Śrīrāmāvatāra-varṇana
Description of the Incarnation of Sri Rama
ब्रह्मात्मजः पुलस्त्योभूत् विश्रवास्तस्य नैकषी पुष्पोत्कटाभूत् प्रथमा तत्पुत्रोभूद्धनेश्वरः
brahmātmajaḥ pulastyobhūt viśravāstasya naikaṣī puṣpotkaṭābhūt prathamā tatputrobhūddhaneśvaraḥ
બ્રહ્માના માનસપુત્ર પુલસ્ત્ય થયા; તેમના પુત્ર વિશ્રવા હતા। વિશ્રવાની પત્ની નૈકાષી હતી; અને તેમની પ્રથમ પત્ની/સંગિની પુષ્પોત્કટા હતી। તેણીમાંથી ધનેશ્વર (કુબેર) જન્મ્યા।
Lord Agni (narrating Purāṇic genealogy to sage Vasiṣṭha)
Vidya Category: {"primary_vidya":"Cosmology","secondary_vidya":"Samanya","practical_application":"Genealogical mapping used for remembering mythic lineages, contextualizing characters (Kubera, Pulastya, Viśravas) and their roles in broader Purāṇic history.","sutra_style":true}
Encyclopedic Reference: {"reference_type":"List","entry_title":"Pulastya–Viśravas–Kubera (Dhaneśvara) vaṃśa-sūcī","lookup_keywords":["Pulastya","Viśravas","Naikāṣī","Puṣpotkaṭā","Kubera Dhaneśvara"],"quick_summary":"A concise lineage note: from Brahmā’s mind-born Pulastya comes Viśravas; through Puṣpotkaṭā is born Dhaneśvara (Kubera), establishing the wealth-deity’s ancestry."}
Concept: Purāṇic vaṃśa as a knowledge-system for organizing cosmic history and divine functions (wealth, guardianship of directions).
Application: Use genealogies to connect deities and sages across narratives, aiding ritual storytelling, iconographic identification, and cultural memory.
Khanda Section: Puranic Genealogy (Vamsha-Anucharita / Lineage Narratives)
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Type: City
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A genealogical visualization: Brahmā’s mind-born Pulastya, then Viśravas with consorts Naikāṣī and Puṣpotkaṭā, culminating in Kubera (Dhaneśvara) as lord of wealth.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural, hierarchical lineage tableau: Brahmā above, Pulastya and Viśravas as sages, Puṣpotkaṭā as dignified consort, Kubera below with wealth symbols, stylized lotus separators and traditional palette","tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore, central Kubera with gold halo and ornaments, flanked by sage-ancestors in smaller registers, embossed gold coins and jewelry motifs, temple-like framing","mysore_prompt":"Mysore painting, diagrammatic family-tree composition with labeled figures implied, soft colors, clear separation of generations, Kubera iconography emphasized for identification","mughal_miniature_prompt":"Mughal miniature, courtly portrait treatment of sages and consorts in separate panels, culminating in Kubera seated with attendants and treasure, fine detailing and balanced composition"}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"instructional","suggested_raga":null,"pace":"fast","voice_tone":"instructional"}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: पुलस्त्योभूत् = पुलस्त्यः + अभूत्; विश्रवास्तस्य = विश्रवाः + तस्य; पुष्पोत्कटाभूत् = पुष्पोत्कटा + अभूत्; तत्पुत्रोभूत् = तत् + पुत्रः + अभूत्; भूद्धनेश्वरः = अभूत् + धनेश्वरः (त् + ध् → द्ध्).
Related Themes: Agni Purana vaṃśa-anucarita/genealogy sequences around Brahmā’s mānasa-putras and their descendants (near ch.11)
This verse imparts genealogical knowledge (vaṁśa-vidyā)—identifying Pulastya’s lineage through Viśravas and the birth of Dhaneśvara (Kubera), used to anchor later narratives and deity/being classifications.
By cataloging lineages of sages and divine figures, it functions like a reference index for Purāṇic cosmology—supporting interconnected topics such as creation accounts, regional myths, and the origins of deities like Kubera.
Remembering and reciting sacred lineages is traditionally treated as purifying (smṛti-śuddhi) and devotionally meritorious, reinforcing continuity of dharma through revered ancestral and sage traditions.