The Battle at Mandara: Vinayaka, Nandin, and Skanda Rout the Daitya Hosts
नन्दिषेणं तथा बद्धं समीक्ष्य बलिनां वरः विशाखः कपितो ऽभ्येत्य शक्तिपाणिरवस्थितः
nandiṣeṇaṃ tathā baddhaṃ samīkṣya balināṃ varaḥ viśākhaḥ kapito 'bhyetya śaktipāṇiravasthitaḥ
Al ver a Nandiṣeṇa así atado, Viśākha—el más eminente entre los poderosos—se acercó; y el de color leonado (kapitaḥ), con la lanza en la mano, tomó posición, presto para el combate.
{ "primaryRasa": "vira", "secondaryRasa": "raudra", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
In this localized battle narrative, Viśākha is presented as a prominent combatant (‘balināṃ varaḥ’). The name can occur across Purāṇic corpora for different figures; here it should be read as a battlefield hero within the Andhaka-cycle episode rather than automatically equated with other well-known Viśākhas.
It is an epithet describing appearance (tawny/reddish hue), a common Purāṇic technique to individualize warriors quickly in fast-moving combat scenes.
Not directly. This unit is martial narration without tīrtha markers; its value is mythic-historical (gaṇa–asura conflict) rather than geographic cataloging.