Shukra’s Curse on King Danda and Andhaka’s Challenge to Shiva
ततो ऋतध्वजः श्रीमान् कपिं वचनमब्रवीत् गच्छनेतुं गुह्यकं त्वमञ्जनाद्रौ महाञ्जनम्
tato ṛtadhvajaḥ śrīmān kapiṃ vacanamabravīt gacchanetuṃ guhyakaṃ tvamañjanādrau mahāñjanam
Затем славный Ритадхваджа сказал обезьяне: «Ступай и приведи Гухьяку по имени Махāнджана с горы Анджанадри».
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Guhyakas are a class of semi-divine beings commonly associated with Kubera, guardianship, and hidden (guhya) places/treasures. Their appearance signals a shift into a mythic network of attendants and guardians tied to specific locales (here, Añjanādri).
In Purāṇic geography, named mountains frequently function as sacred nodes even when not explicitly called a tīrtha. Añjanādri is treated as a distinct, locatable sacred mountain, anchoring the episode spatially and enabling later tīrtha-style associations in the broader text tradition.
Purāṇic narratives often employ animal or semi-divine agents as swift messengers. The kapi here functions as a mobile intermediary, paralleling broader Indic epic motifs where monkeys serve as capable envoys and movers between realms/terrains.