marut
maru/t m. pl. ( prob. the ‘flashing or shining ones’; cf. marIci and Gk. μαρμαίρω ) the storm-gods ( Indra 's companions and sometimes, e.g. Ragh. xii, 101 = devAH , the gods or deities in general; said in the Veda to be the sons of Rudra and Pṛśni q.v. , or the children of heaven or of ocean; and described as armed with golden weapons i.e. lightnings and thunderbolts, as having iron teeth and roaring like lions, as residing in the north, as riding in golden cars drawn by ruddy horses sometimes called Pṛṣatīḥ q.v. ; they are reckoned in Naigh. v, 5 among the gods of the middle sphere, and in RV. viii, 96, 8 are held to be three times sixty in number; in the later literature they are the children of Diti , either seven or seven times seven in number, and are sometimes said to be led by Mātariśvan ), RV. &c. &c.