Prahlada’s Pilgrimage Circuit: Tirtha-Mahatmya from Naimisha to Rudrakoti and Shalagrama
प्लक्षावतरणं गत्वा श्रीनिवासमपूजयत् ततश्च कुण्डिनं गत्वा संपूज्य प्रामतृप्तिदम्
plakṣāvataraṇaṃ gatvā śrīnivāsamapūjayat tataśca kuṇḍinaṃ gatvā saṃpūjya prāmatṛptidam
ப்லக்ஷாவதரணத்திற்குச் சென்று அவர் ஸ்ரீநிவாசனை வழிபட்டார்; பின்னர் குண்டினத்திற்குச் சென்று உயிர்களுக்கு முழுத் திருப்தி அளிப்பவனைச் சரிவரப் பூஜித்தார்।
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Avataraṇa commonly denotes a descent-point to water—a ford, ghat, or river-entry used for snāna and crossing. Such nodes become tirthas because they structure ritual access to the river and are often marked by a notable tree (here, a plakṣa).
Ford-tirthas frequently host Viṣṇu shrines because Viṣṇu is strongly associated with protection, passage, and auspicious transitions. ‘Śrīnivāsa’ emphasizes prosperity and well-being gained through properly performed travel, bathing, and worship.
The name aligns with the well-known Vidarbha capital in epic/Purāṇic memory. In a geography-forward Purāṇa like the Vāmana Purāṇa, such identifications are typical: famous cities are integrated into pilgrimage networks, each with a local shrine whose ‘fruit’ is summarized by an epithet like ‘giver of satisfaction.’