प्रासादं मेरुनामानं हेमप्राकारतोरणम् । चतुर्दशान्ये परितः प्रासादाः परिकल्पिताः । तेषां नामानि वक्ष्यामि प्रत्येकं तानि मे शृणु
prāsādaṃ merunāmānaṃ hemaprākāratoraṇam | caturdaśānye paritaḥ prāsādāḥ parikalpitāḥ | teṣāṃ nāmāni vakṣyāmi pratyekaṃ tāni me śṛṇu
وأُنشئ قصرٌ يُدعى «مِيرو»، مُزيَّنٌ بأسوارٍ وبواباتٍ من ذهب. وحولَه أُقيمت كذلك أربعةَ عشرَ قصراً آخر. وسأذكر أسماءها واحداً واحداً—فاسمعوها مني.
Sūta (Lomaharṣaṇa) to the sages (deduced)
Tirtha: Meru-prāsāda (within Prabhāsa)
Type: kshetra
Scene: A grand central palace named ‘Meru’ rises with golden walls and gateways; around it, fourteen subsidiary palaces are arranged in a planned sacred ring, as the narrator prepares to list their names.
Sacred space is envisioned as an ordered cosmos—one central Meru-like shrine with attendant sanctuaries, mirroring divine hierarchy.
Someśvara within Prabhāsa-kṣetra, where the Meru-named prāsāda and its surrounding shrines are described.
No direct ritual is stated; the verse introduces a catalog of shrine-names as part of the site’s māhātmya.