तेषां पुरस्तादभवन्नार्य्यावर्ते नृपा द्विजाः । तेषां विकुक्षिर्ज्येष्ठस्तु सोऽयोध्यायां नृपोऽभवत्
teṣāṃ purastādabhavannāryyāvarte nṛpā dvijāḥ | teṣāṃ vikukṣirjyeṣṭhastu so'yodhyāyāṃ nṛpo'bhavat
Sebelum mereka, di Āryāvarta muncul para raja yang menegakkan dharma seperti kaum dvija, penjaga ajaran Weda. Di antara mereka, yang sulung adalah Vikukṣi; ia menjadi raja di Ayodhyā.
Suta Goswami
Sthala Purana: Continues Ikṣvāku lineage: kings in Āryāvarta described as ‘dvija’ (Vedic-initiated upholders of dharma); Vikukṣi identified as eldest and king of Ayodhyā.
Significance: Ayodhyā as a major tīrtha-city; here it functions as a dharmic royal center within Purāṇic history rather than a Śaiva shrine reference.
It frames righteous kingship as dharma-protecting leadership rooted in Vedic discipline—an outer social order that supports inner spiritual pursuit, which Shaiva teaching ultimately directs toward devotion to Pati (Shiva) and liberation.
Though the verse is genealogical, the Shiva Purana uses such royal lineages to show how dharmic realms become fit for Shiva-worship—temples, Linga-pratiṣṭhā, and public observances flourish when rulers uphold Vedic and Shaiva duties.
The implied takeaway is dharma-aligned living: daily Shiva-smaraṇa (remembrance), japa of the Panchākṣarī “Om Namaḥ Śivāya,” and maintaining purity and discipline—supportive foundations for deeper Shaiva sādhanā.