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Agni Purana — Raja-dharma, Shloka 21

Yātrā-Maṇḍala-Cintā and Rājya-Rakṣaṇa: Auspicious Travel Rules and the Twelve-King Mandala

त्रिविधा रिपवो ज्ञेयाः कुल्यानन्तरकृत्रिमाः पूर्वपूर्वो गुरुस्तेषां दुश्चिकित्स्यतमो मतः

trividhā ripavo jñeyāḥ kulyānantarakṛtrimāḥ pūrvapūrvo gurusteṣāṃ duścikitsyatamo mataḥ

शत्रु तीन प्रकार के जानने चाहिए—कुल्य (वंश/कुटुम्ब से उत्पन्न), अनन्तर (निकटवर्ती/पड़ोसी), और कृत्रिम (कृत्रिम रूप से बनाए गए)। इनमें जो पहले कहा गया है, वह अगले से अधिक गंभीर और अधिक दुश्चिकित्स्य (सुधारने में कठिन) माना गया है।

tri-vidhāḥthreefold
tri-vidhāḥ:
Visheshana (विशेषण)
TypeAdjective
Roottri (संख्या-प्रातिपदिक) + vidhā (प्रातिपदिक)
Formपुंलिङ्ग, प्रथमा, बहुवचन; तत्पुरुष-समास (त्रयः विधाः)
ripavaḥenemies
ripavaḥ:
Karta (कर्ता/Subject)
TypeNoun
Rootripu (प्रातिपदिक)
Formपुंलिङ्ग, प्रथमा, बहुवचन
jñeyāḥare to be known
jñeyāḥ:
Kriya (क्रिया/predicate)
TypeVerb
Rootjñeya (प्रातिपदिक; √jñā, तव्यत्)
Formतव्यत्-प्रत्ययान्त कृदन्त (gerundive/obligatory passive), पुंलिङ्ग, प्रथमा, बहुवचन; ‘to be known’
kulya-anantara-kṛtrimāḥ(as) familial, immediate, and artificial
kulya-anantara-kṛtrimāḥ:
Visheshana (विशेषण)
TypeAdjective
Rootkulya (प्रातिपदिक) + anantara (प्रातिपदिक) + kṛtrima (प्रातिपदिक)
Formपुंलिङ्ग, प्रथमा, बहुवचन; समाहार-द्वन्द्व/सूची-द्वन्द्व (three classes listed)
pūrva-pūrvaḥthe earlier (of them)
pūrva-pūrvaḥ:
Karta (कर्ता/subject)
TypeAdjective
Rootpūrva (प्रातिपदिक) + pūrva (प्रातिपदिक)
Formपुंलिङ्ग, प्रथमा, एकवचन; कर्मधारय (पूर्वः पूर्वः = earlier one)
guruḥmore weighty / more important
guruḥ:
Karta (कर्ता/subject-complement)
TypeAdjective
Rootguru (प्रातिपदिक)
Formपुंलिङ्ग, प्रथमा, एकवचन; विशेषण (heavy/important)
teṣāmof them
teṣām:
Sambandha (सम्बन्ध/Genitive)
TypeNoun
Roottad (तद् सर्वनाम-प्रातिपदिक)
Formषष्ठी-विभक्ति, बहुवचन; सर्वनाम
duś-cikitsya-tamaḥmost difficult to remedy
duś-cikitsya-tamaḥ:
Karta (कर्ता/subject-complement)
TypeAdjective
Rootdus (उपसर्ग/अव्यय) + cikitsya (प्रातिपदिक; √cit/kit? ‘to treat’, यत्/तव्य) + tama (तमप्)
Formपुंलिङ्ग, प्रथमा, एकवचन; तत्पुरुष (दुष् + चिकित्स्य) + तमप् (superlative)
mataḥis considered
mataḥ:
Kriya (क्रिया/predicate)
TypeVerb
Rootmata (प्रातिपदिक; √man ‘to think’, क्त)
Formभूतकर्मणि कृदन्त (past passive participle), पुंलिङ्ग, प्रथमा, एकवचन; ‘is considered’

Lord Agni (instructing Sage Vasiṣṭha)

Vidya Category: {"primary_vidya":"Arthashastra","secondary_vidya":"Dharmashastra","practical_application":"Risk assessment in governance: identify enemy types (kin, neighbor, manufactured) and prioritize mitigation, recognizing that internal/kin-based hostility is hardest to cure.","sutra_style":true}

Encyclopedic Reference: {"reference_type":"List","entry_title":"Trividha Ripu (Threefold Enemies) — kulyā, anantara, kṛtrima","lookup_keywords":["trividha ripu","kulya shatru","anantara shatru","kritrima shatru","niti"],"quick_summary":"Enemies are classified into three: kin-based, adjacent, and manufactured. The earlier types are more dangerous and more difficult to remedy, guiding priority in security and diplomacy."}

Concept: Proximity and intimacy increase political danger; internal discord is the most intractable.

Application: Strengthen succession clarity, manage factions, and build neighbor diplomacy; treat manufactured enmity with negotiation and intelligence operations.

Khanda Section: Rajadharma (Statecraft and Governance: enemies, policy, and social order)

Primary Rasa: vira

Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka

Type: Kingdom

Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"Three panels showing enemy types: a rival kinsman within the palace, a neighboring king at the border, and a schemer instigating conflict through intrigue.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural triptych: (1) palace intrigue among relatives, (2) border confrontation with adjacent ruler, (3) shadowy minister/spy creating manufactured enmity; bold outlines, expressive eyes, warm palette.","tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore: three framed vignettes with gold borders—kinsman rival, neighboring foe, and instigator; central king advised by ministers; rich gold embossing and jewel tones.","mysore_prompt":"Mysore: didactic three-scene composition with captions; refined faces; emphasis on clarity of categories and hierarchy of severity; soft colors and delicate ornament.","mughal_miniature_prompt":"Mughal miniature: narrative sequence across a single page—court faction, border embassy turning hostile, clandestine bribery; intricate architectural and textile detail."}

Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"serious","suggested_raga":"Bhairavi","pace":"medium","voice_tone":"instructional"}

Sandhi Resolution Notes: gurusteṣāṃ = guruḥ + teṣām; duścikitsyatamo = duḥ + cikitsya + tamaḥ (visarga → ś before c).

Related Themes: Agni Purana Rajadharma discussions on enemies, spies, and counsel (contextual)

A
Agni Purana
R
Rajadharma
R
Ripu (enemy)

FAQs

It gives a threefold taxonomy of adversaries—kin-based, immediate-neighbor, and manufactured—and ranks them by severity, advising rulers to prioritize diagnosis and response to the most entrenched (kin-based) hostility.

Beyond ritual and theology, the Agni Purana preserves applied Rajadharma: political risk-classification, conflict analysis, and prioritization—core elements of ancient Indian statecraft embedded within a Purāṇic compendium.

By urging discernment and proportionate response—especially regarding familial and proximate conflicts—it supports dharmic governance: minimizing harm, preventing escalation, and maintaining social order, which is treated as a ruler’s religious duty.