HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 57Shloka 6
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Shloka 6

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

उदपाने तथा स्नात्वा तत्राभ्यर्च्य पितॄन् वशी गदापाणिं समभ्यर्च्य गोपतिं चापि शङ्करम्

udapāne tathā snātvā tatrābhyarcya pitṝn vaśī gadāpāṇiṃ samabhyarcya gopatiṃ cāpi śaṅkaram

Likewise, having bathed at the well (udāpāna) and having worshipped the Pitṛs there, the self-controlled one duly worshipped Gadāpāṇi, and also Gopati, and Śaṅkara.

Narrator describing sequential rites within the Gayā pilgrimage circuit
Vishnu (Gadāpāṇi)Vishnu (Gopati)Shiva (Śaṅkara)Pitrs (ancestors)
Integration of pitṛ-ritual with deity worshipŚaiva–Vaiṣṇava unity at a single tīrthaTīrtha micro-topography (wells and bathing points)Discipline (vaśitva) as qualification for rite

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

FAQs

Purāṇic tīrtha practice often layers obligations: pitṛ-kārya (ancestral duty) is performed alongside iṣṭa-devatā worship. The verse portrays Gayā as a confluence where ancestral rites and the worship of major deities mutually reinforce merit.

It signals a specific, named or functionally distinct water-source within the sacred terrain. Such wells/ponds are treated as ritual stations (micro-tīrthas), each with its own prescribed acts like snāna and arcana.

They are distinct epithets that can refer to the same supreme deity (Viṣṇu) in different iconographic or local shrine contexts: Gadāpāṇi emphasizes the mace-bearing form, while Gopati emphasizes lordship/protection associated with cows and pastoral symbolism.