यदुवंश-प्रवचनम्: हैहय-क्रोष्टु-वंशविस्तारः (कृतवीर्यार्जुनादि, ज्यामघ-विदर्भ-शात्वत-पर्यन्तम्)
देवक्षत्रसुतः श्रीमान् मधुर्नाम महायशाः मधूनां वंशकृद्राजा मधोस्तु कुरुवंशकः
devakṣatrasutaḥ śrīmān madhurnāma mahāyaśāḥ madhūnāṃ vaṃśakṛdrājā madhostu kuruvaṃśakaḥ
ومن ديفاكشَترا وُلد الملك المشرق المجد، عظيم الصيت، واسمه مَدهو. فكان مؤسِّس سلالة مَدهو؛ ومن مَدهو بدوره ظهر سلفُ سلالة كورو.
Suta Goswami (narrating dynastic history to the sages of Naimisharanya)
By anchoring Shaiva narratives within well-known royal genealogies, the text legitimizes the spread of Shiva-dharma through righteous kings who protect temples, endow Linga installation, and uphold public worship.
Indirectly: Shiva-tattva is presented as the transcendent Pati whose dharma is preserved in the world through orderly succession and dharmic rulership; the stability of lineage mirrors the maintenance of cosmic order under Mahadeva.
No specific puja-vidhi or Pashupata Yoga practice is stated; the takeaway is the dharmic role of kingship—supporting Shaiva rites such as Linga-pratiṣṭhā and temple patronage.