Abhiṣeka-mantrāḥ
Consecration Mantras
पिशाचा ऊर्ध्वकेशाद्या भूता भूम्यादिवासिनः महाकालं पुरस्कृत्य नरसिंहञ्च मातरः
piśācā ūrdhvakeśādyā bhūtā bhūmyādivāsinaḥ mahākālaṃ puraskṛtya narasiṃhañca mātaraḥ
ピシャーチャおよびウールドヴァケーシャらの諸霊—地中や諸界に住まうブータたち—は、マハーカーラを先頭に進み来たる。そこにはまた、ナラシンハと母神群(マートリカー)も在す。
Lord Agni (narrating the ritual/protective framework to Sage Vasiṣṭha in the Agni Purāṇa’s instructional voice)
Vidya Category: {"primary_vidya":"Tantra","secondary_vidya":"Mantra","practical_application":"Rakṣā and bhūta-śānti: recognizing and ritually managing spirit-hosts (piśāca, bhūta) through alignment with Mahākāla, Narasiṃha, and Mātṛkās in protective rites.","sutra_style":false}
Encyclopedic Reference: {"reference_type":"Description","entry_title":"Bhūta-gaṇa and protective hierarchy (Mahākāla–Narasiṃha–Mātṛkā)","lookup_keywords":["piśāca","bhūta","Mahākāla","Narasiṃha","Mātṛkā"],"quick_summary":"Maps a protective cosmology where spirit-hosts are acknowledged as moving under a commanding deity, while fierce protectors (Narasiṃha, Mothers) stand as guardians. Useful for pacification and boundary-protection rituals."}
Concept: Acknowledgement and ordering of unseen forces: protection is achieved by invoking higher guardians and integrating/appeasing lower entities rather than ignoring them.
Application: Use in bhūta-śānti, rakṣā-bandhana, night-protection, and threshold-guarding rites with fierce deities.
Khanda Section: Isana-kalpa / Bhairava–Narasimha Raksha (Protective rites and spirit-host pacification)
Primary Rasa: bhayanaka
Secondary Rasa: vira
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A nocturnal protective scene: spirit-hosts (piśācas, bhūtas) gather, led by Mahākāla, while Narasiṃha and the Mātṛkās stand as fierce guardians forming a protective perimeter.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural, dramatic night palette; Mahākāla with fierce eyes and trident-like aura, bhūtas in stylized forms; Narasiṃha roaring in protective stance; Mātṛkās in a row with distinct attributes; temple courtyard boundary line.","tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore gold work emphasizing divine guardians; Narasiṃha central with halo and gold emboss; Mātṛkās flanking symmetrically; Mahākāla above/behind as commanding presence; subdued depiction of bhūtas at the margins.","mysore_prompt":"Mysore style, clear iconographic labeling; orderly arrangement of Mahākāla, Narasiṃha, and Mātṛkās; bhūtas shown as smaller figures indicating realms (earth/other); instructional clarity over drama.","mughal_miniature_prompt":"Mughal miniature, night scene with fine detailing; procession of spirits led by a dark fierce figure; protective deities rendered with stylized halos; architectural threshold and guards; subtle chiaroscuro."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"epic","suggested_raga":"Bhairavi","pace":"medium","voice_tone":"epic"}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: नरसिंहञ्च = नरसिंहम् + च.
Related Themes: Agni Purana 219 (Īśāna-kalpa, rakṣā, bhairava/narasiṃha context)
It enumerates the spirit-hosts (piśāca, bhūta, ūrdhvakeśa) and the protective divine powers (Mahākāla, Narasiṃha, Mātṛkās) typically invoked/visualized in rakṣā (protective) procedures for bhūta-piśāca-śamana.
By cataloging classes of supernatural beings and pairing them with specific protective deities, the text preserves applied ritual taxonomy—an example of Agni Purana’s practical compendium style alongside its law, worship, iconography, and other technical domains.
Recognizing and ritually subordinating hostile forces under protective divinities (especially Narasiṃha and the Mātṛkās) is presented as a means to remove fear, avert affliction, and restore dharmic order and personal spiritual safety.