HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 63Shloka 11
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Shloka 11

Sacred Abodes of Vishnu & ShivaCatalogue of Vishnu and Shiva’s Sacred Abodes (Tirtha-Mahatmya within the Pulastya–Narada Frame)

गोपालमुत्तरे नित्यं महेन्द्रे सोमपीथिनम् वैकुण्ठमपि सह्याद्रौ पारियात्रऽपराजितम्

gopālamuttare nityaṃ mahendre somapīthinam vaikuṇṭhamapi sahyādrau pāriyātra'parājitam

(One should know/see) Gopāla ever in the northern region; Soma-pīthin (the Lord associated with Soma’s seat) on Mahendra; Vaikuṇṭha also on the Sahya mountain; and Aparājita on the Pāriyātra range.

Contextual narrator within the Adhyāya’s catalogue (speaker not specified in the provided excerpt) addressing the listener of the Purāṇic discourse.
VishnuSoma
Sacred geography as theology (deity-forms mapped onto landscapes)Tīrtha-yātrā orientation by mountains and quartersMultiplicity of Viṣṇu’s shrine-forms

{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "adbhuta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }

FAQs

This portion functions as a gazetteer: the Purāṇa sacralizes the subcontinent by anchoring specific divine forms (nāma-rūpa) to identifiable ranges and regions, guiding pilgrimage and ritual geography rather than telling a single myth.

Purāṇic usage allows ‘Vaikuṇṭha’ to denote both the supreme abode and a terrestrial manifestation/shrine bearing that name; the verse signals a localized ‘Vaikuṇṭha’ presence on Sahyādri for devotees and pilgrims.

Both appear in classical Purāṇic mountain lists as major markers for orienting sacred space. By associating them with specific deity-forms (Soma-pīthin on Mahendra; Aparājita on Pāriyātra), the text turns topography into a devotional itinerary.