Shri Krishna married 16000 wives – Srimad Bhagavatam

According to the Srimad Bhagavatam, Lord Krishna, one of the most revered deities in Hinduism, is said to have married 16,108 women and fathered over 161,000 sons. These stories portray Krishna not only as a divine figure but also as a symbol of fertility and prosperity, emphasizing the importance of marriage and population growth in ancient Hindu society. While modern readers may find these numbers astonishing or even unbelievable, the Puranic texts present them as examples of devotion, divine power, and the ideal of fulfilling dharma through family and progeny.

📖Srimad Bhagavatam 10.69.1-6
Śukadeva Gosvāmī describes Krishna marrying 16,000 women after killing Narakasura, each in a separate palace.

This claim is clearly mythological and impossible in reality. Even assuming one palace per wife, the logistics alone, space, resources, and daily management, are absurd. The text exaggerates Krishna’s power to ridiculous levels. This is ancient storytelling taken literally, not historical fact.

  • Imagine building 16,000 palaces and trying to remember every wife’s name—ancient Hindus clearly had a flair for hyperbole.

📖Srimad Bhagavatam 10.58.56
Krishna marries Bhadrā, a princess, offered to him by her brothers.

This demonstrates how arranged marriages and political alliances were woven into mythology. It promotes the idea that women could be given as “gifts” to men, which is morally questionable by today’s standards.

  • Oh yes, let’s just hand over daughters like packets of sweets and call it divine play. Sure, sounds totally ethical.

📖Rigveda 10:85:45
Indra is prayed to make a woman the mother of ten sons, and the husband the eleventh.

This is a fertility prayer, common in ancient cultures. It shows the obsession with producing multiple offspring, especially male heirs, not spiritual or ethical guidance.

  • Because nothing says devotion like mass-producing sons like factory output.

📖Srimad Bhagavatam 10.61.1
Each of Krishna’s wives gave birth to ten sons, all as glorious as Krishna himself.

This multiplies the already impossible narrative of 16,108 wives to over 161,080 children. The numbers are physically and biologically impossible. These exaggerations were likely intended to glorify Krishna’s supremacy and promote population growth ideals.

  • Yes, let’s ignore human biology and physics and pretend one man fathered over a hundred thousand children—super dad much?

📖Srimad Bhagavatam 1.14.31
All of Krishna’s sons had sons themselves, totaling around 1,610,800 family members.

This is pure mythological inflation. Ancient Hindu texts often glorified deities through impossible feats, turning them into symbols of infinite power, population growth, and social domination.

  • So Krishna wasn’t just a deity—he was an ancient population boom machine. Forget contraception, just divine multiplication!

Overall Analysis

How this is fake:

  1. Biologically impossible: No human can marry 16,108 wives or father 161,080 children.
  2. Logistically absurd: Housing, feeding, and raising such a family defies all reason.
  3. Clearly hyperbolic mythology: Meant to glorify Krishna’s “power” and population-producing capacity.

Hinduism’s ancient texts often glorified population growth. Krishna’s story is an extreme example, marry thousands, have hundreds of thousands of children. Today, Hindus cannot claim the same because biology and society don’t allow it. Yet, exposure to Western media, pornography, and modern ideas leads to moral and sexual confusion. Many blame other religions or cultures for this decline in “family discipline,” ignoring the sheer absurdity of their own mythology.

Example:
Ancient texts: Marry 16,000 women → produce unlimited children.
Modern Hindus: Can’t manage one spouse properly → blame someone else while watching porn.

  1. Reference: Srimad Bhagavatam 10.69.1-6
  2. Reference: Srimad Bhagavatam 10.58.56
  3. Reference: Refrence Rigveda 10:85:45
  4. Reference: Srimad Bhagavatam 10.61.1 
  5. Reference: Srimad-Bhagavatam 1.14.31
  6. Reference: Srimad-Bhagavatam 1.14.31

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