HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 41Shloka 14
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Vamana Purana — Harihara Non-Duality, Shloka 14

Harihara Non-Duality and the Revelation of Sadasiva to the Ganas

दिग्वाससो मौनिनश्च घण्टाप्रहरणास्तथा निराश्रया नाम गणाः समायाता जगद्गुरो

digvāsaso mauninaśca ghaṇṭāpraharaṇāstathā nirāśrayā nāma gaṇāḥ samāyātā jagadguro

దిగంబరులై, మౌనవ్రతులు, గంటలను ఆయుధాలుగా ధరించిన ‘నిరాశ్రయ’ అనే గణులు జగద్గురువుని చేరి వచ్చారు।

Narrator (Purāṇic narrator) describing the assembly to the listener (traditional frame: Pulastya to Nārada)
Shiva
Gaṇa taxonomy and iconographyAscetic motifs (digambara, mauna)Śaiva devotional framing in the Andhaka cycle

{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "vira", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }

FAQs

They are a named class of Śiva’s attendant hosts (gaṇas), characterized here by ascetic markers—sky-clad (digambara) and silent (maunī)—and by a distinctive ‘weapon’ (bells), indicating ritual/sonic power rather than conventional arms.

In Purāṇic and tantric-Śaiva idiom, sound (nāda) and ritual instruments can function as apotropaic force—driving away obstacles, terrifying hostile beings, and marking divine presence—hence a bell can be poetically treated as a weapon.

No explicit river, lake, forest, or tīrtha is named in this śloka; it is primarily a catalog of divine retinues within the Andhaka narrative context.