HomeMatsya PuranaAdh. 150Shloka 45
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Shloka 45

Matsya Purana — War of Devas and Dānavas: Yama and Kubera Defeated; Kālanemi’s Māyā and the A...

यमो ऽपि कण्ठे ऽवष्टभ्य दैत्यं बाहुयुगेन तु वेगेन भ्रामयामास समुत्कृष्य महीतलात् //

yamo 'pi kaṇṭhe 'vaṣṭabhya daityaṃ bāhuyugena tu vegena bhrāmayāmāsa samutkṛṣya mahītalāt //

Yama too, seizing the demon by the throat with both arms, lifted him up from the surface of the earth and whirled him around with force.

yamaḥYama (Lord of Death)
yamaḥ:
apialso/indeed
api:
kaṇṭheat the throat/neck
kaṇṭhe:
avaṣṭabhyahaving seized/pressed/held fast
avaṣṭabhya:
daityamthe Daitya, demon
daityam:
bāhu-yugenawith a pair of arms, with both arms
bāhu-yugena:
tuthen/indeed
tu:
vegenawith speed/force
vegena:
bhrāmayāmāsacaused to whirl, swung around
bhrāmayāmāsa:
samutkṛṣyahaving lifted up, having raised
samutkṛṣya:
mahī-talātfrom the earth’s surface/ground.
mahī-talāt:
Suta (narrator) describing the combat scene
YamaDaitya
BattleDaityaYamaPuranic warfareHeroic feat

FAQs

This verse does not address Pralaya; it is a martial description highlighting Yama’s physical dominance over a Daitya in a battle episode.

Indirectly, it reinforces the Purāṇic ethic that adharma must be restrained by rightful authority—Yama here embodies firm punishment and control, a model often echoed in rājadharma as the need to subdue violent wrongdoing.

No Vāstu, temple-building, or ritual procedure is stated in this verse; its focus is purely narrative combat action.