Nimi’s Disembodied Liberation and the Rise of the Mithilā (Videha) Dynasty
वस्वनन्तोऽथ तत्पुत्रो युयुधो यत् सुभाषण: । श्रुतस्ततो जयस्तस्माद् विजयोऽस्मादृत: सुत: ॥ २५ ॥
vasvananto ’tha tat-putro yuyudho yat subhāṣaṇaḥ śrutas tato jayas tasmād vijayo ’smād ṛtaḥ sutaḥ
உபகுப்தனின் மகன் வச்வநந்தன்; அவனுடைய மகன் யுயுதன். யுயுதனின் மகன் ஸுபாஷணன்; ஸுபாஷணனின் மகன் ஸ்ருதன். ஸ்ருதனின் மகன் ஜயன்; ஜயனிடமிருந்து விஜயன்; விஜயனின் மகன் ருதன் (தன்).
It lists the succession: Vasvananta’s son was Yuyudha; from Yuyudha came Śruta, then Jaya, then Vijaya, and from Vijaya came Ṛta.
Alongside genealogy, the text highlights notable qualities of rulers; Yuyudha is remembered for refined speech, a virtue associated with cultured, dharmic leadership.
Character and speech matter: cultivating truthful, pleasing, and disciplined speech (subhāṣaṇa) is presented as a lasting virtue worth remembering across generations.