The Birth and Consecration of Skanda (Kartikeya) at Kurukshetra
हंसास्यं कुण्डजठरं बहुग्रीवं हयाननम् कूर्मग्रीवं च पञ्चैतान् ददुः पुत्राय कृत्तिकाः
haṃsāsyaṃ kuṇḍajaṭharaṃ bahugrīvaṃ hayānanam kūrmagrīvaṃ ca pañcaitān daduḥ putrāya kṛttikāḥ
{"has_teaching": true, "teaching_type": "dharma", "core_concept": "Legitimate power is conferred through divine sanction and service to cosmic order.", "teaching_summary": "Kumāra’s command is not self-assumed; it is bestowed by Bhava, witnessed by gaṇas and Mātṛs, indicating that righteous authority arises from alignment with dharma and divine will.", "vedantic_theme": "Līlā as governance: roles (adhikāra) are assigned within īśvara-sṛṣṭi; ego-less action becomes instrumentality (nimitta-bhāva).", "practical_application": "Seek authority through competence, consecration, and service; treat leadership as stewardship under dharma rather than personal domination."}
{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Purāṇic lists often function as onomastic theology: they can be read as literal mythic forms (rūpa-bheda) and also as symbolic markers of Skanda’s superhuman, protean nature. The text’s grammar (“daduḥ… pañcaitān”) supports ‘bestowed designations/forms’ rather than a single fixed anatomy.
In Skanda traditions, the Kṛttikās are foster-mothers who nurture and ‘name’ the child. Naming/attributing forms is a way of establishing divine identity, powers, and cultic remembrance (stotra/namāvali usage).
Not in this śloka. It is a mythic-catalogue verse; geographic anchoring, if present in the chapter, would occur in surrounding passages rather than here.