HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 45Shloka 36
Previous Verse
Next Verse

Shloka 36

Indra's Campaign on Mount MalayaIndra’s Campaign on Mount Malaya and the Birth of the Maruts (Origin of the Epithet Gotrabhid)

शक्रो ऽपि प्राह मा मूढ रुदस्वेति सुघर्घरम् इत्येवमुक्त्वा चैकैकं भूयश्चिच्छेद सप्तधा

śakro 'pi prāha mā mūḍha rudasveti sughargharam ityevamuktvā caikaikaṃ bhūyaściccheda saptadhā

Śakra (Indra) said, “Do not be foolish—cry out!” in a very harsh (terrible) manner. Having spoken thus, he again cut each (fetus/embryonic form) into seven parts.

Narrator (Purāṇic narrator) describing Indra’s actions; implied address to the listening sage/audience
Indra (Śakra)
Etiology of the MarutsIndra’s fear of rivalsViolence within mythic cosmologyKarma/āpacāra (offense) and its consequences

{ "primaryRasa": "raudra", "secondaryRasa": "bibhatsa", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }

FAQs

In the Diti–Marut myth, Indra attacks the embryo(s) in Diti’s womb. The command “cry!” functions as a narrative marker: once the beings cry out, they are characterized as “Marut” (often linked to the root *ru(d)*, “to cry/roar”), and their identity shifts from potential adversaries to a class of storm-deities.

The repeated splitting explains the multiplication of beings and provides an origin-story for the Marut hosts. Purāṇic accounts vary in numbers, but the motif of repeated division is a standard etiological device to generate a divine troop from a single womb.

Not in these lines. This segment is mythic-etiological rather than a tīrtha-mahātmya; no rivers, forests, or pilgrimage sites are named in the given verses.