Mulaka, ²ÑÅ«±ô²¹°ì²¹, Mūḷaka, MulÄkÄ, Mula-ka: 35 definitions
Introduction:
Mulaka means something in Buddhism, Pali, Hinduism, Sanskrit, Jainism, Prakrit, Marathi, Hindi, biology. If you want to know the exact meaning, history, etymology or English translation of this term then check out the descriptions on this page. Add your comment or reference to a book if you want to contribute to this summary article.
The Sanskrit term Mūḷaka can be transliterated into English as Mulaka or Muliaka, using the IAST transliteration scheme (?).
Alternative spellings of this word include Mulak.
Images (photo gallery)
In Hinduism
Purana and Itihasa (epic history)
Source: Wisdom Library: Bhagavata Purana²ÑÅ«±ô²¹°ì²¹ (मूलक):—Another name for BÄlika (son of AÅ›maka, who was a son of SaudÄsa). He was known as ²ÑÅ«±ô²¹°ì²¹ because when ParaÅ›urÄma vanquished all the ká¹£atriyas, he became the progenitor of more ká¹£atriyas. (see BhÄgavata PurÄṇa 9.9.39-40)
: archive.org: Puranic Encyclopedia²ÑÅ«±ô²¹°ì²¹ (मूलक).—A son of Kumbhakarṇa. ²ÑÅ«±ô²¹°ì²¹ was born on MÅ«la day and Kumbhakarṇa deeming that day and the constellation inauspicious threw the baby away. The abandoned child was brought up by honey-bees giving the babe honey. When ²ÑÅ«±ô²¹°ì²¹ grew up he became a mighty demon who always tormented people. He was killed by SÄ«tÄ with the help of ÅšrÄ« RÄma. (Ä€nanda RÄmÄyaṇa, RÄjyakÄṇá¸a).
: archive.org: Shiva Purana - English Translation²ÑÅ«±ô²¹°ì²¹ (मूलक) refers to the “footâ€� or “rootâ€� (of a tree), according to the ÅšivapurÄṇa 2.4.5 (“KÄrttikeya is crownedâ€�).—Accordingly, after the Ká¹›tt¾±°ìÄås spoke to KÄrttikeya: “[...] KumÄra reached the foot of a Nyagrodha tree (³¾Å«±ô²¹°ì²¹) [²Ô²â²¹²µ°ù´Ç»å³óÄå'°ìá¹£a²â²¹³¾Å«±ô²¹°ì±ð] at KailÄsa in the fast chariot along with Nandin seated to his right. There KumÄra, the son of Åšiva, an expert in various divine sports, waited along with the Ká¹›tt¾±°ìÄås and the chief of PÄrá¹£adas, in great delight. Then all the gods, sages, Siddhas, CÄraṇas, Viṣṇu and BrahmÄ announced his arrival. [...]â€�.
: Sacred Texts: The Vishnu PuranaThe son of AÅ›maka was ²ÑÅ«±ô²¹°ì²¹, who, when the warrior tribe was extirpated upon earth, was surrounded and concealed by a number of females; whence he was denominated NÄrÄ«kavacha (having women for armour).
His name ²ÑÅ«±ô²¹°ì²¹, or ‘the root,â€� refers also to his being the stem whence the Ká¹£atriya races again proceeded. It may be doubted if the purport of his title NÄrÄ«kavacha is accurately explained by the text.
: Cologne Digital Sanskrit Dictionaries: The Purana Index²ÑÅ«±ô²¹°ì²¹ (मूलक).—A son of AÅ›maka; when the Ká¹£atriyas were rooted out of the earth, he was protected by naked women; hence he was known as NÄrikavaca. The originator of the new Ká¹£atriya race after its ruin by ParaÅ›urÄma; father of DaÅ›aratha.*
- * BhÄgavata-purÄṇa IX. 9. 40-1; BrahmÄṇá¸a-purÄṇa III. 63. 178; Viṣṇu-purÄṇa IV. 4. 73-5; VÄyu-purÄṇa 88. 178-9.

The Purana (पà¥à¤°à¤¾à¤�, purÄṇas) refers to Sanskrit literature preserving ancient India’s vast cultural history, including historical legends, religious ceremonies, various arts and sciences. The eighteen mahapuranas total over 400,000 shlokas (metrical couplets) and date to at least several centuries BCE.
Ayurveda (science of life)
Rasashastra (Alchemy and Herbo-Mineral preparations)
Source: Wisdom Library: Rasa-Å›Ästra²ÑÅ«±ô²¹°ì²¹ (मूलक).—T³ó±ð name of a plant, possibly identified with Raphanus sativus. It is used in various alchemical processess related to mercury (rasa or ±ô¾±á¹…g²¹), according to the RasÄrṇavakalpa (11th-century work dealing with RasaÅ›Ästra).
Dietetics and Culinary Art (such as household cooking)
: Shodhganga: Dietetics and culinary art in ancient and medieval India²ÑÅ«±ô²¹°ì²¹ (मूलक) refers to “radishâ€� according to the 17th century BhojanakutÅ«hala (»å°ù²¹±¹²â²¹²µ³ÜṇÄg³Üṇa-°ì²¹³Ù³ó²¹²Ô²¹), and is commonly found in literature dealing with the topics of dietetics and culinary art, also known as ±ÊÄå°ì²¹Å›Äå²õ³Ù°ù²¹ or ±ÊÄå°ì²¹°ì²¹±ôÄå.—T³ó±ð »å°ù²¹±¹²â²¹²µ³ÜṇÄg³Üṇa section contains the discussions on different food articles and their dietetic effects according to the prominent Ayurvedic treatises. The ²ÑÅ«±ô²¹°ì²¹ foodstuff is mutually incompatible (±¹¾±°ù³Ü»å»å³óÄå³óÄå°ù²¹) with the following: ³¾Äåá¹£a²õÅ«±è²¹ (the soup prepared from black gram). ²ÑÅ«±ô²¹°ì²¹ or “radishâ€� is also mutually incompatible with Ä€nÅ«pamÄmá¹£a (the meat of animals living in marshy lands). ²ÑÅ«±ô²¹°ì²¹ is also mutually incompatible with Paya (milk).
²ÑÅ«±ô²¹°ì²¹ or “radishâ€� is mentioned in a list of potential causes for indigestion.—A complete section in BhojanakutÅ«hala is devoted for the description of agents that cause indigestion [viz., ³¾Å«±ô²¹°ì²¹ (radish)]. These agents consumed on a large scale can cause indigestion for certain people. The remedies [viz., ²õ¾±»å»å³óÄå°ù³Ù³ó²¹°ì²¹ (mustard)] for these types of indigestions are also explained therewith.
Agriculture (Krishi) and Vrikshayurveda (study of Plant life)
: Shodhganga: Drumavichitrikarnam—Plant mutagenesis in ancient India²ÑÅ«±ô²¹°ì²¹ (मूलक) (identified with Raphanus sativus) is subject to certain bio-organical recipes for plant mutagenesis, according to the ³Õá¹›ká¹£ÄÂҳܰù±¹±ð»å²¹ by SÅ«rapÄla (1000 CE): an encyclopedic work dealing with the study of trees and the principles of ancient Indian agriculture.—Accordingly, â€�Raphanus sativus [e.g., ²ÑÅ«±ô²¹°ì²¹], if planted in a pit filled with earth of good quality, burnt in the fire made of bones of cow, hog and dry cow dung, grows instantlyâ€�.
Unclassified Ayurveda definitions
Source: Wisdom Library: Ä€yurveda and botany²ÑÅ«±ô²¹°ì²¹ (मूलक) is a Sanskrit word referring to “radishâ€�, a root vegetable from the Brassicaceae (cabbage) family of flowering plants. It is used throughout Ayurvedic literature such as the Caraka-saṃhitÄ and the SuÅ›ruta-saṃhitÄ. The official botanical name is Raphanus sativus. The word ²ÑÅ«±ô²¹°ì²¹ is dervid from MÅ«la (“root, sourceâ€�) and the literal translation of ²ÑÅ«±ô²¹°ì²¹ roughly means “rooted inâ€� or “springing fromâ€�.

Ä€yurveda (आयà¥à¤°à¥à¤µà¥‡à¤¦, ayurveda) is a branch of Indian science dealing with medicine, herbalism, taxology, anatomy, surgery, alchemy and related topics. Traditional practice of Ä€yurveda in ancient India dates back to at least the first millenium BC. Literature is commonly written in Sanskrit using various poetic metres.
Pancaratra (worship of NÄrÄyaṇa)
: archive.org: Catalogue of Pancaratra Agama Texts²ÑÅ«±ô²¹°ì²¹ (मूलक) refers to a classification of those aligned with the PÄñcarÄtra philosophy, as discussed in chapter 2 of the ³Õ¾±á¹£á¹‡³Ü²õ²¹á¹ƒh¾±³ÙÄå: a Sanskrit text written in 2600 verses which covers typical PÄñcarÄtra topics through a narrative dialogue between AupagÄyana and Siddha Sumati.—Description of the chapter [³Ù²¹²Ô³Ù°ù²¹-±¹²âÄå°ì³ó²âÄå]: This chapter concerns itself with a clarification of certain ideas and terms, viz., [...] how the PÄñcarÄtra believersâ€� extremist groups [±èÄå°ù²¹³¾Äå°ù³Ù³ó¾±°ì²¹²õ] differ among themselves—e.g., VaikhÄnasa, SÄttvata, Åšikhin, EkÄntin, ²ÑÅ«±ô²¹°ì²¹â€”and how each of these so-called groups is to be understood and how each is interrelated to the other four (26-35), [...]

Pancaratra (पाञà¥à¤šà¤°à¤¾à¤¤à¥à¤°, pÄñcarÄtra) represents a tradition of Hinduism where Narayana is revered and worshipped. Closeley related to Vaishnavism, the Pancaratra literature includes various Agamas and tantras incorporating many Vaishnava philosophies.
General definition (in Hinduism)
Source: Wisdom Library: HinduismMūḷaka:—A location mentioned in the PÄrÄyanavagga, being close to Assaka and close to the bank of the ³Ò´Ç»å³óÄå±¹²¹°ù¾± where a brahmin, perfect in the Vedas, once went to live on gleanings and fruit.
: Triveni: JournalIt was two Ikshvaku princes, Asmaka and Mulaka, who founded the two contiguous kingdoms, bearing their names, on the Godavari, corresponding to the Aurangabad and Nizamabad districts of the Hyderabad State today.
In Buddhism
Mahayana (major branch of Buddhism)
: De Gruyter: A Buddhist Ritual Manual on Agriculture²ÑÅ«±ô²¹°ì²¹ (मूलक) refers to “rootsâ€�, according to the ³Õ²¹Âá°ù²¹³Ù³ÜṇḲ¹²õ²¹³¾²¹²â²¹°ì²¹±ô±è²¹°ùÄåÂá²¹, an ancient Buddhist ritual manual on agriculture from the 5th-century (or earlier), containing various instructions for the Sangha to provide agriculture-related services to laypeople including rain-making, weather control and crop protection.—Accordingly, “Then Agastya, the Great Ṛṣi, sitting not too far from the BhagavÄn, having heard this »å³óÄå°ù²¹á¹‡Ä�, arose from his seat and falling at the feet of the BhagavÄn addressed the BhagavÄn, ‘O BhagavÄn, I will make a beak-sealing for pests of all sorts, malevolent and hostile, poison-holders, destroyers of crops, flowers, fruits, leaves and the best roots (gaṇá¸a-³¾Å«±ô²¹°ì²¹); [...]’â€�.

Mahayana (महायान, mahÄyÄna) is a major branch of Buddhism focusing on the path of a Bodhisattva (spiritual aspirants/ enlightened beings). Extant literature is vast and primarely composed in the Sanskrit language. There are many ²õÅ«³Ù°ù²¹²õ of which some of the earliest are the various PrajñÄpÄramitÄ ²õÅ«³Ù°ù²¹²õ.
In Jainism
General definition (in Jainism)
: archive.org: Jaina Yoga²ÑÅ«±ô²¹°ì²¹ (मूलक) in Sanskrit or MÅ«la in Prakrit refers to the plant radish (Raphanus sativus Linn.). This plant is classifed as ²¹²Ô²¹²Ô³Ù²¹-°ìÄå²â²¹, or “plants that are inhabited by an infinite number of living organismsâ€�, and therefore are abhaká¹£ya (forbidden to consume) according to both Nemicandra (in his Pravacana-sÄroddhÄra v245-246) and Hemacandra (in his YogaÅ›Ästra 3.44-46). Those plants which are classified as ²¹²Ô²¹²Ô³Ù²¹-°ìÄå²â²¹s (e.g., ³¾Å«±ô²¹°ì²¹) seem to be chosen because of certain morphological peculiarities such as the possession of bulbs or rhizomes orthe habit of periodically shedding their leaves; and in general theyare characterized by possibilities of vegetative reproduction.

Jainism is an Indian religion of Dharma whose doctrine revolves around harmlessness (ahimsa) towards every living being. The two major branches (Digambara and Svetambara) of Jainism stimulate self-control (or, shramana, ‘self-reliance�) and spiritual development through a path of peace for the soul to progess to the ultimate goal.
Biology (plants and animals)
: Wisdom Library: Local Names of Plants and DrugsMulaka [मूलक] in the Sanskrit language is the name of a plant identified with Raphanus sativus from the Brassicaceae (Mustard) family. For the possible medicinal usage of mulaka, you can check this page for potential sources and references, although be aware that any some or none of the side-effects may not be mentioned here, wether they be harmful or beneficial to health.
: Google Books: CRC World Dictionary (Regional names)Mulaka in India is the name of a plant defined with Raphanus sativus in various botanical sources. This page contains potential references in Ayurveda, modern medicine, and other folk traditions or local practices It has the synonym Raphanus raphanistrum L. var. sativus (L.) Domin (among others).
Example references for further research on medicinal uses or toxicity (see latin names for full list):
· Botanical Magazine (1909)
· Flora von Nieder-Österreich (1892)
· Species Plantarum (1753)
· List of Plants of Formosa (1928)
· Japanese Journal of Breeding (1992)
· Botanical Magazine (1935)
If you are looking for specific details regarding Mulaka, for example diet and recipes, side effects, chemical composition, extract dosage, pregnancy safety, health benefits, have a look at these references.

This sections includes definitions from the five kingdoms of living things: Animals, Plants, Fungi, Protists and Monera. It will include both the official binomial nomenclature (scientific names usually in Latin) as well as regional spellings and variants.
Languages of India and abroad
Pali-English dictionary
: BuddhaSasana: Concise Pali-English Dictionary³¾Å«±ô²¹°ì²¹ : (m.) the reddish. (adj.), (in cpds.), being conditioned by; originating in.
: Sutta: The Pali Text Society's Pali-English Dictionary²ÑÅ«±ô²¹°ì²¹, (adj. nt.) (fr. ³¾Å«±ô²¹) 1. (adj.) (a) (-°) being caused by, having its reason through or from, conditioned by, originating in Vbh. 390 (taṇhİ dhammÄ); Tikp. 233 sq. , 252 sq. , 288 sq. & passim; VbhA. 200 sq. , 207 sq. (saá¹…khÄra°, avijjİ etc. with ref. to the constituents of the Paá¹icca-samuppÄda); PvA. 19.â€�(b) having a certain worth, price, being paid so much, dear Mhvs 27, 23 (a °á¹� kammaá¹� unpaid labour); DhA. I, 398 (nahÄna-cuṇṇa °á¹� catu-paṇṇÄsa-koá¹i dhanaá¹�, as price); II, 154 (pattha-pattha-³¾Å«±ô²¹kÄ bhikkhÄ); III, 296 (kiá¹� ³¾Å«±ô²¹°ì²¹á¹� how dear?).â€�2. (nt.)=³¾Å«±ô²¹, i.e. root, bulb, radish, only in cpd. ³¾Å«±ô²¹°ì²¹-kanda radish (-root) J. IV, 88, 491; DhA. IV, 78.—See also pulaka. (Page 540)
: Sutta: Pali Word Grammar from Pali Myanmar Dictionary³¾Å«±ô²¹°ì²¹ (မူလက) [(na) (á€�)]â€�
°Ú³¾Å«±ô²¹+°ì²¹±Õ
°Úမá¶Ä°á¶Ä�+ံıÕ
[Pali to Burmese]
: Sutta: Tipiá¹aka PÄḷi-Myanmar Dictionary (á€á€á€•á€á€‹á€€-ပါဠá€á€™á€¼á€”်မá€� အဘá€á€“ာနá€�)³¾Å«±ô²¹°ì²¹â€�
(Burmese text): (á�) သစ်မြစ်አအမြစ်አအမြစ်အရင်းዠ(á€á€�) မူလမူလá€á€€á€�-ကြည့်ዠ(á�) မူလရှá€á€žá€±á€¬á‹
(Auto-Translation): (1) Trees, branches, and roots. (Specific) Original source - refer. (2) Existing or original.

Pali is the language of the Tipiá¹aka, which is the sacred canon of TheravÄda Buddhism and contains much of the Buddha’s speech. Closeley related to Sanskrit, both languages are used interchangeably between religions.
Marathi-English dictionary
: DDSA: The Molesworth Marathi and English DictionarymuḷakÄ (मà¥à¤³à¤•à¤�).—m Urging or hurrying. v ±ôÄå±¹²¹. 2 Urgedness. v ±ôÄå²µ²¹. 3 Hurry. v ²õ³Üá¹a.
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³¾Å«±ô²¹°ì²¹ (मूलक).—m S A radish. Ex. sÅmavÄrÄ«á¹� mulakÄlÄ Äṇi tulakÄlÄ sparÅ›a karuá¹� nayÄ“.
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³¾Å«±ô²¹°ì²¹ (मूलक).—Of this constantly recurring form of ³¾Å«±ô²¹ see notice under à¤�.
: DDSA: The Aryabhusan school dictionary, Marathi-EnglishmuḷakÄ (मà¥à¤³à¤•à¤�).â€�m Urging or hurrying. Hurry.
Marathi is an Indo-European language having over 70 million native speakers people in (predominantly) Maharashtra India. Marathi, like many other Indo-Aryan languages, evolved from early forms of Prakrit, which itself is a subset of Sanskrit, one of the most ancient languages of the world.
Sanskrit dictionary
: DDSA: The practical Sanskrit-English dictionary²ÑÅ«±ô²¹°ì²¹ (मूलक).â€�a.
1) (At the end of comp.) Rooted in, springing from, founded or based on; à¤à¥à¤°à¤¾à¤¨à¥à¤¤à¤¿à¤®à¥‚लक (bhrÄnti³¾Å«±ô²¹°ì²¹) 'based on error.'
2) Born under the constellation Mūla; P.IV. 3.28.
-°ì²¹á¸�, -kam 1 A radish.
2) An esculent root.
3) A sort of yam.
-°ì²¹á¸� A kind of poison.
: Cologne Digital Sanskrit Dictionaries: Edgerton Buddhist Hybrid Sanskrit Dictionary²ÑÅ«±ô²¹°ì²¹ (मूलक).â€�m. (Sanskrit nt., only Gr. m.), an edible root, perhaps radish: °kÄ bhaká¹£itavyÄá¸� ¶Ù¾±±¹²âÄå±¹²¹»åÄå²Ô²¹ 511.21.
: Cologne Digital Sanskrit Dictionaries: Shabda-Sagara Sanskrit-English Dictionary²ÑÅ«±ô²¹°ì²¹ (मूलक).—mn.
(-°ì²¹á¸�-kaá¹�) 1. The radish, (Raphanus sativus.) 2. A large sort of yam. m.
(-°ì²¹á¸�) A sort of poison. E. ³¾Å«±ô²¹ a root, kan added.
: Cologne Digital Sanskrit Dictionaries: Benfey Sanskrit-English Dictionary²ÑÅ«±ô²¹°ì²¹ (मूलक).—[³¾Å«±ô²¹ + ka], I. m. A sort of poison. Ii. n. 1. An esculent root, [²ÑÄå²Ô²¹±¹²¹»å³ó²¹°ù³¾²¹Å›Äå²õ³Ù°ù²¹] 8, 341. 2. The radish, Raphanus sativus. 3. A sort of yam.
: Cologne Digital Sanskrit Dictionaries: Cappeller Sanskrit-English Dictionary²ÑÅ«±ô²¹°ì²¹ (मूलक).—[feminine] ±ô¾±°ìÄå = [preceding] (—Â�); [neuter] an esculent root, radish.
: Cologne Digital Sanskrit Dictionaries: Monier-Williams Sanskrit-English Dictionary1) ²ÑÅ«±ô²¹°ì²¹ (मूलक):—[from ³¾Å«±ô] mf(¾±°ìÄå)n. (ifc.) rooted in, springing from (-tva n.), [MahÄbhÄrata; Jaimini [Scholiast or Commentator]] etc.
2) [v.s. ...] born under the constellation MÅ«la, [PÄṇini 4-3, 28]
3) [v.s. ...] mn. a radish, [Manu-smá¹›ti; YÄjñavalkya] etc.
4) [v.s. ...] a sort of yam, [Horace H. Wilson]
5) [v.s. ...] m. a kind of vegetable poison, [cf. Lexicographers, esp. such as amarasiṃha, halÄyudha, hemacandra, etc.]
6) [v.s. ...] Name of a prince (a son of AÅ›maka), [PurÄṇa]
7) [from ³¾Å«±ô] n. a root, [MahÄbhÄrata; PañcarÄtra]
: Cologne Digital Sanskrit Dictionaries: Yates Sanskrit-English Dictionary²ÑÅ«±ô²¹°ì²¹ (मूलक):—[(°ì²¹á¸�-°ì²¹á¹�)] 1. m. n. A radish; a yam; sort of a poison.
: DDSA: Paia-sadda-mahannavo; a comprehensive Prakrit Hindi dictionary (S)²ÑÅ«±ô²¹°ì²¹ (मूलक) in the Sanskrit language is related to the Prakrit words: ²ÑÅ«±ô²¹²µ²¹, ²ÑÅ«±ô²¹²â²¹.
[Sanskrit to German]
Sanskrit, also spelled संसà¥à¤•ृतमà¥� (²õ²¹á¹ƒs°ìá¹›t²¹³¾), is an ancient language of India commonly seen as the grandmother of the Indo-European language family (even English!). Closely allied with Prakrit and Pali, Sanskrit is more exhaustive in both grammar and terms and has the most extensive collection of literature in the world, greatly surpassing its sister-languages Greek and Latin.
Hindi dictionary
: DDSA: A practical Hindi-English dictionary²ÑÅ«±ô²¹°ì²¹ (मूलक) [Also spelled mulak]:—a suffix which means based or depending on, growing or emanating/originating from (as [dhvani³¾Å«±ô²¹°ì²¹, jÄti³¾Å«±ô²¹°ì²¹]).
...
Kannada-English dictionary
: Alar: Kannada-English corpusMuḷaka (ಮà³à²³à²•):—[noun] a kind of eatable made by frying in ghee, the ground segments of jackfruit, soaked rice etc.
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²ÑÅ«±ô²¹°ì²¹ (ಮೂಲಕ):—[noun] = ಮೂಲಂಗಿ [mulamgi].
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²ÑÅ«±ô²¹°ì²¹ (ಮೂಲಕ):—[adverb] through; by means of.
Kannada is a Dravidian language (as opposed to the Indo-European language family) mainly spoken in the southwestern region of India.
Nepali dictionary
: unoes: Nepali-English Dictionary1) MulÄkÄ (मà¥à¤²à¤¾à¤•ा):—n. a species of radish;
2) ²ÑÅ«±ô²¹°ì²¹ (मूलक):—adj. suffix. causing or exhibiting;
3) ²ÑÅ«±ô²¹°ì²¹ (मूलक):—n. 1. a radish; 2. an esculent root;
4) ²ÑÅ«±ô²¹°ì²¹ (मूलक):—n. Chem., Bot. & Math. radical;
Nepali is the primary language of the Nepalese people counting almost 20 million native speakers. The country of Nepal is situated in the Himalaya mountain range to the north of India.
See also (Relevant definitions)
Starts with (+13): Mulaka Sutta, Mulaka-tani, Mulakaccam, Mulakadeva, Mulakadi, Mulakadisuta, Mulakakalira, Mulakakanda, Mulakammatthana, Mulakamula, Mulakamutthi, Mulakanadu, Mulakanaya, Mulakanda, Mulakapallavam, Mulakapana, Mulakaparni, Mulakapoti, Mulakapotika, Mulakapuppha.
Full-text (+284): Mulakamula, Mastakamulaka, Pushkaramulaka, Shitamulaka, Samulaka, Paniyamulaka, Mulakapotika, Vamshamulaka, Pitamulaka, Gandhamulaka, Bahumulaka, Dhautamulaka, Nepalamulaka, Mulakaparni, Mulakapana, Raktamulaka, Mastamulaka, Mulakam, Bhavamulaka, Laghumulaka.
Relevant text
Search found 52 books and stories containing Mulaka, ²ÑÅ«±ô²¹°ì²¹, Mūḷaka, MuḷakÄ, MulakÄ, Muḷaka, MulÄkÄ, Mulaaka, Mula-ka, MÅ«la-ka; (plurals include: Mulakas, ²ÑÅ«±ô²¹°ì²¹s, Mūḷakas, MuḷakÄs, MulakÄs, Muḷakas, MulÄkÄs, Mulaakas, kas). You can also click to the full overview containing English textual excerpts. Below are direct links for the most relevant articles:
Garuda Purana (by Manmatha Nath Dutt)
Chapter CCII - Various other medicinal Recipes (continued) < [Dhanvantari Samhita]
Chapter LV - Description of the Geographical situations of the different countries of the earth < [Agastya Samhita]
Chapter CC - Various other medicinal Recipes (continued) < [Dhanvantari Samhita]
Puranic encyclopaedia (by Vettam Mani)
Atharvaveda and Charaka Samhita (by Laxmi Maji)
Classification of Drugs in the Caraka-SaṃhitÄ < [Chapter 4 - Diseases and Remedial measures (described in Caraka-saṃhitÄ)]
4b. Leprosy (Kuá¹£á¹ha) in the Caraka-saṃhitÄ < [Chapter 5 - Diseases and Remedies in Atharvaveda and Caraka-SaṃhitÄ]
5b. Ká¹›mi (Worms) in the Atharvaveda < [Chapter 5 - Diseases and Remedies in Atharvaveda and Caraka-SaṃhitÄ]
The Indian Buddhist Iconography (by Benoytosh Bhattachacharyya)
A Descriptive Catalogue of the Sanskrit Manuscripts, Madras (by M. Seshagiri Sastri)
Notices of Sanskrit Manuscripts (by Rajendralala Mitra)
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