HomeMatsya PuranaAdh. 8Shloka 6
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Shloka 6

Matsya Purana — Secondary Creation: Appointment of Cosmic Regents and Consecration of Directi...

प्रालेयशैलं च पतिं गिरीणाम् ईशं समुद्रं ससरिन्नदानाम् गन्धर्वविद्याधरकिंनराणाम् ईशं पुनश्चित्ररथं चकार //

prāleyaśailaṃ ca patiṃ girīṇām īśaṃ samudraṃ sasarinnadānām gandharvavidyādharakiṃnarāṇām īśaṃ punaścitrarathaṃ cakāra //

He appointed Prāleyaśaila as the lord of mountains; he made the ocean the sovereign of rivers and streams; and again, he established Citraratha as the lord over the Gandharvas, Vidyādharas, and Kinnaras.

prāleyaśailamPrāleya mountain (the Snowy mountain)
prāleyaśailam:
caand
ca:
patimlord, master
patim:
girīṇāmof mountains
girīṇām:
īśamruler, sovereign
īśam:
samudramthe ocean
samudram:
sasarit-nadānāmof rivers (sarit) and streams/flows (nadā)
sasarit-nadānām:
gandharvaGandharvas (celestial musicians)
gandharva:
vidyādharaVidyādharas (holders of magical knowledge)
vidyādhara:
kiṃnaraṇāmof Kinnaras (celestial beings)
kiṃnaraṇām:
īśamlord
īśam:
punaḥagain, further
punaḥ:
citrarathamCitraratha (chief Gandharva)
citraratham:
cakāramade, established, appointed.
cakāra:
Suta (narratorial voice recounting cosmic appointments; commonly framed within the Matsya Purana’s discourse to Manu)
PrāleyaśailaSamudra (Ocean)Sarit (Rivers)Nadā (Streams)GandharvasVidyādharasKinnarasCitraratha
Cosmic orderPresiding deitiesPuranic cosmologyGandharva-lokaHierarchy of beings

FAQs

Rather than describing Pralaya directly, the verse highlights post-creation governance: the cosmos is stabilized by assigning “lords” (īśa/pati) to domains like mountains, oceans, and celestial communities.

It models dharmic administration: just as cosmic realms have appointed overseers, a king should delegate authority appropriately, and a householder should maintain order in household roles—each sphere functioning best with clear responsibility.

Indirectly, it supports the Vastu/Shilpa principle of “presiding powers” (adhidevatā): sacred geography (mountains, waters) is treated as governed and ritually respected, informing site-selection, water-body reverence, and consecration attitudes in temple and settlement planning.