, the component, oblivious of the design is captured within six or seven tiers of soldier formation surrounding him from all sides. The last soldiers of the formation give the signal of completing the Chakravyuha.
In the Mahabharata
it is mentioned that Abhimanyu learnt about the Chakravyūha while in his
mother's womb but he was not able to hear how to escape the formation.
Chakravyuha
-The Most Deadliest and Brilliant Military Formation
The
Chakravyuha (Wheel or Discuss Formation)
Chakra
means “spinning wheel” and “vyuha” means formation. Hence, chakravyuha means
the puzzled arrangement of soldiers that keeps moving in the form of a spinning
wheel. Rotation of soldiers is very similar to helix of a screw commonly seen
in watches. The Chakravyuha, is a multi-tier defensive formation that looks
like a disc (chakra, चक्र) when viewed from
above.The warriors at each interleaving position would be in an increasingly
tough position to fight. The formation was used in the battle of Kurukshetra by
Dronacharya, who became commander-in-chief of the Kaurava army after the fall
of Bhishma Pitamaha.
As per this military strategy, a specific stationary object or a moving object or person can be captured and surrounded and rendered fully secured during time of military conflict. The pattern is of two soldiers on both sides with other soldiers following them at a distance of three hands, drawing up seven circles and culminating in the end which is the place where the captured person or object is to be kept. In order to make Chakravyuha, the Commander has to identify soldiers who will form this formation. The number of soldiers to be deployed and the size of the Chakravyuha is calculated as per the resistance estimated. Once drawn, the foremost soldiers come on either side of the component to be captured, engage briefly and then move ahead. Their place is taken up by the next soldiers on either side, who again engage the component briefly and then move ahead. In this fashion, a number of soldiers keep on passing the component and keep on moving in a circular pattern. By the time the last bit of soldiers arrive, the component, oblivious of the design is captured within six or seven tiers of soldier formation surrounding him from all sides. The last soldiers of the formation give the signal of completing the Chakravyuha. On the signal, every soldier who so far has been facing outwards, turn inwards to face the component. It is only then that the captured component realizes his captivity. The Chakravyuha keeps on moving in a spherical order and can easily lead the component away in captivity as well. Formation of Chakravyuha is never visible from the ground. But anyone from above can easily decipher the movement. It is a hopeless 'no escape' situation for the captive. This strategy was applied during prehistoric days. The component even if heavily guarded, cannot escape the web of a chakravyuha.
Chakravyuh
- the most deadliest and brilliant military formation
Drona
devised the Chakravyuha on the 13th day of the war with a motive to capture
Yudhishtira, the leader of the Pandavas, as a prisoner of war. Such deadly was
the trap of Chakravyuh that only few talented warriors like Krishna, Arjuna,
Drona, Bhisma and Pradyumna knew the way to break in and come out of it.
Chakravyuha was a very deadly defensive formation and also an offensive one in
which whole arrangement of soldiers moves continuously across the battlefield,
simultaneously attacking the invading warriors. It was like a spinning death
machine that consumes everything that came on his path. It rotates along its
axis with each layer rotating in alternate directions at different speeds to
make it a great defensive formation. Chakravyuha not only rotates but also
revolves in its orbit to destroy everything that comes in his path thus making
it a very offensive and destructive force. Chakravyuh formation is similar to a
typhoon that moves across the battlefield to destroy everything that it
encounters. So, the opposition cannot just sit back and needs to quickly devise
a strategy to stop the advancement of Chakravyuh. This is why when Drona formed
the most renowned Chakravyuha during the Kurukshetra war, despite of having
inadequate knowledge, Abhimanyu stepped in to stop the casualty rate of Pandava
army.
Fighting inside the deadly spiral formation is very damaging mentally and the psychological impact of Chakravyuha on the body and mind is very huge. Hence, thousands of soldiers were killed in a relatively short span of time due to the psychological impact of the rotating formation.
Layer
of Chakravyuh formation
Usually,
there were seven layers, level 7 being the innermost layer consisting of
strongest soldiers. Soldiers of the inner level were technically and physically
stronger than the soldiers of the immediate outer level. Infantry formed the
outer layers of Chakravyuh and the inner layers were formed by armored chariots
and elephant cavalry. At the center of Chakravyuh, are the best of warriors
awaiting to kill the invading warrior. Weak and strong warriors are
strategically placed in each of the layers, either to inflict the maximum
damage to the opposing warriors or to defend the attacks from skilled warriors
of the enemy. Each layer has openings that were closely protected by one of the
highly skilled warriors and his personal troops. Role of soldiers in outer
layers was to only prevent entry of warrior into the layer. If the layer is
broken, aim of outer layer soldiers is to prevent further entries and not to
attack the warriors who already breached the layer.
Role of
infantry, cavalry and archers in chakravyuha
Infantry
were tightly massed so as not to allow the incoming chariot to breach the layer
easily. Skilled archers in armored chariots, cavalry and elephants on the inner
layer would easily fire arrows over the heads of infantry on outer layer to kill
the infantry of enemy warriors. This formation ensured the safety of the
infantry from enemy warriors who are trying to breach the Chakravyuh. This
defensive formation would be very difficult to breach as any attack by enemy
warriors in outer layer would draw the concentrated attention and attack of all
centered archers. To break this formation, a well planned strategy needs to be
formulated to keep the archers engaged so that they are busy in defending
themselves instead of attacking the enemy.
What makes
Chakravyuha the most deadly formation
Let us first understand how the
Chakravyuh formation works:-
Soldier
at the blue dot is responsible to start the outward oscillatory motion by
taking a step to the left. This triggers a chain reaction where each soldiers
in the same ring will take a step to the left to take up the position emptied
by the front soldier.
Soldier
in the next ring will take a step in the opposite direction (right) to trigger
the chain reaction where every soldiers moves to the right to fill up the space
emptied by the front soldier. So, there are seven circles of alternate
clockwise and anticlockwise rotating soldiers that moves so fast that the enemy
is completely lost and totally deceived into thinking that the formation is in
few numbers as the actual strength of the inner rings cannot be estimated from
outside the formation.
Music
of drums/conch changes the arrangements of soldiers
Arrangement
and direction of the rings keep changing based on pre-indicated signals and
commands issued by the army-commander though drums/conch/sound. No army
commander is gifted enough to choreograph movement of thousand soldiers. Also
note that the soldiers came from different kingdoms and were not trained under
the marching army-commander. Movement of soldiers is controlled by the drum
beats which informs the soldiers to make the move uniformly in a particular
direction. Killing the drummer would be one way to break the formation into
chaos as stopping the drumbeats would break the rhythm of soldiers. But killing
the drummers would be against the ethics of war and no ethical warrior would
take the move of killing an unarmed drummer. If any soldier in the formation
gets killed, his position is covered up by the sliding motion of the soldiers
following him till the space left by him is completely accommodated. This
technique ensured that the maze existed at all times with soldiers distributed
uniformly.
How
warrior gets trapped in Chakravyuh
See the below diagram to comprehend how the warrior gets trapped on entering the Chakravyuh.
Firstly
it needs to be noted that the formation is not visible from the ground, simply
because each of the layers of the maze are not in fact a single row of
soldiers, but a huge batallion of army which has a depth of tens or hundreds of
soldiers, and the path between between 2 layers is also multifold wide through
which a batallion could pass through. So from ground, it would simply seem to
be a big passage on either side of which the enimies' army are busy fighting. Only
the inner row is facing the warrior or army that passes through the maze. The
outer layer is busy facing the next outer passage.
Now
imagine the situation where a warrior tries to enter the maze through it mouth.
Let's call him "X". s. Soldiers near the mouth are always stronger
and more skilled compared to the remaining regions. So, the warrior is most
likely to get killed if entered through mouth. If "X" is skilled
enough to survive the warriors at the mouth, once he enters, the mouth closes
to prevent backup supply to enter with him. Now if "X" tries to
proceed through the path, he gets trapped in a maze and keeps running in a
circular motion until he ends up at the centre. But in most cases, a warrior
will not survice until he reaches the centre. As he goes deep inside the
formation, "X" keeps getting more and more tired and would end up
fighting stronger and stronger soldiers who are fresh and strong. So at the
point where the skills of "X" combined with his tiredness is overcome
by the skills and strength of a warrior in any of the layers, "X"
falls.
Now
imagine the situation where a warrior doesnot try to enter the maze, but is
just conent with fighting the outermost layer. Let's call him "Y".
The Chakravyuha formation keeps revolving around its axis where each solder is
replaced by the one on his right, and the formation also rotates around a
distance axis (like how earth moves around the sun). With the magnitude of the
formation, "Y" will not be able to realize his relative position with
respect to the whole formation, and at at some point the mouth of the formation
will move around to engulf him, even without his realization. So even if
"Y" is static, he is still engulfed by the formation
Now
imagine a third situation where a warrior or his army knows that this is
Chakravyuha, and he tries to penetrate it by breaking the layers. Firstly it's
not that easy to create a gap to enter, since any gap is closed immediately. If
somehow he is successful in penetrating one layer, he would end up fighting the
stronger soldiers in the innermost layer. If somehow the warrior is successful
in killing many soldiers of a particular layer, then he is forced to go inside
another layer to get attacked by more ferocious and seasoned warriors. As a
result, as he enters deep and deep inside the Chakravyuh, he keeps getting
tired both physically and mentally and finally, gets pounded by the enemy.
So irrespective of what one does, the Chakravyuha is designed to engulf the enemy, and either kill him as he goes through the maze, or spare his life, but weaken him until he's taken captive along the route. This makes it one of the deadliest formations.
Breaking
into the Chakravyuha
To break into the Chakravyuha and reach the centre without being tired needs a warrior to find the shortest possible route to the centre, as well as it demands him to be really superior in skills to the warriors along his path to the centre. ie one needs to break in the layers to reach the centre than to travel along the maze to reach the centre. Most warriors would think of breaching the layer by killing the soldier in front of him. No longer has the warrior successfully killed the soldiers in front of him, his place would be instantly covered up by the soldiers to the right. Hence, before the warrior attempts to breach the layer on his horse or charrior, he finds the space emptied earlier, already occupied by group of immediate soldiers, thereby making a breach impossible. Hence, Most of the inexperienced warriors lost their life while attempting to breach the challenging and deadly Chakravyuha.
A preferable solution would be to kill as many soldiers as possible so as to increase the gap between them so that the gap available to breach is more than what the warriors on the left could easily fill in. Or in a way, it a race between the time taken to fill the gap vs the time needed to break in. Its easier said that done, because the soldiers are already instructed or choreographed to keep moving and their natural movement keeps filling up the gap without additional chaos or panic. It is also important to ensure that one avoids stronger warriors who could tire hime out during his journey to the centre. In the epic, Arjuna mentions that there is a right time and a right place to enter the formation and a right manner to do so. ie the weak links have to be first identified, and one needs to travel along with the formation to keep creating the gap at the intended place. And the success of breaking in depends on how effectively a painc button could be hit on an ememy formation that is designed to absorb the panic mode. So probably the creation of such a panic was achieved not just by creating a gap at one fixed point, but making gaps at few points in the same ring so that the natural filling in process of the soldiers is disturbed. This is what Abhimanyu and Arjuna probably did to break into the formation. Also it needs an archer with very long shooring range and fast shooting speed to be able to create such a bigger gap before the formations moves ahead to fill the gap. If one needs to oversimplify the above concept, a simple way to exlain this is that one could create a bigger gap by killing the soldiers/batallion on either side of the soldier/batallion in front of him, so that there is enough time before the warriors in the region could move to fill the gap.
Why is
it more difficult to exit the Chakravyuha than entering it.
On
question that puzzles many is why Abhimanyu could not exit the Chakravyuha,
despite being able to break into it. It's simply because the challenges
increase when trying to exit the maze. There are multiple reasons for the same.
Firstly while entering only the inner layers are facing the warrior who has
entered the maze. The duty of the outer layers is to prevent further entry of
more soldiers into the maze. But once the target is inside, the commander
instructs the inner layers to face inside. So while exiting one needs to face
warrios very much like entering, but the only catch is that once a layer is
breached to go out, the warrior is faced not only by the soldiers standing
before him on the outer layers, but also by the soldiers behind him in the
inner layers. Secondly. While exiting, one needs to break the innermost layer, which
has the strongest warriors while staying within the shooting range of all of
them, as the diameter of the ring is smaller. Thirdly, the warrior would
already be exhaused in entering the formation and fighting the strongest
warriors in the inner circle. And lastly, the skills needed to create a similar
panic mode in the innermost layer with the best warriors is probably too
immense.
Again
these are mere speculations and reasoning on how the formation could be
breached and what difficulties might have to be tackled. There could indeed be
more challenges that made exiting the maze a bigger challenge. And it probably
needs a bit more research and reasoning.
How
many times Chakravyuh was formed during the Kurukshetra war?
In fact
the Chakravyuh was formed just for a single time in the story of Mahabharata.
Chakravyuh
was formed by master military strategist ‘Dronacharya’ on the 13th day of the
war to capture Yudhishthir. As per the plan devised earlier by Kauravas, Arjuna
was distracted into another battle with Samshaptakas and Abhimanyu along with
four Pandavas were protecting Yudhisthira from the clutches of Kaurava
warriors. Lacking Arjuna and Krishna, the four Pandava brothers were totally
clueless on how to defend against this formation. Seeing the circumstances,
Abhimanyu forced Yudhisthira to let him break the vyuha. Four Pandavas followed
Abhimanyu closely but as soon as Abhimanyu breached the first layer, Jayadratha
was able to shut down the opening to block the entry of the four Pandavas.
Abhimanyu single-handedly fought against all Kaurava warriors with great valour
and bravado but was ultimately killed by the treacherous attack of Kaurava
warriors.
The
Padmavyuha (a subtle variation of the Chakravyuha) was formed the very next day
to protect Jayadratha. Arjuna took the vow of self-immolation if he was
unsuccessful in killing Jayadratha on 14th day of Mahabharata. To protect
Jayadratha from the wrath of Arjuna, a combination of Padmavyuha, Shakatavyuha
(Cart formation) and Soochivyuha (Needle formation) was formed. As per the the
epic the three vyuhas werre 48 Miles long! Even after Arjuna had breached 2 of
those vyuhas, a hundred thousand horsemen, sixty thousand chariots, 21000
foot-soldiers and fourteen thousand elephants stood between Arjuna and
Jayadratha just in the last stretch of Suchivyuha alone! (though the Suchivyuha
extended all the way till the mouth of the outermost Padmavyuha formation).
Despite
such a well-planned formation, Arjuna killed Jayadratha at the end of the day
with his incredible skills, valor and the treacherous help of Krishna.
Why was
not Chakravyuha implemented more often?
This
Vyuha requires a large number of soldiers to be formed. When formed by small
number of soldiers, it can be easily engulfed by the opposition from all sides
and crushed from outside the view. Secondly, this formation was best to be
formed when no one in the enemy has the clue on how to break it. Since Arjuna
and Krishna knew the technique of breaching the Chakravyuh successfully, it was
not implemented more often as it causes a lot of damage to the soldiers within
the formation if Arjuna was able to disturb the rhythm of the formation and
create a panic. Moreover, Arjuna had all the Divyastras to destroy everyone
around him and would have caused massive destruction among the kauravas, had he
entered it. Also, on the kaurava side, Drona, Bhisma and Karna knew the art of
breaching Chakravyuh. Thirdly, Implementation of Chakravyuh requires excellent
planning and execution else it results in extreme chaos and confusion. Human
cost involved in Chakravyuh formation is extremely high as many lives are lost
on both sides of the war in a relatively short period of time.
Summary:
Chakravyuh
can be termed as the most brilliant military tactic of all times. Chakravyuh
resembles the fatal formation that requires skills of the highest order to
survive as many warriors easily forget the ethics of war in such a cruel
formation. This is why Abhimanyu is justifiably remembered as a glorious and
tragic hero who lost his life while breaching the lethal Chakravyuh.
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