पुरा हत्वांऽधकं दैत्यं सगणो वृषभध्वजः । ततः स्नातो ह्रदं कृत्वा ततो रुद्रह्रदोऽभवत्
purā hatvāṃ'dhakaṃ daityaṃ sagaṇo vṛṣabhadhvajaḥ | tataḥ snāto hradaṃ kṛtvā tato rudrahrado'bhavat
Einst, nachdem der Dämon Andhaka erschlagen war, badete der Herr mit dem Stierbanner (Śiva) dort zusammen mit seinen Gefährten. So entstand ein See, und jener Ort wurde als Rudra-hrada, „Rudras heiliger See“, berühmt.
Pulastya (deduced from adjacent verses in this narrative sequence)
Tirtha: Rudra-hrada
Type: kund
Listener: Nṛpaśreṣṭha (king)
Scene: Śiva with bull-banner (vṛṣabhadhvaja) stands after slaying Andhaka; gaṇas surround him; he bathes, and the ground fills to become a luminous lake—Rudra-hrada.
A tīrtha becomes supremely sanctified by the direct presence and līlā of Śiva; sacred places preserve divine acts as ongoing sources of merit.
Rudra-hrada, a sacred lake praised in the Arbuda Khaṇḍa within the Prabhāsa Khaṇḍa of the Skanda Purāṇa.
Śiva’s own bathing (snāna) establishes the tīrtha’s sanctity, implicitly recommending bathing at Rudra-hrada for spiritual benefit.