एकादशभिरैश्वर्यं चक्रगः संप्रयच्छति । निर्वाणं द्वादशात्मा च द्वादशभिर्ददाति च
ekādaśabhiraiśvaryaṃ cakragaḥ saṃprayacchati | nirvāṇaṃ dvādaśātmā ca dvādaśabhirdadāti ca
Avec onze marques, le Seigneur lié au Cakra accorde l’aiśvarya : souveraineté, puissance et prospérité. Avec douze marques, comme le Soi aux douze aspects (dvādaśātmā), Il donne le nirvāṇa, également par ces douze marques.
Sūta (Lomaharṣaṇa) to the sages (deduced)
Tirtha: Cakratīrtha (Dvārakā)
Type: ghat
Listener: Pilgrim audience
Scene: Hari as Cakradhara stands above a tīrtha-ghāṭa; to one side, symbols of aiśvarya (crown, throne, prosperity) and to the other, symbols of nirvāṇa (lotus of release, serene light), linked by a twelve-petaled mandala.
Sacred association can yield both aiśvarya (worldly excellence) and nirvāṇa (ultimate release), with liberation presented as the highest culmination.
The Dvārakā region’s Cakra-centered sanctity, explicitly pointing to the Cakra-associated presence (contextually Cakratīrtha).
No explicit ritual; it emphasizes the phala (results) tied to the sacred Cakra association.