Harihara Non-Duality and the Revelation of Sadasiva to the Ganas
दिग्वाससो मौनिनश्च घण्टाप्रहरणास्तथा निराश्रया नाम गणाः समायाता जगद्गुरो
digvāsaso mauninaśca ghaṇṭāpraharaṇāstathā nirāśrayā nāma gaṇāḥ samāyātā jagadguro
Chegaram as gaṇas chamadas “Nirāśrayas”: vestidas do céu (digvāsa), observando o silêncio (mauna) e trazendo sinos como armas, ao Mestre do Mundo (Jagadguru).
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They are a named class of Śiva’s attendant hosts (gaṇas), characterized here by ascetic markers—sky-clad (digambara) and silent (maunī)—and by a distinctive ‘weapon’ (bells), indicating ritual/sonic power rather than conventional arms.
In Purāṇic and tantric-Śaiva idiom, sound (nāda) and ritual instruments can function as apotropaic force—driving away obstacles, terrifying hostile beings, and marking divine presence—hence a bell can be poetically treated as a weapon.
No explicit river, lake, forest, or tīrtha is named in this śloka; it is primarily a catalog of divine retinues within the Andhaka narrative context.