Prahlada’s Pilgrimage Circuit: Tirtha-Mahatmya from Naimisha to Rudrakoti and Shalagrama
अश्वतीर्थे ततः स्नात्वा दृष्ट्वा च तुरगाननम् श्रीधरं चैव संपूज्य पञ्चालविषयं ययौ
aśvatīrthe tataḥ snātvā dṛṣṭvā ca turagānanam śrīdharaṃ caiva saṃpūjya pañcālaviṣayaṃ yayau
{"avatara_relevance": true, "avatara_stage": "trivikrama", "dwarf_form_active": false, "trivikrama_form_active": true, "bali_interaction": "Implicit: cosmic form that encompasses the worlds, the same vision that compels Bali’s surrender", "divine_purpose": "To reveal universal sovereignty and re-order the cosmos through the three strides", "aditi_kashyapa_context": null}
{ "primaryRasa": "", "secondaryRasa": "", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Purāṇic tirtha practice commonly sequences purification (snāna) before deity-contact (darśana) and formal worship (pūjā). The verse encodes that normative ritual order within a travel narrative.
They are best read as two shrine-manifestations or epithets of Viṣṇu encountered at successive points: Turagānana emphasizes the horse-faced form (Hayagrīva-type), while Śrīdhara emphasizes Viṣṇu as Lakṣmī’s bearer—together reflecting the plurality of Vaiṣṇava sacred sites.
It anchors the itinerary in a recognizable janapada (Pañcāla), showing that the text maps holiness not only to isolated tirthas but also across broader political-cultural regions, linking local shrines to macro-geography.