Shukra’s Curse on King Danda and Andhaka’s Challenge to Shiva
एतस्मिन्नन्तरे तन्वी घृताची शोकसंयुता विचचारोदयगिरिं विचिन्वन्ती सुतां निजाम्
etasminnantare tanvī ghṛtācī śokasaṃyutā vicacārodayagiriṃ vicinvantī sutāṃ nijām
Unterdessen irrte die schlanke Gṛtācī, von Kummer überwältigt, am Berge Udayagiri umher und suchte ihre eigene Tochter.
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Gṛtācī is a well-known apsaras in Purāṇic and epic traditions. In the Vāmana Purāṇa’s geography-driven chapters, such figures often function as narrative anchors that explain why a place is remembered, named, or ritually significant.
Udayagiri is presented as a distinct mountain landmark associated with the ‘east’ (udaya = sunrise). By situating Gṛtācī’s search there, the text maps emotion and myth onto a concrete topography, reinforcing the Purāṇa’s role as a sacralized gazetteer.
The verse itself names only the mountain, not a ford or shrine. However, in Purāṇic composition, such a mountain reference commonly foreshadows or accompanies nearby tīrthas, rivers, or sanctuaries described in adjacent verses.