HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 63Shloka 11
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Shloka 11

Sacred Abodes of Vishnu & ShivaCatalogue of Vishnu and Shiva’s Sacred Abodes (Tirtha-Mahatmya within the Pulastya–Narada Frame)

गोपालमुत्तरे नित्यं महेन्द्रे सोमपीथिनम् वैकुण्ठमपि सह्याद्रौ पारियात्रऽपराजितम्

gopālamuttare nityaṃ mahendre somapīthinam vaikuṇṭhamapi sahyādrau pāriyātra'parājitam

ഉത്തരദേശത്ത് നിത്യമായി ഗോപാലനെ അറിയുകയും ദർശിക്കുകയും വേണം; മഹേന്ദ്രപർവതത്തിൽ സോമപീഠിൻ; സഹ്യാദ്രിയിൽ വൈകുണ്ഠം; പാരിയാത്ര ശ്രേണിയിൽ അപരാജിതൻ।

Contextual narrator within the Adhyāya’s catalogue (speaker not specified in the provided excerpt) addressing the listener of the Purāṇic discourse.
VishnuSoma
Sacred geography as theology (deity-forms mapped onto landscapes)Tīrtha-yātrā orientation by mountains and quartersMultiplicity of Viṣṇu’s shrine-forms

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

FAQs

This portion functions as a gazetteer: the Purāṇa sacralizes the subcontinent by anchoring specific divine forms (nāma-rūpa) to identifiable ranges and regions, guiding pilgrimage and ritual geography rather than telling a single myth.

Purāṇic usage allows ‘Vaikuṇṭha’ to denote both the supreme abode and a terrestrial manifestation/shrine bearing that name; the verse signals a localized ‘Vaikuṇṭha’ presence on Sahyādri for devotees and pilgrims.

Both appear in classical Purāṇic mountain lists as major markers for orienting sacred space. By associating them with specific deity-forms (Soma-pīthin on Mahendra; Aparājita on Pāriyātra), the text turns topography into a devotional itinerary.