The Description of the Four Durgā Mantras
अनंगपदपूर्वाश्च मातंग्यंताः समीरिताः । विन्यस्तव्यास्ततो मूलेऽधिष्ठाने मणिपूरके ॥ ११८ ॥
anaṃgapadapūrvāśca mātaṃgyaṃtāḥ samīritāḥ | vinyastavyāstato mūle'dhiṣṭhāne maṇipūrake || 118 ||
Se han enunciado las sílabas que comienzan con “Anaṅga” y concluyen en “Mātaṅgī”. Luego deben colocarse, mediante nyāsa, en la raíz, en Svādhiṣṭhāna y en Maṇipūraka.
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: none
It teaches a precise ritual-yogic method (nyāsa) where specific mantra-units are installed in key subtle centers, aligning the practitioner’s body as a seat of the mantra’s power.
While technical in tone, it supports devotional practice by prescribing disciplined mantra-application; correct nyāsa is presented as a way to internalize worship so devotion becomes embodied and steady.
It reflects applied ritual science—mantra-vidhi and nyāsa (procedural placement)—a technical discipline aligned with the Purana’s Book 1.3 focus on structured sacred practices.
Curious about the meaning, context, or a word? Ask, and continue the conversation in the Vedapath app.
A free Google sign-in keeps your chat saved across web and the app.
Read Narada Purana in the Vedapath app
Scan the QR code to open this directly in the app, with audio, word-by-word meanings, and more.