Andhaka’s Defeat, the Bhairava Manifestation, and His Redemption as Bhṛṅgī Gaṇapati
यद्भूभ्यां न्यपतद् विप्र स्वेदबिन्दुः शिवाननात् तस्मादङ्गरपुञ्जाभो बालकः समजायत
yadbhūbhyāṃ nyapatad vipra svedabinduḥ śivānanāt tasmādaṅgarapuñjābho bālakaḥ samajāyata
Wahai vipra, ketika setetes keringat jatuh ke tanah dari wajah Śiva, dari tetes itu lahirlah seorang anak yang menyerupai tumpukan bara menyala.
{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "raudra", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
The ember-simile signals raudra-tejas—Śiva’s fierce, transformative energy. In Andhaka-related episodes, such imagery foreshadows destructive or uncanny capacities rather than an ordinary human birth.
Yes. Purāṇas frequently describe beings arising from a deity’s bodily emanations (sweat, breath, glance, etc.) to convey that the being is a direct condensation of divine śakti rather than a womb-born creature.
No. It only mentions ‘earth/ground’ (bhūmi) in general; the verse functions as narrative etiology within the Andhaka cycle rather than a tīrtha-mahātmya passage.