Harihara Revelation and the Kurukshetra Tirtha Cycle: Sthanu in Vishnu and the Sanctification of Saptasarasvata
पितामहो ऽपि तं पुत्रं साध्यं सद्धिनयान्वितम् सनत्कुमारं प्रोवाच योगं द्वादशपत्रकम्
pitāmaho 'pi taṃ putraṃ sādhyaṃ saddhinayānvitam sanatkumāraṃ provāca yogaṃ dvādaśapatrakam
その後、祖父尊(ピターマハ)もまた、その子—成就にふさわしく善き規律を具えた—サナトクマーラに、十二の「葉(章節)」から成るヨーガの教えを説き示した。
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It most naturally denotes a teaching organized into twelve units—like twelve sections, topics, or ‘folios’. Purāṇic authors often use ‘patra’ metaphorically for a leaf/folio of a text, implying a structured syllabus rather than a single verse instruction.
Sanatkumāra is a canonical figure of ascetic wisdom—an eternally youthful mind-born son of Brahmā associated with renunciation, jñāna, and yogic realization. Making him the recipient authorizes the yoga teaching as ancient and exemplary.
Indirectly. While no place-name appears here, the Vāmana Purāṇa frequently embeds doctrinal teachings within pilgrimage narratives; yogic instruction can function as the ‘inner tirtha’ counterpart to outer sacred geography, pairing place-mahātmya with soteriological method.