Matsya Purana — Code of Conduct and Vow-Procedure for Courtesans
तेषां व्रातसहस्राणि शतान्यपि च योषिताम् परिणीतानि यानि स्युर् बलाद्भुक्तानि यानि वै तानि सर्वाणि देवेशः प्रोवाच वदतां वरः //
teṣāṃ vrātasahasrāṇi śatānyapi ca yoṣitām pariṇītāni yāni syur balādbhuktāni yāni vai tāni sarvāṇi deveśaḥ provāca vadatāṃ varaḥ //
Au sujet de ces femmes—qu’il s’agît des vœux innombrables et même des centaines d’observances qu’elles avaient entrepris, des mariages contractés selon le rite, ou des cas où elles furent violées par la force—tout cela fut exposé par le Seigneur des dieux, le plus éminent des orateurs.
This verse is not about cosmic dissolution; it shifts to dharma—how vows, marriages, and violations involving women are to be accounted for and explained by the divine teacher.
It frames a king’s/householder’s duty to treat marital status and sexual violation as serious dharmic categories—distinguishing lawful marriage from coercion and requiring principled adjudication and ethical reckoning rather than confusion of cases.
The ritual element appears indirectly through “vrāta” (vow-observances): the text signals that vows and social rites (like marriage) must be interpreted within dharma, but no Vāstu or temple-architecture rule is stated in this verse.