HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 46Shloka 69
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Shloka 69

Origins of the MarutsOrigins of the Maruts Across the Manvantaras (Pulastya–Narada Dialogue)

ते च मात्रा विनाभूता रुरुदुस्तान् पितामहः निवारयित्वा कृतवांल्लोकनाथो मरुद्गणान्

te ca mātrā vinābhūtā rurudustān pitāmahaḥ nivārayitvā kṛtavāṃllokanātho marudgaṇān

ते च मातृविहीना बालाः रुरुदुः। तान् पितामहः सान्त्वयित्वा निवार्य च, लोकनाथः तान् मरुद्गणत्वेन नियोजयामास।

Narratorial voice; Brahmā (Pitāmaha) acts within the narrative toward the motherless children.
BrahmāMaruts
Brahmā as cosmic ordainerOrigin of the Maruts (etiology)Transformation from human birth to divine function

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FAQs

Pitāmaha is Brahmā, the ‘Grandfather’ of beings. ‘Loka-nātha’ underscores his role as cosmic administrator who assigns functions and stations to beings—here, converting the seven children into a divine collective.

Maruts are storm/wind deities, often attendants of Indra in Vedic literature and later grouped as a gaṇa (host). Purāṇas frequently provide origin-stories (janma-kathā) for such deities to integrate Vedic gods into Purāṇic genealogies and local sacred narratives.

Tīrtha texts often connect local events to cosmic structures: a place becomes significant because it is where a divine group originated, was empowered, or received a role. Even if the place-name is outside these three verses, the chapter’s broader frame typically anchors this origin to a specific sacred geography, thereby enhancing the site’s prestige and pilgrimage merit.