HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 30Shloka 4
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Vamana Purana — Slaying of Raktabija, Shloka 4

The Slaying of Raktabīja and Niśumbha–Śumbha; the Manifestation of the Mātṛkās and the Devas’ Hymn

माहेश्वरी त्रिनेत्रा च वृषारूढा त्रिशूलिनी महाहिवलया रौद्रा जाता कुण्डलिनी क्षणात्

māheśvarī trinetrā ca vṛṣārūḍhā triśūlinī mahāhivalayā raudrā jātā kuṇḍalinī kṣaṇāt

ແລ້ວໃນພິບຕາດຽວ ມາເຫສະວະຣີກໍເກີດຂຶ້ນ—ມີສາມຕາ ຂີ່ງົວ (ວຶສະ) ຖືຕຣິຊູລ (ຫອກສາມງ່າ) ປະດັບດ້ວຍງູໃຫຍ່ເປັນກຳໄລ ມີພາບຮ້າຍກ້າ ແລະ ພະລັງກຸນຑະລິນີຂອງນາງຂົມຂື້ນພ້ອມຈະຈົມຕີ।

Narratorial voice within the Andhaka-vadha account (traditionally framed as a sage’s narration to a listenere.g.Pulastya to Nāradadepending on recension).
Śiva (Maheśvara)Devī as Māheśvarī
Mātṛkā manifestationŚakti as divine powerIconography of the goddessAndhaka-vadha battle contextŚaiva theology

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

FAQs

Māheśvarī is the feminine power (śakti) of Śiva, counted among the Mātṛkās (Mother-goddesses) who manifest to assist the gods in cosmic battles such as the slaying of Andhaka.

These are Śiva’s defining emblems. The verse signals that Māheśvarī is not an independent deity here but Śiva’s own power taking a battle-form, marked by his iconography.

Primarily martial and descriptive: ‘coiled’ power, like a serpent poised to uncoil. Secondarily, it resonates with the broader Indic idea of latent śakti that can suddenly surge forth.