Harihara Revelation and the Kurukshetra Tirtha Cycle: Sthanu in Vishnu and the Sanctification of Saptasarasvata
भकारं नेत्रयुगलं तत्र कर्कटकः स्थितः मासः श्रावण इत्युक्तश्चतुर्थं पत्रकं स्मृतम्
bhakāraṃ netrayugalaṃ tatra karkaṭakaḥ sthitaḥ māsaḥ śrāvaṇa ityuktaścaturthaṃ patrakaṃ smṛtam
يُقال إن المقطع «bha» يقابل زوج العينين؛ وهناك يستقر برج السرطان (Karkaṭaka). ويُعلَن الشهر بأنه Śrāvaṇa، ويُتَذَكَّر هذا بوصفه «patraka» الرابع (ورقة/مقطع).
{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
This is a cosmological-ritual mapping: phonemes (varṇas), the human body (a microcosm), and time/sky (rāśi and māsa) are aligned to sacralize recitation and contemplation. Such correspondences often support nyāsa-like practices and meditative visualization.
Patraka literally means a ‘leaf’ or ‘petal’. In this chapter it functions as a numbered segment in a structured sequence—like a petal in a lotus-diagram or a section in a mapped schema of syllables, body-parts, and calendrical markers.
No. Despite the Vāmana Purāṇa’s strong geographic orientation, this particular verse is purely schematic (phoneme–body–zodiac–month) and contains no explicit sacred geography terms.