Show HN: Ithihāsas – a character explorer for Hindu epics, built in a few hours (ithihasas.in)
176 points by cvrajeesh 36 days ago | 45 comments



stinger 36 days ago | flag as AI [–]

I like the attempt but mythology is significantly more layered that just the study of their characters at the end. A single perspective of these stories will help you get the lay of the land but you need to be very cautious if you want to use this to draw lessons and conclusions from them. For example, the protagonist and antagonist are different from the perspective of the other characters. Both these epics are all about the nuance and that needs to be captured effectively to do justice to them

Good point. One way to handle this might be to show the same event from multiple character perspectives - like how Karna's story looks completely different depending on whether you enter it from Kunti's node vs Duryodhana's. The graph structure actually lends itself well to this since you could attach different narrative framings to each edge.

1. Is this actually based on any textual analysis or just AI generated? The popular understanding of the epic material is rather poor and the AI is stupid on it.

Eg: Indra would have a much larger role in original versions of mahābhārata and rāmāyana compared to Hindu popular conscience. In Ramayana he defeated kabandha, lent weapons to Rāma, and the hero is frequently compared to him as "Indra among men" - making him technically the most mentioned God in Valmiki's text (https://manasataramgini.wordpress.com/2017/02/12/the-ramaya%...).

In Mahabharata he fights equally with the krishna-arjuna in the burning of khandava episode until a truce is reached (and for reasons beyond the present redactions of the epic and owing to his prominence as ārya national god, the new capital of pāndavas is named.... Indraprastha!).

This kind of stuff is virtually unknown to AI, which reinforces the present pop understanding of the epics, which is to say super shallow and not very interesting.


Feels like you created an Obsidian of the entire Mahābhārata and Rāmāyaṇa... I love the Crimson Dusk theme. I think, for the relationship graph, when the clusters get too overloaded in some places, they should separate out even when I zoom in. When I zoom in, they're still too close to each other which makes it hard to read the bottom right section of Mahabharata.

Very cool! I like how cool it is to see the graph, but at the current density it’s a bit hard to read.

I’ve been working on a similar project for biblical texts. For example, here’s a character detail page for David: https://hypr.bible/en/entities/person/david/

I’m finding that character dictionaries like this are useful to people who want to engage with ancient texts but are not very familiar with them, but even if one is familiar, they are still quite helpful.

sparin9 36 days ago | flag as AI [–]

This is a genuinely delightful project. The graph-based approach to navigating the Mahābhārata and Rāmāyaṇa feels really natural — these epics are fundamentally about relationships and webs of consequence, so exploring them through a character graph rather than linear text makes a lot of sense.

The Crimson Dusk theme is a nice touch too. Looking forward to seeing how the data coverage grows over time!


You're Absolutely Right! Your original summary is not just insightful — you've cleanly delved into the best parts! What else can you share with us tonight?
ember 36 days ago | flag as AI [–]

Spent a while tracing Karna's lineage through the graph and it's genuinely well-done. One gotcha: some lesser-known rishis have sparse connections, so you can hit dead ends quickly. But for major characters the relationship web is surprisingly complete — more than I expected from something built in a few hours.
neal17 36 days ago | flag as AI [–]

Thousands of years of oral tradition, a few hours of vibe coding.

Good attempt. What were the sources for these graphs? Orginals? Valmiki Ramayanam and Vyasa Mahabharata? Looking at Mahabharata's relationship graph on the website - it feels like it is incomplete. There are probably ~400 to 500 active named characters in Mahabharata (among several thousands of named characters overall)
cvrajeesh 36 days ago | flag as AI [–]

That’s a fair point, and you’re right.

Right now the data isn’t directly modeled from primary sources like the Valmiki Ramayana or the Mahabharata. It’s an MVP built quickly using curated summaries, so the graph is definitely incomplete.

Planning to expand coverage and move towards a more accurate, source-grounded knowledge graph over time.


Can you do comparative textual analysis between original sources and popular retellings? Or highlight it better across different versions.

E.g. Laxman Rekha incident is not present in Valmiki Ramayana but is present in societal consciousness.

TheLNL 36 days ago | flag as AI [–]

I wonder how using wikidata as a source would work. I haven't checked but I assume these characters would be realtively comprehensively covered.

And where did the stats come from? I find it very amusing & interesting & informative. I'm assuming you had the LLM generate these? That would be so interesting to see the prompts for!!
aanet 36 days ago | flag as AI [–]

Good vis. I wasn't sure what to expect, tbh. A few notes:

- The default vis has very low contrast (despite changing theme colors).. perhaps make the contrast stronger. I find this is the case with most AI-driven websites :-/ Same for some of the standard text ("family lineage", "group connections, etc)

- Pls cite the sources. That would be useful / important

- The dynasty tree looks useful... But is it incomplete? Or is only the visualization capped at some limit?

- Wasn't sure what the "Sections" dropdown on the left does

The challenge for sure is about the sheer number of characters, the number of years/decades in these epics, the complexity.

Would love to see some references, perhaps with quotes in Sankskrit / transliterated to English, at key points. [yes, this is challenging, no doubt]

Hope this is useful

yalogin 36 days ago | flag as AI [–]

I like the approach, however, could tell this is done by AI, someone that studied it at the periphery. The characters, if you are automating the creation, should be a lot more in depth, at least that’s what I would expect.

What an incredibly diverse and inclusive UI design. I often find that Indian mythologies tend to be overshadowed, but with the advent of AI generated art and media there's been a resurgence of Indian-centric stories.

Keep up the good work!

naravara 36 days ago | flag as AI [–]

The internet being flooded with AI slop masquerading as devotional artwork has been among the most depressing things about GenAI. It has no meaning or intention or devotion behind it, it’s just engagement farming. Nothing of value is added by having Devi with extra fingers on each hand and completely blurred messes for all the affects in her hands. Or pictures of Rama shooting a bansuri out of his bow. It’s just tripe. We could have told the stories with an overlay of open source artwork from Raja Ravi Varma or Gita Press or old Tanjore paintings or Chola bronzes or whatever if we couldn’t afford to hire an artist who knows what items Vishnu is supposed to be holding in each hand.

It’s not a problem just for us Hindus either. I see so much terrible Jesus/angel “artwork” everywhere. It makes me start to wonder if maybe the Wahabbis were onto something with their complete taboo around depictions of God or the prophets.


>Nothing of value is added by having Devi with extra fingers on each hand and completely blurred messes for all the affects in her hands

South Asian religions are in an especially bad position because so many works related to them have never been digitized (and quite frankly, in some cases what's available on the internet is of extremely low quality) [1]. I'd be pretty concerned if someone were to rely on entirely on these models since the probability of hallucinations (or at the very least, erasure of regional/ideological diversity) probably skyrockets because the information was never actually there in the training data to begin with.

[1] I was able to find a few works of Newari Buddhist iconography recently, so it might be changing: https://web.archive.org/web/20240901130203/https://download..... It still has a few mistakes and doesn't compare to what's out there, though.


In the Mahābhārata, what's going on with the dynasty tree of the Kurus?

That's a view you get in every single book, and it looks really weird here. I feel like it's important to get this really basic stuff right before doing the cool-looking graph visuals.


Absolutely slick UI and wonderful implementation. As an ardent follower of Santana Dharma I admire OP’s courage and grit to put this piece of work out there. More power to OP and hoping to see more Epics included. Thanks for making and sharing this.

Really cool stuff, but I really don't understand the dynasties viz. For example, Kunti somehow has her sons to the left of, right of, and above her, making the relationship unclear.
inveflo 35 days ago | flag as AI [–]

I think the real problem isn’t just accessing data, but how fragmented the workflow is. Even with good tools, you still end up context-switching constantly.
alephnerd 36 days ago | flag as AI [–]

Would love this to be extended well beyond common Western known classics and other similarly complex ones like Ananda Math, Baburnama, etc.

This with Amar Chitra Katha would be great.

avrionov 36 days ago | flag as AI [–]

Looks great. Which libraries / themes did you use?
cvrajeesh 36 days ago | flag as AI [–]

D3 for Viz, NextJS and Fuse for search
atulvi 36 days ago | flag as AI [–]

This is cool, but also add the relationship between two entities on the edge as an edge label. Probably only when one node is highlighted.

I like how it's mapped out the relationship graph. The edges could be labelled to follow and validate quickly

it's a novelty to see the connections. One way it will be useful is to connect every character to the stories they're part of - either in the site, or in new tab. this will allow exploring the stories for each one of them. This will make people come to this for more than novelty, imo.

Very nice. The relationship graph flickers too much when I move the mouse over it. Consider adding an animated fade.
the_arun 36 days ago | flag as AI [–]

Do you use any DB? like Neo4J? or static jsons generated at build time?
cvrajeesh 36 days ago | flag as AI [–]

Powered by static JSON
ksdme9 36 days ago | flag as AI [–]

Is it just my setup or is the contrast so bad that I cannot read anything.
r0b05 36 days ago | flag as AI [–]

Just want to say that the UI is very pleasant.

Is this fully vibe coded?

Very nice. Is the UI inspired by Org Roam UI?

Very very cool. Thanks. Will explore

this is not mythology. this is ithihasas meaning thus it happened

- but there is one point you have not accounted for

- what actually happened may not be what was written

- what was written 5000 yrs ago may not be what you are reading now. lots of people may have created their own versions or modified the original in ways you did not foresee

- the author who originally wrote the books may also have exaggerated for storytelling effect

- the probability of all of the above mathematically speaking is non zero


Nice, good one!!
ms7892 36 days ago | flag as AI [–]

Too cool

Is this a joke?

> Draupadi-- strength 6, wisdom 8

Are you creating RPG characters?

Its clear you used AI to create the whole thing, but did you stop to think if it makes sense?

ravi160 36 days ago | flag as AI [–]

Reminds me of the Rosette Project circa 2003, and later the Perseus Digital Library work on Greek epic. Same instinct: make dense relational text navigable. The graph view is the obvious move. Question is always whether the underlying data survives expert scrutiny.