HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 41Shloka 58
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Vamana Purana — Harihara Non-Duality, Shloka 58

Harihara Non-Duality and the Revelation of Sadasiva to the Ganas

इति विभुना प्रणतार्तिहरेण गणपतयो वृषमेघरथेन श्रुतिगदितानुगमेनेव मन्दरं गिरिमवतत्य समध्यवसन्तम्

iti vibhunā praṇatārtihareṇa gaṇapatayo vṛṣamegharathena śrutigaditānugameneva mandaraṃ girimavatatya samadhyavasantam

ດັ່ງນັ້ນ ໂດຍພຣະຜູ້ມີອຳນາດທັງປວງ—ຜູ້ກຳຈັດຄວາມທຸກຂອງຜູ້ກົ້ມກາບ—ໂດຍພຣະອົງຜູ້ມີລົດດັ່ງວົວ ແລະດັ່ງເມກ; ຫົວໜ້າຄະນະຂອງພວກກະນະ ດຳເນີນລົງສູ່ພູມັນດະຣະ ປານດັ່ງຕາມຄຳປະກາດໃນເວດ ແລະໄດ້ຕັ້ງຖິ່ນຖານຢູ່ທີ່ນັ້ນ।

Pulastya (narrator) → (implied audiencetraditionally Nārada); narrative describes the Gaṇas’ movement under Śiva’s auspices
Śiva
Devotional epithet: protector of the surrendered (praṇatārti-hara)Śruti-aligned conduct (śruti-gadita-anugamana)Sacred mountain as locus of divine assemblyMobilization of Śiva’s hosts in cosmic conflict

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FAQs

Mandara is a paradigmatic sacred mountain, widely remembered as the churning-rod in the Samudra-manthana myth. Here it functions as a charged cosmic locale—an elevated, stable “giri” suitable for divine mustering and residence.

It is a poetic compound suggesting Śiva’s conveyance/majesty: “bull” evokes Śiva’s emblem (and Nandin), while “cloud” evokes thunderous, sky-filling power. The phrase intensifies the theophanic imagery rather than giving a literal vehicle description.

It legitimizes the gaṇas’ action as consonant with revealed order (ṛta/dharma). Even martial or mobilizing movements are framed as aligned with Vedic sanction, not mere impulse or factional will.