Plakṣaprasravaṇa–Kārapacana tīrtha-varṇana and Nārada’s war briefing (Śalya-parva, Adhyāya 53)
'श्रेष्ठ देवताओ! यहाँ ब्राह्मणशिरोमणि तथा नृप आदि मुख्य-मुख्य पुरुषसिंह नरेश महान् यज्ञोंका अनुष्ठान करके देहत्यागके पश्चात् उत्तम गतिको प्राप्त हुए हैं ।।
śreṣṭha-devatāḥ! iha brāhmaṇa-śiromaṇayaḥ tathā nṛpādayaḥ mukhya-mukhya-puruṣa-siṁhā nṛpā mahān-yajñān anuṣṭhāya deha-tyāgāt paścād uttamāṁ gatiṁ prāptavantaḥ. tarantukāraṇṭukayor yad antaraṁ rāma-hradānāṁ ca macakrukasya ca, etat kuru-kṣetra-samantapañcakaṁ prajāpater uttaravedir ucyate.
Rāma bersabda: “Wahai para dewa yang paling mulia! Di wilayah inilah para brahmana terkemuka dan raja-raja utama—laksana singa di antara manusia—telah melaksanakan yajña-yajña agung; dan setelah menanggalkan jasad, mereka mencapai keadaan tertinggi. Hamparan tanah di antara Tarantuka dan Arantuka, serta di antara telaga Rāma dan Macakruka—itulah Samantapañcaka di Kurukṣetra. Tempat itu disebut Altar Utara milik Prajāpati.”
राम उवाच
The verse frames Kurukṣetra as a sanctified sacrificial landscape: performing righteous rites (yajña) in a holy kṣetra and living by dharma is presented as leading to an ‘uttamā gati’ (highest destiny). It links ethical-religious action with spiritual outcome, anchored in sacred geography.
Rama addresses the gods and identifies a specific bounded region—between named landmarks (Tarantuka, Arantuka, Rāma-hradas, Macakruka)—as Kurukṣetra/Samantapañcaka, revered as Prajāpati’s Northern Altar, and notes that great Brahmins and kings attained supreme states after performing major sacrifices there.