HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 43Shloka 56
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Vamana Purana — Shukra's Samjivani, Shloka 56

Shukra’s Saṃjīvanī, Shiva’s Containment of the Asuras, and Indra’s Recovery of Power

सरभः शलक्षः पाकः पुरो ऽथ विपृथुःपृथुः वातापि चेल्वलश्चैव नानाशस्त्रास्त्रयोधिनः

sarabhaḥ śalakṣaḥ pākaḥ puro 'tha vipṛthuḥpṛthuḥ vātāpi celvalaścaiva nānāśastrāstrayodhinaḥ

“Sarabhā, Śalakṣa, Pāka e depois Puro; também Vipṛthu e Pṛthu; e Vātāpi e Celvala—todos guerreiros versados em diversas armas e projéteis (astras).”

Narrator (Sūta/paurāṇika voice) describing the battle to the listening sages (traditional frame)
Shiva (Rudra)Rudras (collective)Devas (collective)
Asura musterCatalogue of warriors (nāma-saṅgraha)Martial imagery (śastra–astra)Cosmic conflict (deva–asura yuddha)

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

FAQs

Such catalogues function as a ‘battle roster’ (nāma-saṅgraha), a common epic-purāṇic technique that conveys the scale of the conflict and preserves traditional name-lists associated with particular myth-cycles (here, the Andhaka-related war).

Śastra typically denotes a hand-held weapon used directly (e.g., sword, mace), while astra denotes a discharged or projected weapon—often empowered by mantra/ritual knowledge—emphasizing both physical and sacralized modes of combat.

Names like Vātāpi are prominent in wider Itihāsa-Purāṇa lore (often paired with Ilvala). Their appearance here signals the Purāṇic habit of reusing renowned asura figures across different battle narratives to intensify the sense of a pan-demonic coalition.