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Shloka 11

Adhyaya 50 — देवपुर्यः, पुराणि, आयतनानि च; श्रीकण्ठाधिपत्य-प्रतिपादनम्

श्वेतोदरे मुनिश्रेष्ठाः सुपर्णस्य महात्मनः पिशाचके कुबेरस्य हरिकूटे हरेर्गृहम्

śvetodare muniśreṣṭhāḥ suparṇasya mahātmanaḥ piśācake kuberasya harikūṭe harergṛham

يا خيرَ الحكماء، في شْوِيتُودَرَا (Śvetodara) مقعدٌ مقدّس لسوبَرْنَا (Suparṇa/غارودا) عظيمِ النفس. وفي بِشَاتَكَا (Piśācaka) مسكنُ كُوبِيرَا (Kubera)، وعلى هَرِي-كُوطَا (Hari-kūṭa) يقوم بيتُ هَرِي (Hari). وهكذا تُثبَّت هذه المقامات الإلهية في أقاليمها المقدّسة الخاصة.

śvetodarein Śvetodara (a sacred place/region)
śvetodare:
muniśreṣṭhāḥO best of sages
muniśreṣṭhāḥ:
suparṇasyaof Suparṇa (Garuḍa)
suparṇasya:
mahātmanaḥof the great-souled one
mahātmanaḥ:
piśācakein Piśācaka (a place/region)
piśācake:
kuberasyaof Kubera
kuberasya:
harikūṭeon/at Hari-kūṭa (Hari-peak)
harikūṭe:
harerof Hari (Viṣṇu)
harer:
gṛhamhouse, abode, dwelling
gṛham:

Suta

G
Garuḍa (Suparṇa)
K
Kubera
V
Vishnu (Hari)

FAQs

It situates Linga-centered pilgrimage within a wider tirtha-map: by knowing the divine abodes, the devotee approaches sacred space with śraddhā, preparing the mind (pāśa-kṣaya) for Shiva-upāsanā and the recognition of Pati beyond all locations.

Indirectly, it presents a Purāṇic vision where multiple deities have abodes, yet Shaiva teaching frames them within a single sacred order—supporting the Siddhāntic view that Pati (Śiva) is the ultimate ground, while other divine forms function within His cosmic governance.

Tīrtha-darśana and smaraṇa (recollecting holy sites) are implied—pilgrimage, purification, and disciplined devotion that support Pāśupata-oriented steadiness of mind prior to formal Liṅga-pūjā.