HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 42Shloka 54
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Shloka 54

Battle at MandaraThe Battle at Mandara: Vinayaka, Nandin, and Skanda Rout the Daitya Hosts

ते वध्यमानाः प्रमथैर्दैत्याश्चापि पराङ्मुखाःष भूयो निवृत्ता बलिनः कार्त्तस्वरपुरोगमाः

te vadhyamānāḥ pramathairdaityāścāpi parāṅmukhāḥṣa bhūyo nivṛttā balinaḥ kārttasvarapurogamāḥ

Bien qu’ils fussent tués par les Pramathas, les Daityas se détournèrent; pourtant, une fois encore, ces puissants—menés par Kārttasvara—revinrent au combat.

Narratorial voice continuing the battle description.
Śiva
Asura resilience and regroupingPramatha/gaṇa ferocityBattle reversals (retreat and return)Command structure among Asuras

{ "primaryRasa": "vira", "secondaryRasa": "bhayanaka", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }

FAQs

They overlap. ‘Pramathas’ are a well-known fierce subset/class of Śiva’s attendants; in battle narration Purāṇas often use pramatha/gaṇa interchangeably to emphasize their terrifying, disruptive nature.

Parāṅmukha literally means ‘turned away’. In epic-Purāṇic battle style it can indicate a momentary rout or tactical withdrawal; the next hemistich (‘bhūyo nivṛttā’) explicitly frames it as a regrouping and return.

Kārttasvara is presented as the leader (purogama) of the returning Daitya force. The name suggests ‘golden splendor’ (kārttasvara = gold), a common Asura epithet/name indicating brilliance, wealth, or martial radiance.