HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 46Shloka 55
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Shloka 55

Origins of the MarutsOrigins of the Maruts Across the Manvantaras (Pulastya–Narada Dialogue)

साम्भसा सुखशीतेन संसिक्ता सप्तधाभवत् ते ऽजायन्ताथ मरुत उत्तमस्यान्तरे मनोः

sāmbhasā sukhaśītena saṃsiktā saptadhābhavat te 'jāyantātha maruta uttamasyāntare manoḥ

সুখদ আৰু শীতল পানীৰে সিঞ্চিত হোৱাত সি সাত ভাগত বিভক্ত হ’ল; আৰু তাৰ পৰাই উত্তম নামৰ মনুৰ মন্বন্তৰত মৰুতগণ জন্মিল।

Narrator/teacher voice (traditional Purāṇic narrator) continuing a cosmological catalogue to the listening sage/audience (specific interlocutors not explicit in the given excerpt).
Maruts
Manvantara chronologyOrigin of deity-classes (Maruts)Cosmic order and periodicity

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FAQs

The Maruts are a deity-class associated with wind, storm, and atmospheric power. Purāṇas often enumerate different groups of gods (including Maruts) for each Manvantara to express cyclical time: each Manu’s era has its own Indra, gods, sages, and attendant deity-groups.

It signals a cosmogonic multiplication—one substance or offering, when ritually or divinely transformed (here by sprinkling with cool water), differentiates into seven units or forms, from which a septenary group (or a group described as sevenfold) arises. The verse emphasizes transformation through a purificatory/ritual act.

No named tīrtha, river, or region appears in the wording provided. The focus is temporal-geographical in a cosmic sense (the ‘interval’ of Uttama Manu), not terrestrial pilgrimage geography.