HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 46Shloka 52

Shloka 52

Origins of the MarutsAcross the Manvantaras

अवाप गर्भं तन्वङ्गी तस्मान्नृपतिसत्तमात् गुर्विण्यामथ भार्यायां ममारासौ नराधिपः

avāpa garbhaṃ tanvaṅgī tasmānnṛpatisattamāt gurviṇyāmatha bhāryāyāṃ mamārāsau narādhipaḥ

The slender-limbed queen conceived a child from that excellent king. Then, while his wife was pregnant, that ruler (narādhipa) died.

Narrator (Purāṇic sūta/ṛṣi voice) addressing a sage interlocutor (mune) within the ongoing dialogue frame
Royal lineage and successionPregnancy and dynastic continuityImpermanence (mṛtyu)Pathos in royal narrative

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

FAQs

Purāṇic royal narratives often mark pregnancy at the time of the king’s death to secure dynastic continuity: the unborn child becomes the locus of succession, legitimacy, and later plot developments (guardianship, regency, threats to the heir).

Not directly. This is a human royal episode embedded in the Purāṇic flow; deities may enter later as protectors, witnesses, or as the narrative returns to the main theological arc, but this verse itself is purely genealogical/tragic narration.

They are conventional kāvya-style honorifics: tanvaṅgī idealizes the queen, while nṛpatisattama elevates the king’s stature, intensifying the tragedy of an untimely death and heightening the moral-emotional stakes.