Harihara Non-Duality and the Revelation of Sadasiva to the Ganas
तत एकमुखं भूयो ददृशुः शङ्करं गणाः रौद्रैश्च वैष्णवैश्चैव वृतं चिह्नैः सहस्रशः
tata ekamukhaṃ bhūyo dadṛśuḥ śaṅkaraṃ gaṇāḥ raudraiśca vaiṣṇavaiścaiva vṛtaṃ cihnaiḥ sahasraśaḥ
তাৰ পাছত গণসকলে পুনৰ শংকৰক ‘একমুখ’ ৰূপে দৰ্শন কৰিলে— সহস্ৰশঃ ৰৌদ্ৰ আৰু বৈষ্ণৱ উভয় প্ৰকাৰৰ চিহ্নে পৰিবৃত।
{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
While ‘ekamukha’ can be read literally as ‘one-faced,’ in this context it functions theologically: the Gaṇas see Śaṅkara in a unified aspect that can bear both Rudraic and Vaiṣṇava emblems, anticipating the explicit Hari-Hara synthesis described in the next verse.
The phrase signals a supernormal, cosmic iconography: the deity is not limited to a single sectarian set of marks. The abundance of emblems conveys omnipotence and the capacity to encompass multiple divine functions (protection, sovereignty, ascetic power, etc.).
No. This unit is mythic-theological and iconographic; it does not name a river, tīrtha, or kṣetra in the verse as transmitted here.