Shukra’s Curse on King Danda and Andhaka’s Challenge to Shiva
रमयामास तां तन्वीं सा च तं वानरोत्तमम् एवं रमन्तौ सुचिरं संप्राप्तौ विन्ध्यपर्वतम्
ramayāmāsa tāṃ tanvīṃ sā ca taṃ vānarottamam evaṃ ramantau suciraṃ saṃprāptau vindhyaparvatam
Er ergötzte sich mit jener schlanken Frau, und sie mit dem vortrefflichsten der Vānara. So gelangten sie, nachdem sie lange gemeinsam gespielt hatten, zum Vindhya-Gebirge.
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Vindhya is a major geographic marker in Purāṇic cartography. Mentioning it often signals a transition into a specific regional tīrtha network (rivers, confluences, lakes) associated with central/southern India.
In tīrtha sections, such episodes commonly function as ‘narrative anchors’ that move characters across named landscapes. The movement to Vindhya prepares for subsequent identification of rivers and sacred waters (as in the next verse).
Not necessarily. ‘Vānarottama’ is an honorific that can apply to a specific famed vanara or simply to an exemplary monkey figure within this local myth. Confirmation requires the surrounding verses and any explicit naming.