Jabali Bound on the Banyan Tree and Nandayanti’s Appeal at Sri-Kantha on the Yamuna
ईजे च विविधैर्यज्ञैर्नृपतिः शुक्रपावलितः सुक्रस्यासीच्च दुहिता अरजा नाम नामतः
īje ca vividhairyajñairnṛpatiḥ śukrapāvalitaḥ sukrasyāsīcca duhitā arajā nāma nāmataḥ
O rei, orientado por Śukra, realizou diversos sacrifícios (yajñas). E Śukra tinha uma filha, cujo nome, por denominação, era Arajā.
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Śukra is the Bhārgava preceptor (ācārya) famed as the guru of the Asuras; his guidance legitimizes royal rites and frames the Asura polity as operating within Vedic sacrificial norms.
It signals that political authority is ideally tethered to ritual expertise; even in Asura-linked narratives, yajña and priestly counsel function as markers of dharma-like order and prestige.
Arajā’s introduction prepares for subsequent court and household episodes—often involving hospitality, service to fire (agni), and alliances—by establishing her identity and lineage as Śukra’s daughter.