HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 57Shloka 44
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Shloka 44

Prahlada's Tirtha CircuitPrahlada’s Pilgrimage Circuit: Tirtha-Mahatmya from Naimisha to Rudrakoti and Shalagrama

तत्र स्नात्वार्ऽच्य च पितृन् सोमं संपूज्य भक्तिततः क्षीरिकावासमभ्येत्य स्नानं चक्रे महायशाः

tatra snātvār'cya ca pitṛn somaṃ saṃpūjya bhaktitataḥ kṣīrikāvāsamabhyetya snānaṃ cakre mahāyaśāḥ

[{"question": "Who are the Cāraṇas, and why are they present here?", "answer": "Cāraṇas are celestial bards who witness and proclaim divine deeds. Their presence frames the event as universally significant—worthy of being sung and remembered across worlds."}, {"question": "What does ‘vismayotphūllanayanāḥ’ convey beyond simple surprise?", "answer": "It depicts a devotional-aesthetic response (adbhuta-rasa): the miracle is so extraordinary that it physically manifests as widened eyes, underscoring the event’s revelatory power."}, {"question": "Why is Viṣṇu called ‘Janārdana’ in a liberation episode?", "answer": "The epithet connects Viṣṇu to the human/divine community that seeks him; in such episodes, he is the one who responds to cries for help and is therefore naturally the object of communal praise."}]

Narratorial voice continuing the itinerary description within the Saromahatmya.
Soma (Chandra)Pitrs (ancestral deities/collective)
Pitṛ-tarpaṇa / ancestral rites at tirthasDevotional worship (bhakti)Pilgrimage as sequential purification (multiple snānas)Tirtha network mapping (place-to-place movement)

{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "karuna", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }

FAQs

Soma is closely linked with nourishment, the lunar cycle, and the Pitṛ-world in many Purāṇic and Smṛti frameworks. A Soma-associated tirtha is therefore an especially fitting locus for pitṛ-arcana/tarpaṇa, integrating cosmic symbolism (Moon) with ancestral obligation (ṛṇa to Pitṛs).

Each tirtha is treated as a distinct ‘ritual field’ with its own merit (puṇya). Bathing at each station is not redundant; it is the formal act that ‘activates’ the tirtha’s promised fruit and marks transition from one sacred micro-region to the next.

Names like Kṣīrikā-vāsa typically preserve local cult-memory—either a goddess/river-personification (Kṣīrikā) or a site famed for milk-like waters/offerings (kṣīra). The Purāṇa’s method is to sacralize such localities by embedding them in an authoritative pilgrimage itinerary.