Harihara Revelation and the Kurukshetra Tirtha Cycle: Sthanu in Vishnu and the Sanctification of Saptasarasvata
द्वादशारं तथा चक्रं षष्णाभि द्वियुतं तथा त्रिव्यूहमेकमूर्तिश्च तथोक्तः परमेश्वरः
dvādaśāraṃ tathā cakraṃ ṣaṣṇābhi dviyutaṃ tathā trivyūhamekamūrtiśca tathoktaḥ parameśvaraḥ
Así se describe al Señor Supremo: “(Él porta) un disco con doce radios; y asimismo (una forma) con seis cubos unidos por pares; y (Él es) la única forma corpórea de los tres vyūhas—tal como se ha dicho.”
{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
A twelve-spoked wheel commonly evokes completeness and cosmic order—often mapped to the twelve Ādityas, twelve months, or the full cycle of time. In Vaishnava iconography it also points to Sudarśana, the Lord’s sovereign power that upholds dharma.
It states that the three vyūhas (emanational aspects taught in Pāñcarātra theology) are not separate gods but unified in one supreme embodied reality. The verse compresses a theological claim (emanations) into a dhyāna-description (one form).
Within such dhyāna passages, multiple wheel-descriptors can function as layered symbolism rather than separate objects: different ‘wheel-structures’ can encode doctrinal sets (numbers, groupings) while still referring to the Lord’s cakra as the emblem of rule and cosmic regulation.