Mudgala

[2] The great sage strongly believed in simple living high thinking and had a high-level patience amongst other Rishis.

Rishi Mudgal was the son of a Chandravanshi /Nagavanshi Kshatriya King Bhamyarswa of Panchal Rajya, at present the Punjab State of India.

Rishi Mudgal was married to Nalayani Indrasenā, daughter of Nishada's King Nala and Queen Damayanti.

When Rishi Mudgal attained moksha, he left the mortal life but Nalayani in her next birth, when she could not find a matching suitor, did penance for Lord Shiva.

A seal from Sumer, (of Mudgala,[3] Lord of Edin, Minister to Uruas[4]) shows the word Azu, which meant water-divinator (lit.

Using this oṁkāra, Lord Brahmā created the original Vedas and taught them to his sons, Marīci and others, who were all saintly leaders of the brahminical society.

This body of Vedic knowledge was handed down through the disciplic succession of spiritual masters until the end of Dvāpara-yuga, when Lord Vyāsadeva divided it into four parts and instructed various schools of sages in these four saṁhitās.

[9]The son of Māṇḍūkeya, named Śākalya, divided his own collection into five, entrusting one subdivision each to Vātsya, Mudgala, Śālīya, Gokhalya and Śiśira.