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Agni Purana — Raja-dharma, Shloka 26

Rājanīti (Statecraft): Ṣaḍvidha-bala, Vyūha-vidhāna, and Strategic Warfare

अनुयानापसरणे शीघ्रकार्योपपादनं दीनानुसरणं घातः कोटीनां जघनस्य च

anuyānāpasaraṇe śīghrakāryopapādanaṃ dīnānusaraṇaṃ ghātaḥ koṭīnāṃ jaghanasya ca

येथे इतरांच्या मागे जाणे व माघार घेणे, कामे शीघ्र पूर्ण करणे, दीन/नीच जनांचे अनुसरण, तसेच घात/इजा—आणि कोटी (पार्श्व) व जघन (नितंब) यांची लक्षणेही सांगितली आहेत।

अनुयानin pursuit
अनुयान:
अधिकरण (अधिकरण/Locative)
TypeNoun
Rootअनुयान (प्रातिपदिक; √या + अनु + घञ्/ल्युट्-भाव)
Formनपुंसकलिङ्गे, सप्तमी (7th/सप्तमी), एकवचनम्; अधिकरणे
अपसरणेin retreat / withdrawal
अपसरणे:
अधिकरण (अधिकरण/Locative)
TypeNoun
Rootअपसरण (प्रातिपदिक; √सृ + अप + ल्युट्)
Formनपुंसकलिङ्गे, सप्तमी (7th/सप्तमी), एकवचनम्; अधिकरणे
शीघ्रकार्योपपादनम्prompt accomplishment of the task
शीघ्रकार्योपपादनम्:
कर्ता (कर्तृपद/Topic item)
TypeNoun
Rootशीघ्र (प्रातिपदिक) + कार्य (प्रातिपदिक) + उपपादन (प्रातिपदिक; √पद्/√पाद् + उप + णिच्? + ल्युट्)
Formनपुंसकलिङ्गे, प्रथमा (1st/प्रथमा), एकवचनम्; बहुपद-तत्पुरुषः (शीघ्रस्य कार्यस्य उपपादनम्)
दीनानुसरणम्following the weak / distressed
दीनानुसरणम्:
कर्ता (कर्तृपद/Topic item)
TypeNoun
Rootदीन (प्रातिपदिक) + अनुसरण (प्रातिपदिक; √सृ + अनु + ल्युट्)
Formनपुंसकलिङ्गे, प्रथमा (1st/प्रथमा), एकवचनम्; षष्ठी-तत्पुरुषः (दीनानाम् अनुसरणम्)
घातःkilling; striking
घातः:
कर्ता (कर्तृपद/Topic item)
TypeNoun
Rootघात (प्रातिपदिक; √हन् + घञ्)
Formपुंलिङ्गे, प्रथमा (1st/प्रथमा), एकवचनम्
कोटीनाम्of the flanks / edges
कोटीनाम्:
सम्बन्ध (षष्ठी/Genitive relation)
TypeNoun
Rootकोटि (प्रातिपदिक)
Formस्त्रीलिङ्गे, षष्ठी (6th/षष्ठी), बहुवचनम्
जघनस्यof the rear; hind part
जघनस्य:
सम्बन्ध (षष्ठी/Genitive relation)
TypeNoun
Rootजघन (प्रातिपदिक)
Formनपुंसकलिङ्गे, षष्ठी (6th/षष्ठी), एकवचनम्
and
:
समुच्चय (Conjunctive)
TypeIndeclinable
Rootच (अव्यय)
Formसमुच्चयार्थक-अव्ययम् (conjunction)

Lord Agni (narrating to Sage Vashistha)

Vidya Category: {"primary_vidya":"Jyotisha","secondary_vidya":"Arthashastra","practical_application":"Reading predictive marks/behavioral tendencies for personnel assessment: identifying retreating/following disposition, speed of execution, low-company association, and injury-proneness linked with bodily marks (flanks/buttocks).","sutra_style":true}

Encyclopedic Reference: {"reference_type":"Description","entry_title":"Lakṣaṇa (Predictive Marks): Anuyāna-Apasaraṇa, Śīghra-kārya, Dīna-saṅga, and Injury; Koṭi-Jaghana Indicators","lookup_keywords":["lakṣaṇa","anuyāna","apasaraṇa","koṭi","jaghana"],"quick_summary":"Certain behavioral patterns and bodily marks are treated as omens/indicators for predicting a person’s tendencies—such as retreating, quick task completion, associating with the lowly, and susceptibility to injury."}

Concept: Lakṣaṇa-śāstra approach: inferring disposition and fate from conduct and bodily indicators for pragmatic decision-making.

Application: Use as a (historical-text) framework for vetting roles: assign high-risk duties away from injury-prone profiles; place swift executors in logistics; avoid entrusting sensitive tasks to those showing chronic retreating tendencies.

Khanda Section: Rajadharma & Niti-shastra (Omens, physiognomy, and predictive marks)

Primary Rasa: adbhuta

Secondary Rasa: shanta

Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A court assessor observes a candidate’s behavior—following others, retreating, quick execution—while a diagram-like focus highlights bodily regions: flanks (koṭi) and buttocks (jaghana) as ‘marks’ for prediction.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural, a royal hall with an assessor-sage gesturing, attendants observing a candidate, stylized anatomical emphasis on flanks and hips with traditional decorative motifs, calm palette with strong outlines","tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore style, gold-bordered court scene, central seated assessor with palm-leaf manuscript, candidate standing, subtle highlighted regions at koṭi and jaghana, ornate pillars and textiles","mysore_prompt":"Mysore painting, semi-diagrammatic instructional scene: labeled body regions (koṭi, jaghana), small vignettes of behaviors (following, retreating, swift work), clean lines and soft colors","mughal_miniature_prompt":"Mughal miniature, intimate court interior, a physiognomist examining posture and gait, attendants whispering, fine detailing of garments; marginal notes-like cartouches indicating koṭi and jaghana"}

Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"contemplative","suggested_raga":"Shree","pace":"slow","voice_tone":"instructional"}

Sandhi Resolution Notes: अनुयानापसरणे → अनुयान + अपसरणे (द्वन्द्वार्थे सप्तमी-द्वयम्); शीघ्रकार्योपपादनम् → शीघ्रकार्य + उपपादनम्.

Related Themes: Agni Purana sections on śakuna/lakṣaṇa (omens, bodily marks); Agni Purana Rajadharma: selection of servants/officials and court assessment

A
Agni
V
Vashistha

FAQs

This verse conveys lakṣaṇa-vidyā (physiognomic/predictive knowledge): certain bodily indications are said to correlate with behavioral traits such as dependence, withdrawal, quick execution of tasks, and susceptibility to harm.

Beyond theology and ritual, the Agni Purana compiles applied knowledge used in social and political life—here, omenology/physiognomy that could inform judgment about temperament and risk, aligning with wider Rajadharma and niti concerns.

In a Puranic frame, bodily signs are treated as outcomes of prior tendencies (saṃskāra/karma) and as prompts for self-correction—encouraging vigilance, ethical conduct, and restraint to mitigate harm and unwholesome associations.