In Vedic literature the Ādityas are presented as children of the goddess Aditi; in later Puranic accounts they are typically listed as the offspring of Aditi and the sage Kaśyapa. Their number varies across sources: Rigvedic passages mention roughly six to eight Ādityas, while Brāhmaṇas and Purāṇas expand and standardize the group to twelve, corresponding to the twelve months. Puranic and later lists commonly include names such as Vivasvan (Vīvasvat/Sūrya), Mitra, Varuṇa, Savitṛ (Savitr), Bhaga, Dhātri (Dhatr), Tvaṣṭṛ (Tvashtr), Aṃśa (Amsha), Puṣan (Puṣan), (sometimes) Indra and Viṣṇu (in certain late enumerations). A devotional bhajan excerpt in the supplied materials also contains a variant line attributing 'the twelve Ādityas' as born from Nārāyaṇa, which is presented in the sources as a devotional/gangetic variant rather than a universal cosmogony.
Vedic hymns describe the Ādityas in luminous, moralized terms: 'bright and pure as streams of water,' free from guile, blameless and perfect — emphasizing solar radiance and moral purity rather than fixed bodily detail. The supplied summaries note that iconographic features are not consistently given for the class in the sources, and that in later tradition many individual Ādityas’ identities are merged into the single sun-deity Sūrya, whose established imagery (in later material outside these extracts) includes a chariot driven by the charioteer Aruṇa and horses, a consolidation noted by the sources as part of the historical development.
The Ādityas function primarily as solar manifestations and cosmic guardians: they are beneficent gods who protect beings, guard the world of spirits, and uphold movables and immovable Dharma. Specific functional roles are attested for named members (for example the Mitra–Varuṇa aspect enforces obligations and exacts debts). They serve a calendrical and astronomical role in that later texts present twelve Ādityas as the twelve monthly aspects of the Sun — 'in each month of the year a different Āditya is said to shine.' The Gayatri mantra is dedicated to Savitṛ, one of the principal Ādityas, illustrating their role as ritual foci. Sources also record theological variation and absorption of many Ādityas into Sūrya over time.
Weaknesses
- otherNone recorded in supplied sources (the Ādityas are presented as beneficent; no hostile weaknesses are given)
Wards
- otherNone recorded in supplied sources (no protective or warding rites against the Ādityas are documented because they are not framed as threats)
Community Record
- [1]Adityas. Wikipedia contributors, 'Adityas', Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia.wiki
- [2]Ādityas (Wikidata). Wikidata entry Q357630, 'Ādityas'.other
- [3]nArAyaNAd dvAdasAdityah - GovindA madhavA Bhajan (archive excerpt). Archive.org, devotional bhajan audio containing the line 'narayanad dvadasadityah' ('from Narayana the twelve Adityas are born').folk
- [4]Applied Interpretation Of 'Rigved' Using Multi Dimensional Approach (archive). Archive.org, 'Applied Interpretation of Rigved Using Multi Dimensional Approach' (interpretive material referencing Vedic lists and development of Ādityas).other