HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 43Shloka 121
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Vamana Purana — Shukra's Samjivani, Shloka 121

Shukra’s Saṃjīvanī, Shiva’s Containment of the Asuras, and Indra’s Recovery of Power

पतमानाद् द्विपेन्द्रात् तु शक्रश्चाप्लुत्य वेगवान् त्यक्त्वैव मन्दरगिरिं पपात वसुधातले

patamānād dvipendrāt tu śakraścāplutya vegavān tyaktvaiva mandaragiriṃ papāta vasudhātale

Lalu para dewa—dengan Pitāmaha (Brahmā) di depan—melihat penguasa para gaṇa sedang dipukul dan dihantam oleh para perkasa itu.

Narrator describing sequential battle events.
Indra (Śakra)
Cosmic-scale battle settingFall of a deity from an elevated locusMythic geography as stage for combat

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FAQs

Mandara functions as a recognizable cosmic landmark and elevated battleground in Purāṇic imagination. Mentioning it signals that the combat occurs on a grand, supra-human stage, and that Indra’s fall is correspondingly dramatic.

It can mean he had taken position upon/near Mandara as a strategic vantage point during the fight. The phrasing emphasizes a forced retreat—he ‘abandons’ that support and is driven down to earth.

Purāṇic battle narration often blends literal and emblematic registers. Here it is both: a physical fall (papāta) and a narrative marker of Indra’s loss of control and status in that moment.