HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 46Shloka 71
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Shloka 71

Origins of the MarutsOrigins of the Maruts Across the Manvantaras (Pulastya–Narada Dialogue)

आसीन्मङ्किरिति ख्यातस्तपस्वी सत्यवाक् शुचिः सप्तसारस्वते तीर्थे सो ऽतप्यत महत् तपः

āsīnmaṅkiriti khyātastapasvī satyavāk śuciḥ saptasārasvate tīrthe so 'tapyata mahat tapaḥ

Ada seorang pertapa terkenal bernama Maṅkiri—berkata benar dan suci. Di tīrtha Sapta-Sārasvata ia menjalankan tapa yang agung.

Not specified in the excerpt; narrator recounting the legend of sage Maṅkiri.
Tīrtha sanctityPower of tapasRishi exemplars (truthfulness and purity)Sarasvatī sacred landscape

{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "vira", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }

FAQs

In Purāṇic tīrtha-topography, such compounds often indicate either (a) a cluster of seven fords/holy spots along the Sarasvatī system, or (b) a single site whose sanctity is explained through a ‘sevenfold’ motif (seven sages, seven streams, seven rites). The verse treats it as a recognized named tīrtha.

These epithets establish ritual and ethical qualification: tīrtha-based tapas is portrayed as most efficacious when grounded in truthfulness and purity, aligning inner discipline with sacred geography.

This verse primarily locates the action at a specific tīrtha; the ensuing narrative (including divine tests/obstacles) typically serves to demonstrate the potency of tapas performed at such places and thereby magnify the tīrtha’s fame.