तस्मिन्पुरवरे रम्ये राज्यं निहतकण्टकम् । करोति बान्धवैः सार्द्धमृद्धियुक्तः सुदर्शनः । हिरण्यदत्तस्य सुतो जातो गांधारकन्यया
tasminpuravare ramye rājyaṃ nihatakaṇṭakam | karoti bāndhavaiḥ sārddhamṛddhiyuktaḥ sudarśanaḥ | hiraṇyadattasya suto jāto gāṃdhārakanyayā
In jener lieblichen, vortrefflichen Stadt herrschte Sudarśana—mit Wohlstand begabt—zusammen mit seinen Verwandten über ein Reich ohne Dornen (ohne Drangsal). Er war der Sohn Hiraṇyadattas, geboren von einer Jungfrau aus Gandhāra.
Narrator (contextual Purāṇic narrator within Prabhāsakṣetramāhātmya; likely Sūta/Lomaharṣaṇa continuing the account)
Tirtha: Prabhāsa-kṣetra
Type: kshetra
Scene: King Sudarśana enthroned in a fortified city hall, surrounded by kinsmen-counsellors; symbols of prosperity—granaries, tribute, orderly guards—convey a trouble-free realm.
Prosperity and stable rule are portrayed as fruits of dharma, where a king removes ‘thorns’—injustice and suffering—from society.
The larger passage belongs to Prabhāsa-kṣetra māhātmya; this verse sets the human lineage context before the tīrtha and vrata teaching unfolds.
None directly in this verse; it introduces Sudarśana’s background before the later Śivarātri-vrata discussion.