The Structure of Jambudvipa: Nine Varshas, Navadvipa Bharata, Mountains, Rivers, and Peoples
मत्स्याः कुशट्टाः कुणिकुण्डलाश्च पाञ्जालकाश्याः सह कोसलाभिः
matsyāḥ kuśaṭṭāḥ kuṇikuṇḍalāśca pāñjālakāśyāḥ saha kosalābhiḥ
मत्स्य, कुशट्ट, कुणिकुण्डल, पाञ्जाल और काश्य—ये सब कोसलों के साथ (उल्लिखित हैं)।
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Purāṇic geography integrates many communities into a single sacred-cultural map. The ethical subtext is inclusivity within dharma: diverse peoples are situated within the same cosmographic order.
This aligns with vaṃśānucarita/itihāsa-adjacent cataloguing only loosely; more precisely it belongs to Purāṇic descriptive geography (often embedded in tīrtha-mahātmya or regional digests).
Lists of peoples function as a ‘sacred census’—a way to universalize the narrative world and imply that dharma and pilgrimage networks extend across political boundaries.