Ṣāḍguṇya — The Six Measures of Foreign Policy
with Rāja-maṇḍala Theory
बलवद्विग्रहीतेन सन्धिं कुर्याच्छिवाय च कपाल उपहारश् च सन्तानः सङ्गतस् तथा
balavadvigrahītena sandhiṃ kuryācchivāya ca kapāla upahāraś ca santānaḥ saṅgatas tathā
Por el bien y la prosperidad (śiva), debe concluirse un sandhi (tratado) incluso con un agresor poderoso. Asimismo, debe ofrecerse un kapāla (cráneo) como don de oblación; y asegurar la continuidad del linaje y la cohesión de la alianza, del mismo modo.
Lord Agni (instructing Vasiṣṭha) — conventional Agni Purana dialogue frame
Vidya Category: {"primary_vidya":"Arthashastra","secondary_vidya":"Tantra","practical_application":"Crisis diplomacy: even with a stronger aggressor, conclude peace for welfare; employ appeasement/offerings and secure dynastic continuity and alliance cohesion as state objectives.","sutra_style":true}
Encyclopedic Reference: {"reference_type":"Procedure","entry_title":"Treaty with a Powerful Aggressor; Offerings and Securing Lineage & Alliance Cohesion","lookup_keywords":["balavat vigrahītā","sandhi","śiva (welfare)","kapāla upahāra","santāna saṅgata"],"quick_summary":"When overmatched, prioritize welfare by making treaty with the stronger enemy. Complement diplomacy with symbolic gifts/offerings and ensure succession and alliance unity to stabilize the polity."}
Concept: Śiva (welfare/auspicious outcome) as the criterion: dharmic kingship chooses peace when it preserves life, lineage, and social order.
Application: If enemy strength is superior, negotiate; use culturally resonant gifts/ritual gestures to seal intent; protect succession and keep allies bound by shared interest.
Khanda Section: Rajadharma & Niti-shastra (Treaty-making, diplomacy, and governance)
Primary Rasa: niti
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A king meets a formidable aggressor-king to sign a treaty; attendants present a ritual offering (kapāla as symbolic oblation-gift); behind, the king’s heir is shown, and allied chiefs clasp hands to show cohesion.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural, two kings facing with treaty scroll, ritual tray bearing a kapāla offering, priests and ministers present, heir-prince standing behind the home king, allied chieftains in a united row, bold traditional palette","tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting with gold leaf, treaty ceremony under ornate canopy, offering plate with kapāla rendered in stylized form, halos and rich jewelry, heir and allied chiefs emphasized with gold detailing","mysore_prompt":"Mysore style, narrative-instructional scene: treaty signing, separate inset panels for 'offerings', 'lineage continuity' (heir), and 'alliance cohesion' (joined hands), fine lines and muted elegance","mughal_miniature_prompt":"Mughal miniature, diplomatic durbar with two rulers, scribes drafting treaty, gift-bearers with ritual object, prince-heir in attendance, allied nobles grouped, detailed carpets and architectural backdrop"}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"contemplative","suggested_raga":"Bhairavi","pace":"slow","voice_tone":"instructional"}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: बलवद्विग्रहीतेन→बलवत् विग्रहीतेन; कुर्याच्छिवाय→कुर्यात् शिवाय (त्+श→च्छ)
Related Themes: Agni Purana Rajadharma sections on sandhi, upāyas, and succession (santāna)
It teaches sandhi-nīti (treaty policy): even with a stronger hostile power, peace may be strategically concluded for śiva (public welfare), alongside mention of a kapāla-upahāra (a specific ritual offering) as part of prescribed acts.
It blends political science (treaty-making, alliance consolidation, succession/lineage continuity) with ritual detail (kapāla-offering), showing how the Agni Purana treats governance and religious practice as interlinked domains of applied knowledge.
By prioritizing śiva (auspicious welfare) through prudent peace and prescribed offerings, the verse frames state policy as dharmic action that preserves social order, reduces harm, and supports merit through right conduct.