HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 62Shloka 11
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Vamana Purana — Vamana's Birth, Shloka 11

Vamana’s Birth during Bali’s Horse-Sacrifice and the Mapping of Vishnu’s Sacred Presences

ततो दूरादपश्यन्त वनषण्डं सुविस्तृतम् वनं हरगलश्यामं खगध्वनिनिनादितम्

tato dūrādapaśyanta vanaṣaṇḍaṃ suvistṛtam vanaṃ haragalaśyāmaṃ khagadhvaninināditam

["Guru’s counsel", "Asura polity and dharma", "Foreshadowing of divine intervention", "Narrative transition"]

Narrator continuing the account of the ṛṣis’ journey and perception.
Shiva (Hara/Nīlakaṇṭha)
Sacred landscape description (vana as tīrtha-environment)Śaiva imagery embedded in geographyAuspicious natural soundscape (bird-calls)

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FAQs

The simile evokes Śiva as Nīlakaṇṭha (‘blue-throated’), linking the landscape’s dark hue to a well-known Śaiva mythic marker. In Purāṇic geography, such comparisons subtly sacralize terrain by mapping divine attributes onto natural features.

Not necessarily. It denotes a deep dark/blue-black tone (śyāma) poetically intensified by the Nīlakaṇṭha reference—suggesting dense shade, moisture, or thick foliage.

It identifies a large forest-grove (vanaṣaṇḍa, suvistṛta) characterized by avian sound (khaga-dhvani). While unnamed, it functions as a locational waypoint in the tīrtha itinerary and should be indexed as a forested sacred landscape element.