HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 39Shloka 157
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Vamana Purana — Shukra's Curse on King Danda, Shloka 157

Shukra’s Curse on King Danda and Andhaka’s Challenge to Shiva

सुरैः सरुद्रैः संप्राप्तस्तत्तीर्थ हाटकाह्वयम् समायातेषु देवेषु गन्धर्वेष्वप्सरस्सु च

suraiḥ sarudraiḥ saṃprāptastattīrtha hāṭakāhvayam samāyāteṣu deveṣu gandharveṣvapsarassu ca

Jenes heilige Tīrtha, Hāṭaka genannt, wurde von den Göttern zusammen mit den Rudras erreicht; und als die Götter dort versammelt waren—mitsamt Gandharvas und Apsarās—nahmen die folgenden Begebenheiten ihren Lauf.

Narratorial voice (Purāṇic narrator continuing the account)
DevasRudrasGandharvasApsarases
Tirtha MahimaDivine assembly at sacred geographyŚaiva celestial presence (Rudras) within a tīrtha setting

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

FAQs

Hāṭaka literally denotes ‘gold’ and, as a tīrtha-name, signals exceptional sanctity and merit—often implying a place whose spiritual ‘value’ is likened to gold, or where divine gatherings and boons are especially accessible.

Their inclusion highlights the Purāṇic pattern of shared sacred space: tīrthas are not sectarian. The presence of Rudras (Śaiva divinities) with Devas, Gandharvas, and Apsarases frames the site as cosmically important and ritually potent.

It explicitly names only the tīrtha ‘Hāṭaka’. Any associated river/lake/forest would need the surrounding verses; here the geographic datum is the tīrtha-name alone.