Sukta 21
Kanda 6Anuvaka 3Sukta 213 Mantras

Sukta 21

Rishi: Atharvanic seer tradition for oṣadhi hymns (often anonymous/collective in later indices).

Devata: Oṣadhi (the herb) and Bhūmi/Pṛthivī as source of medicinal power.

Chandas: Anuṣṭubh tendencies with prose-like opening label; metrical classification varies due to the initial rubric-like phrase.

Mantras

Frequently Asked Questions

It is used to consecrate a hair-promoting herb so it strengthens hair and increases growth, treating the remedy as an earth-derived power that can be made ritually effective.

Because the hymn grounds medicinal potency in the earth itself: Bhūmi is called the highest support, and the remedy is said to be taken from the earth’s outer layer—symbolizing concentrated, accessible healing power.

Traditionally it refers to keśavardhanī, a hair-increasing herb; in practice, a locally known hair-strengthening plant may be used, but the rite’s logic is to treat the herb (especially its ‘skin/bark’ layer) as the medicine empowered by the mantra.