Prahlada’s Pilgrimage Circuit: Tirtha-Mahatmya from Naimisha to Rudrakoti and Shalagrama
प्रदक्षिमीकृत्य पुरीं पूज्याविमुक्तकेशवौ लोलं दिवाकरं दृष्ट्वा ततो मधुवनं ययौ
pradakṣimīkṛtya purīṃ pūjyāvimuktakeśavau lolaṃ divākaraṃ dṛṣṭvā tato madhuvanaṃ yayau
पुरीची प्रदक्षिणा करून, पूज्य अविमुक्त व केशव यांना वंदन करून, मग चंचल गतीने सरकणारा दिवाकर (सूर्य) पाहून तो तेथून मधुवनास गेला।
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The Vāmana Purāṇa frequently maps sacred geography through a network of Śaiva and Vaiṣṇava nodes. Pairing Avimukta (a Śaiva kṣetra-marker) with Keśava (a Vaiṣṇava deity-name) frames the pilgrimage as integrative: merit accrues through honoring multiple divine presences embedded in the landscape.
It functions as a temporal cue: the pilgrim notes the sun’s movement, implying the passage of time and the urgency/sequence of the itinerary. In tīrtha narratives, such solar markers often signal auspicious timing for travel or bathing rites.
Madhuvana (‘honey-forest’) is a named sacred grove, widely associated with the Vraja-Mathurā sacred region in broader Purāṇic tradition. Here it serves as a distinct pilgrimage station (vana) within the chapter’s route-map of holy places.