The Structure of Jambudvipa: Nine Varshas, Navadvipa Bharata, Mountains, Rivers, and Peoples
माला मगधगोनन्दाः प्राच्य नजपदास्त्विमे पुण्ड्राश्च केरलाश्चैव चौडाः कुल्याश्च राक्षस
mālā magadhagonandāḥ prācya najapadāstvime puṇḍrāśca keralāścaiva cauḍāḥ kulyāśca rākṣasa
These are (the peoples/kingdoms): the Mālā, the Magadha and the Gonanda (people), the Prācya, and these Najapadas; also the Puṇḍras and the Keralas, the Cauḍas, the Kulyas, and the Rākṣasas.
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "adbhuta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
The verse functions primarily as a catalog, emphasizing the Purāṇic vision of Bhārata as a vast, multi-regional sacred-cultural space rather than delivering a direct moral injunction.
This aligns most closely with material used in Vaṃśānucarita/Manvantara-style geographical-ethnographic descriptions that accompany dynastic and world-order narrations (not sarga/pratisarga proper, but typical ancillary Purāṇic cataloguing).
By enumerating diverse peoples—including liminal groups like ‘Rākṣasas’—the text symbolically maps a comprehensive world where all regions and beings fall within a single cosmic and dharmic geography.