The Birth of Tāraka and the Prelude to the Deva–Asura War
Topic-based Title
शतहस्ततुरंगस्थो मंथनो नाम दैत्यराट् । जंभकस्तूष्ट्रमारूढो गिरींद्राभं महाबलः
śatahastaturaṃgastho maṃthano nāma daityarāṭ | jaṃbhakastūṣṭramārūḍho girīṃdrābhaṃ mahābalaḥ
Der Daitya-König namens Manthana saß auf einem schnellen, kräftigen Pferd; und Jambhaka —von großer Macht, dem Herrn der Berge gleich— ritt auf einem Kamel.
Not explicitly marked in the provided excerpt (narratorial description within the Adhyaya).
Concept: Worldly strength and royal display are transient; alignment with dharma determines the outcome, not mere might.
Application: Cultivate humility amid success; do not equate status, vehicles, or resources with true security.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: vira
Type: celestial_realm
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"Manthana, the daitya-king, rides a powerful war-horse whose limbs blur with speed, as if endowed with a hundred hands’ force. Beside him, Jambhaka—broad as a mountain—sways atop a camel, its long neck arched like a battle-standard, while dust and sparks rise from the marching host.","primary_figures":["Manthana (daitya-king)","Jambhaka (asura)","war-horse","camel","asura soldiers"],"setting":"Open mythic plain at the edge of the asura city, with banners, spear-forests, and chariot wheels carving tracks into dark earth under a turbulent sky.","lighting_mood":"bronze dusk with dust-haze","color_palette":["burnt umber","bronze gold","onyx black","vermillion","smoky violet"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: Manthana enthroned on a rearing horse with gold-leaf harness and gemmed saddle; Jambhaka on a richly caparisoned camel, mountain-like torso emphasized; ornate earrings and crowns; thick decorative borders; gold leaf on weapons and standards; saturated reds and greens with traditional South Indian stylization.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: elegant horse and camel rendered with fine brushwork; Jambhaka’s mountain-like bulk suggested through layered shading; distant ranks of soldiers as rhythmic dots; cool violet sky and warm earth tones; refined faces and delicate jewelry.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: iconic profiles, bold outlines; horse and camel simplified into strong curves; Manthana and Jambhaka with exaggerated eyes and elaborate ornaments; red/yellow/green palette with dark background bands like temple murals.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: decorative procession scene with floral borders; stylized camel and horse patterned with paisleys; deep blue ground with gold highlights; banners arranged symmetrically; lotus motifs subtly woven into the border to contrast martial content."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"narrative","suggested_raga":"Durga","pace":"moderate-narrative","voice_tone":"authoritative","sound_elements":["hoofbeats","camel bells","war-drums","banner flapping","dusty wind"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: śatahastaturaṃgastho = śata-hasta-turaṅga-sthaḥ; jaṃbhakastūṣṭramārūḍho = jaṃbhakaḥ tu uṣṭram ārūḍhaḥ; girīṃdrābhaṃ = giri-indra-ābham.
They are described as powerful Daitya figures: Manthana is explicitly called the Daitya-king, and Jambhaka is portrayed as a mountain-like warrior of great strength.
It is an epithet meaning “resembling the lord of mountains,” i.e., appearing mountain-like—suggesting immense size, firmness, and formidable power.
Such details function as epic-style characterization: they quickly signal rank, readiness for conflict or travel, and distinct martial identity within the unfolding Puranic narrative.