Sacred Abodes of Vishnu & Shiva — Catalogue of Vishnu and Shiva’s Sacred Abodes (Tirtha-Mahatmya within the Pulastya–Narada Frame)
पद्मनाभं तथा क्रौञ्चे शाल्मले वृषभध्वजम् सहस्रांशुः स्थितः शाके धर्मराट् पुष्करे स्थितः
padmanābhaṃ tathā krauñce śālmale vṛṣabhadhvajam sahasrāṃśuḥ sthitaḥ śāke dharmarāṭ puṣkare sthitaḥ
Di Krauñcadvīpa Ia dikenal sebagai Padmanābha; di Śālmaladvīpa sebagai Vṛṣabhadhvaja; di Śākadvīpa Ia tegak sebagai Sahasrāṃśu; dan di Puṣkaradvīpa Ia tegak sebagai Dharmarāṭ.
{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
This is a Purāṇic strategy of cosmic inclusivity: different dvīpas are characterized by dominant modes of worship and cosmic function. The geography becomes a theological map where multiple deities represent the Supreme’s governance through distinct powers.
Yes. ‘Bull-bannered’ is a well-established Śaiva epithet (linked to Nandin and the bull emblem). In a dvīpa-list, it signals Śiva’s prominence or principal worship-form in Śālmaladvīpa.
Most naturally it points to Dharmarāja/Yama as the sovereign of moral order, but it can also be read as the presiding ‘kingly’ principle of dharma. The verse’s pattern (Sūrya named explicitly by epithet) supports a personal deity reading while retaining an abstract layer.