Shiva’s Kedara-Tirtha and the Rise of Mura: From Shaiva Pilgrimage to Vaishnava Theology
स सरय्वास्तटे वीरं राजानं सूर्यवंशजम् ददृशो रघुनामानं दीक्षितं यज्ञकर्मणि
sa sarayvāstaṭe vīraṃ rājānaṃ sūryavaṃśajam dadṛśo raghunāmānaṃ dīkṣitaṃ yajñakarmaṇi
सरयूच्या तीरावर त्याने सूर्यवंशातील वीर राजा रघू यांना पाहिले; ते यज्ञकर्मासाठी दीक्षित होते।
{ "primaryRasa": "vira", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
‘Raghu’ is the eponymous ancestor of the Raghu line within the Sūryavaṃśa (Ikṣvāku dynasty), the same royal lineage celebrated in the Rāmāyaṇa. Purāṇic narration often uses such figures to anchor events in a well-known dynastic-sacral geography centered on rivers like the Sarayū.
It means the king has undergone dīkṣā—ritual consecration/initiatory vows for a yajña. This marks him as temporarily bound by sacrificial discipline, purity rules, and a sacred timetable, which heightens the dramatic stakes of any interruption or encounter.
Riverbanks are classic yajña-sites and tirtha zones: they provide ritual purity, water for offerings and ablutions, and a sacral landscape. In the Vāmana Purāṇa’s geography-forward style, naming Sarayū situates the narrative within a recognizable sacred map.