Graha–Ketu–Utpāta Lakṣaṇas: Solar/Lunar Omens, Comets, Eclipses, and Calendar Rules
षष्ठः षष्ठश्चेतरेषां कालहोराधिपाः स्मृताः । सार्द्धनाडीद्वयेनैव दिवा रात्रौ यथाक्रमात् ॥ १६७ ॥
ṣaṣṭhaḥ ṣaṣṭhaścetareṣāṃ kālahorādhipāḥ smṛtāḥ | sārddhanāḍīdvayenaiva divā rātrau yathākramāt || 167 ||
Le sixième (seigneur) et, de nouveau, le sixième parmi les autres sont tenus pour les régents des heures du temps (kāla-horā). Chaque heure est faite de deux nāḍīs et demi, se déroulant selon l’ordre, de jour comme de nuit.
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: none
It frames time (kāla) as an ordered, knowable principle; by understanding its divisions and rulers, a practitioner aligns actions with dharma and disciplines the mind toward mokṣa-oriented living.
While technical, it supports bhakti in practice: devotion is strengthened when worship, japa, and vrata-observance are performed with awareness of proper time-order (yathākramāt), emphasizing reverence for cosmic rhythm under divine governance.
Vedāṅga Jyotiṣa: the concept of kāla-horā (hour rulership) and the hora’s duration measured as two and a half nāḍīs, applied distinctly across day and night in sequential rotation.