HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 9Shloka 4
Previous Verse
Next Verse

Vamana Purana — Andhaka's Coronation, Shloka 4

Andhaka’s Coronation, Boons from Shiva, and the Daiva–Asura War (Vahana Catalogues)

पुलस्त्य उवाच राज्ये ऽभिषिक्तो दैत्येन्द्रो हिरण्याक्षसुतो ऽन्धकः तपसाराध्य देवेशं शूलपाणिं त्रिलोचनम्

pulastya uvāca rājye 'bhiṣikto daityendro hiraṇyākṣasuto 'ndhakaḥ tapasārādhya deveśaṃ śūlapāṇiṃ trilocanam

Pulastya disse: Andhaka, filho de Hiraṇyākṣa—consagrado ao reino e senhor entre os Daityas—propiciou, por meio de austeridades, o Senhor dos deuses, o portador do tridente, o de três olhos (Śiva).

Pulastya to Nārada
Śiva
Tapas (austerity) as means to boons/powerŚaiva devotion within a Purāṇic narrativeSectarian harmony potential (Daitya worship of Śiva)

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

FAQs

Tapas is presented as a potent spiritual technology accessible even to Daityas; the ethical question shifts to how acquired power is used. The Purāṇic lens often distinguishes spiritual efficacy (tapas works) from dharmic orientation (whether the goal aligns with cosmic order).

Vamśānucarita (career of Andhaka) with a devotional/ritual-ascetic episode that often functions as a causal node leading to future conflicts (boon → hubris → confrontation).

Śiva titled 'Deveśa' underscores his supra-sectarian status in the Vāmana Purāṇa’s harmonizing style: even an Asura-king seeks Śiva as the ultimate granter of boons. The trident and third eye signal mastery over the three guṇas/three times and the capacity to burn ignorance—an ironic counterpoint when sought for worldly domination.