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

যখন দৈত্যদের পূজা-সম্মান চলছিল এবং সূর্য মিথুন রাশিতে অবস্থান করেছিল, তখন দেবজননী বামনাকৃতিতে মাধবকে প্রসব করলেন।

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.