Battle at Mandara — The Battle at Mandara: Vinayaka, Nandin, and Skanda Rout the Daitya Hosts
विशाखं संनिरुद्धं वै दृष्ट्वायशिरसा रणे शाखश्च नैगमेयश्च तूर्णमाद्रवतां रिपुम्
viśākhaṃ saṃniruddhaṃ vai dṛṣṭvāyaśirasā raṇe śākhaśca naigameyaśca tūrṇamādravatāṃ ripum
Voyant Viśākha contenu au combat par Ayaḥśiras, Śākha et Naigameya se précipitèrent promptement vers l’ennemi.
{ "primaryRasa": "vira", "secondaryRasa": "raudra", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
The verse depicts a common epic tactic: when a key fighter (here Viśākha) is impeded by a powerful opponent (Ayaḥśiras), allied champions intervene to relieve pressure, restore formation, or attempt a quick takedown of the obstructing enemy.
Naigameya is a name that appears in Skanda-related circles, sometimes as an attendant/associate figure. In many Purāṇic lists, such names function as roster-identifiers for divine or semi-divine combatants rather than fully developed narrative characters in every occurrence.
Both readings are viable: it can mean literal obstruction in single combat, and also tactical containment—preventing Viśākha from advancing or executing a decisive strike.