Shiva’s Wedding Procession to Kailasa and the Marriage of Girija (Kali)
ततस्तस्मान्महाशैलं कैलासं सह दैवतैः जगाम भगवान् शर्वः कर्तुं वैवाहिकं विधिम्
tatastasmānmahāśailaṃ kailāsaṃ saha daivataiḥ jagāma bhagavān śarvaḥ kartuṃ vaivāhikaṃ vidhim
Then from there, the Blessed Śarva (Śiva), together with the gods, went to the great mountain Kailāsa in order to perform the wedding rite.
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Ritual is portrayed as cosmically significant: even divine unions are framed through vidhi (regulated rite), teaching that dharma is sustained through orderly sacraments and not mere impulse.
Narrative (Vamśānucarita) material again: a mythic event-sequence concerning divine actions and sacred locales, rather than primary cosmogonic categories.
Kailāsa functions as the axis of Śaiva sacrality (a ‘mahāśaila’ anchoring divine presence). The ‘vaivāhika-vidhi’ signals the sanctification of householding and social order at a divine archetypal level.