HomeMatsya PuranaAdh. 118Shloka 25
Previous Verse
Next Verse

Shloka 25

Matsya Purana — Description of Atri’s Hermitage: Sacred Grove Planning

कङ्कोलकैर्लवङ्गैश्च त्वग्द्रुमैः पारिजातकैः प्रतानैः पिप्पलीनां च नागवल्यश्च भागशः //

kaṅkolakairlavaṅgaiśca tvagdrumaiḥ pārijātakaiḥ pratānaiḥ pippalīnāṃ ca nāgavalyaśca bhāgaśaḥ //

Using kankola berries, cloves, cinnamon bark (tvak), pārijāta blossoms, clusters of long pepper (pippalī), and betel leaves (nāgavalī)—each taken in due proportion, part by part.

कङ्कोलकैःwith kankola (cubeb/allspice-like aromatic berries)
कङ्कोलकैः:
लवङ्गैःwith cloves
लवङ्गैः:
and
:
त्वग्द्रुमैःwith cinnamon bark (tvak)
त्वग्द्रुमैः:
पारिजातकैःwith pārijāta flowers
पारिजातकैः:
प्रतानैःwith clusters/sprays (bundles)
प्रतानैः:
पिप्पलीनांof pippalī (long pepper)
पिप्पलीनां:
and
:
नागवल्यःbetel leaves
नागवल्यः:
and
:
भागशःaccording to parts/proportions
भागशः:
Lord Matsya (in discourse to Vaivasvata Manu, instructional passage)
MatsyaVaivasvata Manu
Ritual materialsAromaticsAyurvedic substancesTemple ritualVastuvidya context

FAQs

This verse does not discuss pralaya; it is a practical list of aromatic substances to be combined in measured proportions for ritual or temple-use preparations.

It supports dharmic practice by prescribing proper materials (pure, fragrant substances) for offerings and worship—duties traditionally upheld by householders and patron-kings who sponsor rites and temple maintenance.

Ritually, it specifies standard aromatics (clove, cinnamon, long pepper, betel, etc.) and emphasizes proportional mixing (bhāgaśaḥ), aligning with temple-procedure precision often embedded in Vastu/Āgamic-style instructions.