Krishna, the Bull-Tamer: The Sacred Roots of Jallikattu and the Hindu Tradition of Bovine Sport Long before the arenas of Tamil Nadu echoed with the thunder of hooves and the roar of crowds, the bull occupied a central place in the spiritual and cultural imagination of the Indian subcontinent. Seals recovered from the Indus Valley civilization depict humans engaged in sporting contact with bulls, suggesting that this relationship between man and bovine stretches back at least four thousand years. The bull was not merely an agricultural asset. It was a living symbol of raw power, fertility, and the untamed forces of nature. In the Vedic tradition, the bull is closely associated with cosmic virility. Indra himself is praised as Vrishabha, the bull among gods. Shiva, whose mount is the magnificent Nandi, is called Vrishabha, one whose banner bears the bull. Krishna and the Taming of the Wild It is in the stories of Krishna, however, that the direct antecedent of bull-sport finds its most ...