Incarnations of Mahādeva in Kali-yuga (Vaivasvata Manvantara) and the Nakulīśa Horizon
दशमो ब्रह्मसावर्णो धर्मसावर्ण एव च / द्वादशो रुद्रसावर्णो रोचमानस्त्रयोदशः / भौत्यश्चतुर्दशः प्रोक्तो भविष्या मनवः क्रमात्
daśamo brahmasāvarṇo dharmasāvarṇa eva ca / dvādaśo rudrasāvarṇo rocamānastrayodaśaḥ / bhautyaścaturdaśaḥ prokto bhaviṣyā manavaḥ kramāt
Le dixième Manu est Brahma-sāvarṇa, et de même le onzième est Dharma-sāvarṇa. Le douzième est Rudra-sāvarṇa; le treizième est Rocamāna. Le quatorzième est proclamé Bhautyā : ainsi, selon l’ordre, sont dits les Manus à venir.
Narrator (Purana narrator in the Kurma Purana’s discourse tradition, relaying the cosmic chronology of Manvantaras)
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
This verse does not directly define Ātman; it frames cosmic order through successive Manus, implying a divinely sustained rhythm of creation and governance within which spiritual realization (Ātma-jñāna) is pursued.
No specific yoga technique is taught in this line; its contribution is contextual—Manvantara time-cycles form the cosmological backdrop against which disciplines like Pāśupata Yoga and devotion to Īśvara are practiced and transmitted.
By listing Manus such as Rudra-sāvarṇa alongside others, the verse reflects the Purāṇic synthesis where cosmic administration is not sectarian: Rudra and the broader divine order function harmoniously within the same dharmic chronology.