The Mother of Mata Sita: Earth, Names, and Sacred Origins Across the Ramayanas The Valmiki Ramayana, the oldest and most revered telling of Rama's story, introduces Sita as a child discovered in a furrow of the earth by King Janaka of Mithila. It does not name her mother. This silence is not an oversight. It is a profound theological statement. Sita does not arrive through a womb. She rises from the earth itself, and the Valmiki Ramayana honours that origin by leaving the question of a human mother deliberately unanswered. Janaka names her Sita, which means furrow, the line drawn by the plough, the act of opening the earth so that life may emerge. From that first moment, her identity is inseparable from the ground beneath all living things. Names Across the Jain Ramayanas The Jain tradition produced its own rich retellings of the Rama story, and these texts do attempt to name the mother of Sita. In Vimalasuri's Paumachariya, one of the earliest Jain versions, Sita's mot...