The Battle at Mandara: Vinayaka, Nandin, and Skanda Rout the Daitya Hosts
कुण्डोदरं भग्नकटिं चकार महोदरं शीर्णशिरःकपालम् कुम्भध्वजं चूर्णितसंधिबन्धं घटोदरं चोरुविभिन्नसंधिम्
kuṇḍodaraṃ bhagnakaṭiṃ cakāra mahodaraṃ śīrṇaśiraḥkapālam kumbhadhvajaṃ cūrṇitasaṃdhibandhaṃ ghaṭodaraṃ coruvibhinnasaṃdhim
তেওঁ কুণ্ডোদৰৰ কঁকাল ভঙি পেলালে, মহোদৰৰ মস্তক চূৰ্ণ কৰিলে, কুম্ভধ্বজৰ সন্ধিবন্ধন গুৰি কৰিলে আৰু ঘটোদৰৰ উৰুসন্ধি বিদীৰ্ণ কৰিলে।
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They read as distinct named fighters within the Vināyaka/gaṇa host rather than Gaṇeśa himself. The shared ‘-odara’ naming pattern is common for gaṇa figures and can signal a cohort associated with Vināyaka’s retinue.
This is a conventional epic technique: specifying hips, skull, ligaments, and thigh-joints conveys decisive disabling blows (not merely superficial wounds), underscoring Bali’s battlefield dominance.
Not in these three verses. They belong to a martial narrative segment; no rivers, lakes, forests, or tīrthas are named here, unlike the Purāṇa’s many māhātmya sections where geography is foregrounded.