HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 43Shloka 57
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Vamana Purana — Shukra's Samjivani, Shloka 57

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

विश्वेदेवगणान् सर्वान् विष्वक्सेनपुरोगमान् एक एव रणे रौद्रः कालनेमिर्महासुरः

viśvedevagaṇān sarvān viṣvaksenapurogamān eka eva raṇe raudraḥ kālanemirmahāsuraḥ

the mighty asura Vidyunmālī

Narrator (Sūta/paurāṇika voice) describing the battle to the listening sages (traditional frame)
Viśvedevas (collective)ViṣvaksenaAsura Kālanemi
Single-combat heroicsDeva-gaṇa organizationAsura prowessPurāṇic militarized cosmology

{ "primaryRasa": "raudra", "secondaryRasa": "vira", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }

FAQs

The Viśvedevas are a collective class of deities (‘All-gods’) frequently invoked in Vedic and Purāṇic contexts. In battle narratives they appear as an organized divine host (gaṇa), representing the aggregated power of multiple deities.

Viṣvaksena is widely known as a commander figure associated with Viṣṇu’s entourage in later Vaiṣṇava tradition. In Purāṇic battle scenes, naming a ‘purogama’ (front-leader) gives structure to the divine side and highlights that even organized hosts can be challenged by a formidable asura.

Raudraḥ signals a terrifying, wrathful battle-temperament—often connoting a quasi-Rudra-like ferocity—used to characterize asuras who momentarily rival divine forces before their eventual defeat.