Vali

Vali or Wali can refer to:

  • Vali, Iran, a village in Khuzestan Province, Iran
  • Vali, East Azerbaijan, a village in East Azerbaijan Province, Iran
  • The Vali tribe, a Sarmatian tribe of Ptolemy
  • Wāli, title meaning governor in Arabic and several other languages
  • Vali (film) or The Governor, a 2009 Turkish action film directed by M. Çağatay Tosun
  • Vaali, a 1999 Tamil-language action film starring Ajith Kumar
  • Gods

  • Váli (son of Loki), in Norse mythology, a son of Loki
  • Váli, In Norse mythology, a son of Odin and Rind
  • Vali (Ramayana) or Bali, character in the Hindu epic Ramayana
  • Al-Walee, one of the Names of God in the Qur'an
  • People

  • Abbas Vali (born 1949), Iranian Kurdish academic
  • Ali Khan Vali (1845/46–1902), Iranian photographer and governor
  • Amir Vali (fl. 1356–1384), ruler of Astarabad and parts of Mazandaran
  • Ayub Vali (born 1987), Iranian footballer
  • Baba Hyder Vali of Mulbagal (12th century), Indian Sufi saint
  • Carmen L. Vali (born 1965), American politician, mayor of Aliso Viejo, California
  • Ferenc A. Váli (1905–1984), Hungarian-born lawyer, author and political analyst
  • Váli (son of Loki)

    In Norse mythology, Váli was one of the unlucky sons of Loki. He is mentioned in the Gylfaginning section of Snorri Sturluson's Prose Edda, chapter 50. After the death of Baldr, the Æsir chase down and capture Loki.

    Váli, son of Loki, is otherwise unknown. A variant version in the Hauksbók manuscript of stanza 34 of "Völuspá" refers to this event; it begins: "Þá kná Vála | vígbǫnd snúa", usually amended to the nominative Váli in order to provide a subject for the verb; in Ursula Dronke's translation in her edition of the poem, "Then did Váli | slaughter bonds twist". This presumably refers to Váli, son of Óðinn, who was begotten to avenge Baldr's death, and thus it is not unlikely that he bound Loki; but the Hauksbók stanza interrupts the flow of "Völuspá" at this point and presumably draws on a variant oral tradition. It is likely that this was Snorri's source, and that he interpreted the manuscript text Vála vígbǫnd as "bonds from Váli's act of slaughter", thus inventing a second Váli. In the rather cryptic prose at the end of "Lokasenna", which appears to be derived from Snorri's account, Narfi transforms into a wolf and his brother Nari's guts are used to bind their father.

    Vali (Ramayana)

    In the Hindu epic Ramayana, the vanara Vali was king of Kishkindha, a son of Indra, elder brother of Sugriva and father of Angada. He was killed by Lord Rama, an Avatar of Vishnu.

    Vali (Sanskrit: वाली, nominative singular of the root वालिन् (Valin) is also known as Bali in several Indian languages. His other names include Indonesian: Subali, Malay: Balya, Yuan: Bari, Thai: Phali, Lao: Palichan and Khmer: ពាលី .

    Early life

    Vali was famous for the boon that he had received, according to which anyone who fought him in single-combat lost half his strength to Vali, thereby making Vali invulnerable to any enemy. Once Ravana called Vali for a fight when Vali was doing his regular Sandhyavandanam. He took Ravana in his tail and took him around all the world. Humbled, Ravana called for a truce. It is said in the Ramayana that Vali was very brave and courageous. Before dawn he used to go from the Eastern coast of sea to the Western coast and from the Northern coast of the sea to the Southern coast to pay his homage to Surya - the sun-god. He was so brave and powerful that on his way to pay homage to Surya, he used to toss the mountain peaks upward and catch them as if they were play balls. After completing the tedious task of paying homage to the sun god in all the four directions, he used to return to Kishkindha without even being tired.

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