The Slaying of Raktabīja and Niśumbha–Śumbha; the Manifestation of the Mātṛkās and the Devas’ Hymn
नमस्ते त्रिनेत्रे भगवति तवचरणानुषिता ये अहरहर्विनतशिरसो ऽवनताः नहि नहि परिभवमस्त्यशुभं च स्तुतिबलिकुसुमकराः सततं ये
namaste trinetre bhagavati tavacaraṇānuṣitā ye aharaharvinataśiraso 'vanatāḥ nahi nahi paribhavamastyaśubhaṃ ca stutibalikusumakarāḥ satataṃ ye
{"bhagavata_parallel": null, "vishnu_purana_parallel": null, "ramayana_connection": null, "mahabharata_echo": "Skanda’s birth-cycle motifs (Agni as carrier of divine seed/tejas) echo broader epic and itihāsa traditions around Kumāra’s theogony.", "other_puranas": ["Shiva Purana (Skanda-janma cycle)", "Skanda Purana", "Linga Purana", "Matsya Purana (Skanda-related theogony variants)"], "vedic_reference": "Agni as Hutāśa and bearer/consumer of offerings is Vedic; the notion of tejas as a cosmic principle resonates with Vedic fire theology (general)."}
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "karuna", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
“Trinetra” is primarily a Śiva-epithet, but in Purāṇic stutis it can mark the Goddess as Śiva’s own power (Śakti) or as the supreme divinity sharing Śaiva attributes. It signals her all-seeing sovereignty and her capacity to burn away evil/inauspiciousness, analogous to the third eye’s fiery discernment.
The verse states a protective fruit (phala): those who daily bow in humility and regularly offer stuti, bali, and flowers are not overcome by paribhava (humiliation/defeat) and are kept free from aśubha (inauspicious misfortune).
No. Despite the Vāmana Purāṇa’s strong geographical orientation elsewhere, this śloka is purely devotional/ritual in content and contains no named sacred sites.