HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 31Shloka 57
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Vamana Purana — Birth of Skanda (Kartikeya), Shloka 57

The Birth and Consecration of Skanda (Kartikeya) at Kurukshetra

अभिषिक्तं कुमारं च गिरिपुत्री निरीक्ष्य हि स्नेहादुत्सङ्गगं स्कन्दं मूर्ध्न्यजिघ्रन्मुर्हुर्मुहुः

abhiṣiktaṃ kumāraṃ ca giriputrī nirīkṣya hi snehādutsaṅgagaṃ skandaṃ mūrdhnyajighranmurhurmuhuḥ

{"location": null, "location_type": null, "region": null, "sacred_significance": "Departure scene en route to a sacred birth-site (Śaravaṇa), a liminal space where divine agency and elemental power (Agni) converge.", "cosmic_realm": "bhuloka"}

Narrator describing Pārvatī’s response to Skanda’s installation.
Pārvatī (Giriputrī)Skanda (Kumāra/Kārttikeya)
Maternal affection (vātsalya)Ritual-to-emotion transition (abhiṣeka followed by intimacy)Śaiva divine familyAuspicious gestures

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

FAQs

It is a conventional gesture of deep affection and blessing, especially maternal—drawing the child close, inhaling their scent, and thereby expressing protection, intimacy, and auspicious approval.

Purāṇas often balance royal/heroic functions with relational dharma: Skanda becomes senāpati by cosmic rite, yet remains Pārvatī’s child. This frames power as grounded in familial and devotional bonds, not mere force.

Yes, even when not naming a specific tīrtha, such epithets anchor the narrative in sacred geography: ‘daughter of the mountain’ evokes Himālaya and the broader Śaiva landscape where mountains are loci of tapas and divine manifestation.