Ṣāḍguṇya — The Six Measures of Foreign Policy
with Rāja-maṇḍala Theory
आसारावनयोश् चैवं विजगीषाश् च मण्डलं अरेश् च विजिगीषोश् च मध्यमो भूम्यनन्तरः
āsārāvanayoś caivaṃ vijagīṣāś ca maṇḍalaṃ areś ca vijigīṣoś ca madhyamo bhūmyanantaraḥ
وهكذا، للملك الطالب للغلبة (vijigīṣu) تتكوّن «الدائرة» (maṇḍala) من الملوك المجاورين، حلفاء كانوا أم أعداء. و«الملك الأوسط» (madhyama) هو الذي تكون أرضه متّصلة اتصالًا مباشرًا، واقعةً بين العدو (ari) وبين طالب الفتح (vijigīṣu).
Lord Agni
Vidya Category: {"primary_vidya":"Arthashastra","secondary_vidya":null,"practical_application":"Identify the madhyama king by geography: the intermediary power contiguous between enemy and conqueror; use this to decide alliance-building or balancing strategy.","sutra_style":true}
Encyclopedic Reference: {"reference_type":"Definition","entry_title":"Madhyama king in the maṇḍala: the contiguous intermediary power","lookup_keywords":["madhyama rāja","maṇḍala","ari","vijigīṣu","anantara-bhūmi"],"quick_summary":"The madhyama is the middle ruler whose territory touches both the enemy and the would-be conqueror; recognizing him is key for balance-of-power diplomacy."}
Concept: Spatial contiguity shapes political obligation and threat; geography is a determinant in nīti.
Application: Map contiguous borders to identify the madhyama; prioritize treaties, transit rights, or neutrality pacts with this pivot power.
Khanda Section: Rajadharma (Mandala Theory & Statecraft)
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: vira
Type: Kingdom
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"Three adjoining kingdoms on a map: vijigīṣu on one side, ari on the other, and the madhyama kingdom between them, shown as the pivotal contiguous territory.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural: stylized tripartite landscape with three crowned rulers and contiguous borders; the middle ruler highlighted as madhyama; bold outlines, flat color fields, temple mural framing.","tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore: central madhyama king emphasized with gold halo and gilded border; two flanking kings labeled ari and vijigīṣu; gold-embossed map-like ground pattern.","mysore_prompt":"Mysore: instructional border-map with three adjacent regions, clear labels and arrows indicating contiguity; soft palette, fine detailing, manuscript aesthetic.","mughal_miniature_prompt":"Mughal miniature: detailed topographic miniature with forts and rivers marking borders; the middle kingdom rendered as a buffer; court officials studying the map."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"instructional","suggested_raga":"Kedar","pace":"medium","voice_tone":"instructional"}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: आसार+अवनयोः→आसारावनयोः; च+एवम्→चैवम्; अरेः+च→अरेश्च; विजिगीषोः+च→विजिगीषोश्च; भूमि+अनन्तरः→भूम्यनन्तरः (इ→य्)
Related Themes: Agni Purana 239 (maṇḍala categories; ṣāḍguṇya application)
It imparts political science (rājavidyā/artha-oriented rajadharma): how to classify the geopolitical ‘mandala’ around a conquering king and identify the madhyama (intermediate power) based on immediate territorial contiguity between rival polities.
By preserving a compact doctrine of statecraft—mandala classification, enemy–conqueror relations, and intermediary powers—alongside the Purana’s ritual, cosmological, and literary materials, it demonstrates the Agni Purana’s multi-disciplinary, encyclopedic scope.
In Purāṇic rajadharma, correct understanding of allies, enemies, and intermediaries supports righteous rule (dharma-protection), minimizing unjust warfare and harm; this is framed as sustaining social order (dharma) and thereby accruing merit through responsible kingship.