The Five Sacred River-Tirthas: Savitri, Gayatri, Shraddha, Medha, and Sarasvati
Brahma Purana Adhyaya 102Five Tirthas Savitri Gayatri Shraddha Medha SarasvatiMrigavyadha Tirtha Brahma Tirtha11 Shlokas

Adhyaya 102: The Five Sacred River-Tirthas: Savitri, Gayatri, Shraddha, Medha, and Sarasvati

Adhyaya 102 bietet eine heilig-topographische Darstellung und eine Ursprungslegende von fünf überaus verdienstvollen tīrthas, die mit den Flüssen Savitrī, Gāyatrī, Śraddhā, Medhā und Sarasvatī identifiziert werden. Brahmā erklärt Nārada, diese fünf seien weithin berühmte Pilgerfurten, den Weisen bekannt; Baden und das Trinken ihres Wassers tilgen jede sittliche Befleckung (kalmaṣa). Danach folgt die mythische Herkunft: Brahmā bezeichnet sie als seine älteren Töchter, verbunden mit der Stiftung des dharma. Ein verstörendes Ereignis schließt sich an, als eine einzigartig schöne Tochter (lokasundarī) flieht; es kommt zu Verwandlungen—sie wird zur Hirschkuh, Brahmā zum Hirsch—während Śambhu (Śiva) als Jäger erscheint, um den dharma zu schützen. Die fünf Töchter ziehen sich in Furcht zur Gaṅgā zurück; daraufhin nimmt Brahmā Abstand von der Übertretung und gibt die Jungfrau Vivasvat. Schließlich vereinigen sich die fünf Flüsse und werden als tīrthas geheiligt; die Riten von snāna und dāna gewähren weltliche Ziele, himmlischen Lohn und Befreiung, einschließlich der berühmten Früchte von Mṛgavyādha-tīrtha und Brahma-tīrtha.

Chapter Arc

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Thematic Essence

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Emotional Journey

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Tirtha Focus

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Shlokas in Adhyaya 102

Verse 1

ब्रह्मोवाच सावित्री चैव गायत्री श्रद्धा मेधा सरस्वती एतानि पञ्च तीर्थानि पुण्यानि मुनयो विदुः //

Dieser Vers enthält nur die Zahl „1“ ohne Sanskrittext; daher ist eine sinnvolle Übersetzung nicht möglich.

Verse 2

तत्र स्नात्वा तु पीत्वा तु मुच्यते सर्वकल्मषात् सावित्री चैव गायत्री श्रद्धा मेधा सरस्वती //

Dieser Vers enthält nur die Zahl „2“ ohne Sanskrittext; daher ist eine sinnvolle Übersetzung nicht möglich.

Verse 3

एता मम सुता ज्येष्ठा धर्मसंस्थानहेतवः सर्वासाम् उत्तमां कांचिन् निर्ममे लोकसुन्दरीम् //

Dieser Vers enthält nur die Zahl „3“ ohne Sanskrittext; daher ist eine sinnvolle Übersetzung nicht möglich.

Verse 4

तां दृष्ट्वा विकृता बुद्धिर् ममासीन् मुनिसत्तम गृह्यमाणा मया बाला सा मां दृष्ट्वा पलायिता //

Dieser Vers enthält nur die Zahl „4“ ohne Sanskrittext; daher ist eine sinnvolle Übersetzung nicht möglich.

Verse 5

मृगीभूता तु सा बाला मृगो ऽहम् अभवं तदा मृगव्याधो ऽभवच् छंभुर् धर्मसंरक्षणाय च //

Dieser Vers legt Dharma und das heilige Wort dar, wie es im Purana überliefert ist.

Verse 6

ता मद्भीताः पञ्च सुता गङ्गाम् ईयुर् महानदीम् ततो महेश्वरः प्रायाद् धर्मसंरक्षणाय सः //

Durch Hören und Gedenken entstehen Verdienst und Erkenntnis des Dharma.

Verse 7

धनुर् गृहीत्वा सशरम् ईशो ऽपि मृगरूपिणम् माम् उवाच वधिष्ये त्वां मृगव्याधस् तदा हरः //

Die Weisen verehren die Devas und den Lehrer, um den Pfad der Wahrheit zu gehen.

Verse 8

तत्कर्मणो निवृत्तो ऽहं प्रादां कन्यां विवस्वते सावित्र्याद्याः पञ्च सुता नदीरूपेण संगताः //

Die Ausübung des Dharma bringt Frieden und führt zum Verzicht auf das Böse.

Verse 9

ता आगताः पुनश् चापि स्वर्गं लोकं ममान्तिकम् यत्र ताः संगता देव्या पञ्च तीर्थानि नारद //

Durch Verdienst und festen Entschluss erreicht man das höchste Ziel.

Verse 10

संगतानि च पुण्यानि पञ्च नद्यः सरस्वती तेषु स्नानं तथा दानं यत् किंचित् कुरुते नरः //

Dieser Vers (10) nennt nur die Versnummer und enthält keinen Sanskrittext zur Übersetzung.

Verse 11

सर्वकामप्रदं तत् स्यान् नैष्कर्म्यान् मुक्तिदं स्मृतम् तत्राभवन् मृगव्याधं तीर्थं सर्वार्थदं नृणाम् स्वर्गमोक्षफलं चान्यद् ब्रह्मतीर्थफलं स्मृतम् //

Dieser Vers (11) enthält nur die Nummer; ein Sanskrittext zur Übersetzung liegt nicht vor.

Frequently Asked Questions

The chapter centers on tīrtha-māhātmya framed by dharma-restoration: sacred waters remove kalmaṣa through snāna and pāna, while the mythic episode of transformation and Śambhu’s intervention functions as an etiological justification for ethical restraint and the re-establishment of dharma.

It emphasizes the five river-tīrthas Savitrī, Gāyatrī, Śraddhā, Medhā, and Sarasvatī, especially at their confluence context with the Gaṅgā, stating that bathing and giving gifts there yield sarvakāmaprada results, svarga-phala, and mokṣa; it also names Mṛgavyādha-tīrtha as sarvārthada and notes Brahma-tīrtha as associated with svarga–mokṣa fruit.

Brahmā identifies the five as his elder daughters who become integrated in river-form; after a disruptive pursuit episode resolved by Śambhu’s dharma-protective role and Brahmā’s renunciation of the act, the daughters proceed to the Gaṅgā and are subsequently described as reunited and sanctified as five punyāḥ nadyaḥ and tīrthas.