found it on another thread😆
Yudhisthir: According to Adi Parva I:95 he won Devika, the daughter of King Govasana of the Saibyas at a swayamvar. He had one son from her called Yaudheya.
The
Mahabharata Tatparya Nirnaya provides a variation on this: according this text (and some others as well) Yudhisthir married Devaki who was the daughter of Shishupala and an incarnation of Shyamala wife of Yama.
The
Sarala Mahabharata provides another variation: here it says that Yudhisthir's second marriage happened towards the very end of the story, during the Pandavas' final pilgrimage. They had stopped at a place called Dharmapuri where a merchant approached Yudhisthir with a proposal of marriage for his young daughter called Suhani (she was from Oriya). Astrologers had predicted that she would die the moment she married which is why he had been delaying her marriage. At the same time it was against tradition to keep the daughter unmarried like that. So he decided to get her married to Yudhisthir since then he would be content that even if he loses his daughter at least he would have had the good fortune of having Yudhisthir as his son-in-law. Yudhisthir agreed after some convincing from Sahadeva. At the marriage ceremony, Lord Yama's agents were thwarted by Arjun. When Yama himself appeared, he too was defeated by Arjun and tied up. Upon Suhani's father's request, Arjun freed Yama only after getting him to promise not to visit that place again. Later Yudhisthir told Suhani to go the Kapilasa hills and wait for him to return. Unfortunately he never returned for the Pandavas all left earth at the end of their pilgrimmage as we know.
Bhima: Again as per I:95, he married Balandhara, daughter of the king of Kashi. He also married Hidimba. In the Asramavasika Parva, it is said that Bhima was also married to Shishupala's sister.
Arjun: Ulupi, Chitrangada and Subhadra
Nakul: As per I:95, he married Karenumati, a Chedi princess. As per Mahabharata Tatparya Nirnaya, he was married to the daughter of the king of Madra.
There are few references to the sister of Dhristaketu (Sisupala's son) in the text (esp in the Asramavasika Parva) as being the wife of one of the Pandavas. It is not clear who that Pandava was but, since Sisuspala was a Chedi king and Nakul is the only Pandava said to be married to a Chedi princess, it is a reasonable conclusion that Dhristaketu's sister (a Chedi princess and daughter of Sisupala) was married to Nakul.
Sahadev: He married Vijaya daughter of the king of Madra as per I:95. Again, as per Asramavasika Parva, he is also said to be married to Jarasandh's daughter.
According to Mahabharata Tatparya Nirnaya, after Jarasandh's son Sahadev was installed as king, he offered his sister to Bhima in order to establish peace. Bhima however, decided to give her to his brother Sahadev is marriage instead. It is possible that this story is the source of the confusion about Bhima being married to Jarasandh's daughter.