Kṣātra-Dharma, Daṇḍanīti, and Social Order
Indra–Māndhātṛ Dialogue
बभूव राजा राजेन्द्र मान्धाता नाम वीर्यवान् | पुरा वसुमतीपालो यज्ञ चक्रे दिदृक्षया
babhūva rājā rājendra māndhātā nāma vīryavān | purā vasumatīpālo yajñaṃ cakre didṛkṣayā ||
Bhīṣma said: “O king among kings, there once lived a mighty ruler named Māndhātṛ, a protector of the earth. Long ago he undertook a sacrifice (yajña), driven by the desire to behold—the divine and the higher order revealed through yajña.”
भीष्म उवाच
The verse introduces an exemplary ancient king and frames yajña as a dharmic act of rulership: a righteous protector of the earth seeks higher vision/confirmation of sacred order through sacrifice, implying that political power is meant to be aligned with ritual duty and moral purpose.
Bhīṣma begins a traditional illustrative episode (itihāsa) for the king he is instructing, stating that in ancient times the powerful king Māndhātṛ, ruler of the earth, performed a yajña motivated by a desire to behold something auspicious/divine, setting up the lesson that follows.