HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 62Shloka 34
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Vamana Purana — Vamana's Birth, Shloka 34

Vamana’s Birth during Bali’s Horse-Sacrifice and the Mapping of Vishnu’s Sacred Presences

पूज्यमानेषु दैत्येषु मिषुनस्थे दिवाकरे सुषुवे देवजननी माधवं वामनाकृतिम्

pūjyamāneṣu daityeṣu miṣunasthe divākare suṣuve devajananī mādhavaṃ vāmanākṛtim

যেতিয়া দৈত্যসকলক পূজা কৰা হৈছিল আৰু সূৰ্য মিথুন ৰাশিত অৱস্থিত আছিল, তেতিয়া দেবজননী বামনাকৃতিত মাধৱক প্ৰসৱ কৰিলে।

Narrator voice (Purāṇic narrator) describing the avatāra-event; no direct dialogue in this pāda.
Vishnu (Mādhava/Nārāyaṇa)Aditi (Devajananī)Sūrya (Divākara)
Avatāra (divine descent)Cosmic timing/astrology (rāśi-kāla)Deva–Daitya polarityVishnu’s protective strategy (upāya)

{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }

FAQs

‘Devajananī’ is Aditi, mother of the Ādityas. In the Vāmana cycle, Vishnu manifests as her son to restore Indra’s sovereignty and re-balance the cosmic order after Bali’s ascendancy.

Purāṇic narration often anchors avatāra-events in auspicious cosmic markers. ‘Divākare miṣunasthe’ functions as a calendrical/astrological timestamp, signaling a ritually significant moment for the descent.

It suggests a public, ritually charged setting—often connected with Bali’s sacrificial culture—where Daityas are at the height of prestige. The avatāra arises precisely when adharma is socially normalized and power is ceremonially consolidated.