Origins of the Maruts — Origins of the Maruts Across the Manvantaras (Pulastya–Narada Dialogue)
पूर्वमन्वन्तरेष्वेव समतीतेषु सत्तम् के त्वासन् वायुमार्गस्थास्तन्मे व्याख्यातुमर्हसि
pūrvamanvantareṣveva samatīteṣu sattam ke tvāsan vāyumārgasthāstanme vyākhyātumarhasi
{"prahlada_mentioned": false, "lineage_reference": null, "bhakta_parampara": null, "hiranyakashipu_context": null, "narasimha_echo": false, "asura_devotee_theme": "Shows the paradoxical spectrum: the same asura line later yields exemplary surrender; here Bali appears as terrifying conqueror prior to his daāna-śīla and bhakti being foregrounded."}
{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
In this context it functions as a cosmological zone: the atmospheric ‘course/realm of wind’ associated with Vāyu and wind-deities (Maruts). It is not a named terrestrial tirtha but part of Purāṇic vertical cosmography (regions between earth and higher worlds).
Manvantara-structure is a standard Purāṇic way to organize repeated cycles of creation and governance. By asking about earlier Manvantaras, the inquirer seeks a genealogy/origin account that may vary across cycles yet follows a patterned cosmology.
The question anticipates an account of earlier ‘Maruts’ or wind-associated hosts (vāyu-gaṇas), often treated as groups of deities whose origins are narrated through Manvantara genealogies and divine lineages.