Puruṣottama-māhātmya
The Greatness of Puruṣottama Kṣetra
दक्षिणस्योदधेस्तीरे न्यग्रोधो यत्र तिष्ठति । यस्तु कल्पे समुत्पन्ने महदुल्कानिबर्हणे ॥ ६६ ॥
dakṣiṇasyodadhestīre nyagrodho yatra tiṣṭhati | yastu kalpe samutpanne mahadulkānibarhaṇe || 66 ||
南の大海の岸辺に、ニヤグローダ(バニヤン)の樹が立っている。それは昔のカルパにおいて、大いなるウルカー(火球の隕石)が滅び鎮まった時に生じたその樹である。
Narada (describing a sacred location in Uttara-Bhaga tirtha-mahatmya style)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: bhakti
It marks a specific sacred landmark—a nyagrodha on the southern sea—whose antiquity is validated by kalpa-time, implying a tirtha whose sanctity transcends ordinary historical time.
By pointing to a sanctified place remembered across aeons, the text supports pilgrimage and remembrance as aids to bhakti—devotion is strengthened through contact with sites associated with divine, cosmic events.
The verse uses puranic cosmological timekeeping (kalpa) and celestial phenomenon terminology (ulkā), aligning with Jyotiṣa-style attention to omens and temporal cycles, though it is presented in a tirtha-mahatmya narrative.