HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 42Shloka 1
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Shloka 1

Battle at MandaraThe Battle at Mandara: Vinayaka, Nandin, and Skanda Rout the Daitya Hosts

आच्छादितो गिरिवरः प्रमथैर्घनाभै राभाति शुक्लतनुरीश्वरपादजुष्टः नीलाजिनातततनुः शरदभ्रवर्णो यद्वद् विभाति बलवान् वृषभो हरस्य // वम्प्_41.59 इति श्रीवामनपुराणे एकचत्वारिशो ऽध्यायः पुलस्त्य उवाच एतस्मिन्नन्तरे प्राप्तः समं दैत्यैस्तथान्धकः मन्दरं पर्वतश्रेष्ठं प्रमथाश्रितकन्दरम्

ācchādito girivaraḥ pramathairghanābhai rābhāti śuklatanurīśvarapādajuṣṭaḥ nīlājinātatatanuḥ śaradabhravarṇo yadvad vibhāti balavān vṛṣabho harasya // VamP_41.59 iti śrīvāmanapurāṇe ekacatvāriśo 'dhyāyaḥ pulastya uvāca etasminnantare prāptaḥ samaṃ daityaistathāndhakaḥ mandaraṃ parvataśreṣṭhaṃ pramathāśritakandaram

ພູເຂົາອັນປະເສີດ ຖືກປົກຄຸມໂດຍພຣະມະຖະ (Pramatha) ຜູ້ມີຮູບດຳດັ່ງເມກຝົນ ແລະສ່ອງສະຫວ່າງ—ມີກາຍຂາວ ປານດັ່ງໄດ້ຮັບການຈູດຈອງດ້ວຍພຣະບາດຂອງພຣະອີສະວະຣະ; ປານດັ່ງຫໍ່ດ້ວຍໜັງສີນ້ຳເງິນດຳ ແລະມີສີດັ່ງເມກລະດູໃບໄມ້ຫຼົ່ນ—ເຫມືອນງົວຜູ້ມີພະລັງຂອງຮະຣະ (ສິວະ) ທີ່ປາກົດ. ພຸລັສຕະຍະ ກ່າວວ່າ: ໃນຂະນະນັ້ນ ອັນທະກະ ມາຮອດພ້ອມກັບພວກໄດຕະຍະ ທີ່ພູມັນດະຣະ ອັນເປັນພູທີ່ດີທີ່ສຸດ �Vamana Purana

Pulastya speaking to (implied) Nārada (standard Vāmana Purāṇa dialogue frame)
Shiva (Hara/Īśvara)
Andhaka episode (approach to conflict)Śaiva gaṇa iconography (Pramathas)Poetic simile linking landscape and deity (mountain compared to Nandin)Sacralization of place by divine presence (īśvara-pāda-juṣṭa)

{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "vira", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }

FAQs

The verse uses layered visual imagery: dark Pramathas ‘cover’ the mountain like a dark hide (nīlājina), while the mountain’s own brightness is likened to the white, powerful bull of Hara. The simile fuses landscape description with Śaiva iconography, signaling that Mandara is effectively a Śiva-sphere (gaṇa-inhabited and ‘touched by the Lord’s feet’).

It marks the site as sanctified by divine contact—an idiom often used to elevate a location’s religious status. Even when a formal tīrtha is not named, such phrasing frames the mountain as a sacred locus suitable for divine action and mythic events.

No. It is a manuscript/editorial colophon indicating the close of Adhyāya 41 and the transition into Adhyāya 42, after which Pulastya resumes narration.