Shiva’s Kedara-Tirtha and the Rise of Mura: From Shaiva Pilgrimage to Vaishnava Theology
वीटया तु पतन्त्याद्रिर्दारितः क्ष्मासमो ऽभवत् जातस्तीर्थवरः पुम्यः केदार इति विश्रुतः
vīṭayā tu patantyādrirdāritaḥ kṣmāsamo 'bhavat jātastīrthavaraḥ pumyaḥ kedāra iti viśrutaḥ
Et par cette vīṭā tombée, la montagne se fendit et devint au niveau de la terre ; il s’éleva alors un tīrtha très excellent et sacré, renommé sous le nom de « Kedāra ».
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The verse presents ‘Kedāra’ as a renowned tīrtha arising from a mythic event. Whether it maps exactly onto the later pan-Indian Kedārnāth complex depends on the Purāṇa’s internal geography and later reception; Purāṇic ‘Kedāra’ often functions as a sacral toponym that can be localized by tradition.
Flattening/leveling signals a dramatic transformation of landscape—an etiological marker explaining a distinctive terrain feature and simultaneously indicating that the site has been ‘prepared’ as a kṣetra suitable for pilgrimage and ritual.
It ranks the site among premier pilgrimage places, implying heightened efficacy for bathing, worship, vows, and gifts—i.e., accelerated production of puṇya and removal of pāpa, which the next verse makes explicit.