Harihara Revelation and the Kurukshetra Tirtha Cycle: Sthanu in Vishnu and the Sanctification of Saptasarasvata
पितामहो ऽपि तं पुत्रं साध्यं सद्धिनयान्वितम् सनत्कुमारं प्रोवाच योगं द्वादशपत्रकम्
pitāmaho 'pi taṃ putraṃ sādhyaṃ saddhinayānvitam sanatkumāraṃ provāca yogaṃ dvādaśapatrakam
Entonces el Abuelo primordial (Pitāmaha) instruyó también a aquel hijo—apto para el logro y dotado de buena disciplina—, a Sanatkumāra, en una enseñanza de yoga expuesta en doce «secciones/hojas».
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It most naturally denotes a teaching organized into twelve units—like twelve sections, topics, or ‘folios’. Purāṇic authors often use ‘patra’ metaphorically for a leaf/folio of a text, implying a structured syllabus rather than a single verse instruction.
Sanatkumāra is a canonical figure of ascetic wisdom—an eternally youthful mind-born son of Brahmā associated with renunciation, jñāna, and yogic realization. Making him the recipient authorizes the yoga teaching as ancient and exemplary.
Indirectly. While no place-name appears here, the Vāmana Purāṇa frequently embeds doctrinal teachings within pilgrimage narratives; yogic instruction can function as the ‘inner tirtha’ counterpart to outer sacred geography, pairing place-mahātmya with soteriological method.