HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 63Shloka 35
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Shloka 35

Sacred Abodes of Vishnu & ShivaCatalogue of Vishnu and Shiva’s Sacred Abodes (Tirtha-Mahatmya within the Pulastya–Narada Frame)

रसातले च विख्यातं सहस्रशिरसं मुने कालाग्निरुद्रं तत्रैव तथान्यं कृत्तिवाससम्

rasātale ca vikhyātaṃ sahasraśirasaṃ mune kālāgnirudraṃ tatraiva tathānyaṃ kṛttivāsasam

63

Narrator/teacher voice addressing a sage (mune); specific interlocutors not stated in the given excerpt
Shiva (Rudra)KālāgnirudraKṛttivāsasAnanta/Śeṣa (implied by sahasraśiras)
Pātāla cosmographyMultiplicity of divine formsŚaiva theophanies in nether realmsCosmic support/dissolution symbolism

{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "bhayanaka", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }

FAQs

In Purāṇic cosmology, “thousand-headed” most naturally recalls Ananta/Śeṣa, the serpent of infinity who supports worlds. Some recensions also apply such epithets to vast cosmic forms; the verse’s placement among netherworld identifications supports the Ananta/Śeṣa reading.

Purāṇas often distribute divine manifestations across all cosmic tiers—heavens, earth, and netherworlds—signaling sovereignty everywhere. Kālāgnirudra represents time-fire and dissolution; Kṛttivāsas signals ascetic/cremation-ground power, thematically resonant with subterranean, liminal realms.

It functions as a cosmological catalogue: it names a loka (Rasātala) and associates it with renowned divine presences, rather than prescribing pilgrimage rites or terrestrial river/forest sites.