The Rite of the Āṣāḍha Bright-Fortnight Dvādaśī Fast and the Installation (Nyāsa) of the Fourfold Manifestation
सौभकंसजरासन्धाः पुनर्नरक एव च । कुरुपाञ्चालभोजाश्च बलिनो दानवाः सुराः । पीडयन्ति समेतां मां तान् हनध्वं सुरोत्तमाः ॥ ४६.१० ॥
saubhakaṃsajarāsandhāḥ punar naraka eva ca | kurupāñcālabhojāś ca balino dānavāḥ surāḥ | pīḍayanti sametā māṃ tān hanadhvaṃ surottamāḥ || 46.10 ||
సౌభ, కంస, జరాసంధుడు మరియు మరల నరకుడును; అలాగే కురు, పాంచాల, భోజులు—బలవంతులైన దానవులు, దేవసమాన శత్రువులు—అందరూ కూడి నన్ను పీడిస్తున్నారు. ఓ దేవోత్తములారా, వారిని సంహరించండి.
Pṛthivī (default dialogue framework; the Earth addressing the gods)
Varaha Avatara Context: {"is_varaha_focus":false}
Bhu Devi Dialogue: {"is_dialogue":true,"speaker_role":"questioner","bhu_devi_state":"Burdened and distressed by oppression; seeking relief through divine intervention.","key_question":"Who will remove the oppressive coalition of rulers/daityas afflicting the Earth and restore dharmic order?"}
Mathura Mandala: {"is_mathura_related":false,"krishna_connection":"Foreshadows Krishna-era antagonists (Kaṃsa, Jarāsandha, Naraka) as part of Earth’s burden narrative, though not explicitly Mathurā-maṇḍala here."}
Dharma Shastra: {"has_dharma_rule":false}
Vrata Mahatmya: {"has_vrata":false}
Cosmic Boar Symbolism: {"has_symbolism":false}
Philosophical Teaching: {"has_teaching":true,"teaching_type":"theodicy / dharma-restoration","core_concept":"When adharma consolidates as political-military oppression, the Earth herself becomes the locus of moral crisis and seeks divine rebalancing.","practical_application":"Read political power through dharma: protect subjects, restrain violence, and seek righteous governance; collective adharma invites corrective divine action."}
Subject Matter: ["Cosmology","Ethics","Political Geography","Conflict Narratives"]
Primary Rasa: karuṇa
Secondary Rasa: raudra
Type: political-geographic landscape
Related Themes: Varāha Purāṇa Bhū-devī–deva-saṃvāda frame (Earth’s complaint leading to divine response)
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"Bhū-devī personified, distressed, addressing an assembly of devas, naming hostile kings/daityas who weigh upon her.","item_prompts":["Bhū-devī with earth-toned garments and a globe/lotus motif","deva assembly in a celestial court","visual tokens for named foes (mace, crown, fortress silhouette)","gesture of supplication (añjali)","atmosphere of crisis (darkened horizon over the earth)"],"kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: Bhū-devī in green/ochre palette with expressive eyes, devas in ornate crowns, flat iconic composition, narrative labels implied by attributes.","tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore style: central Bhū-devī with gold-leaf ornaments, devas in gilded arch, rich reds/greens, embossed jewelry, dramatic pleading mudrā.","mysore_prompt":"Mysore style: delicate linework, soft shading, Bhū-devī’s sorrow emphasized, devas attentive, restrained but regal ornamentation.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari style: lyrical court scene, rolling hills/cloud bands, Bhū-devī smaller and plaintive, devas grouped, subtle symbolism for distant kingdoms."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"supplicatory and urgent","suggested_raga":"Bhairav","pace":"medium-fast (to convey alarm)","voice_tone":"grave, pleading, with emphatic stress on the list of oppressors"}
The verse preserves a Purāṇic catalog of well-known epic-era antagonists and polity-names (e.g., Kuru, Pāñcāla, Bhoja), illustrating how Purāṇas integrate remembered political geography with mythic conflict narratives.
Kuru, Pāñcāla, and Bhoja are regional/political identifiers: Kuru is associated with the Kurukṣetra–Hastināpura cultural zone; Pāñcāla broadly with the middle Ganga-Yamuna region; Bhoja commonly with central/western Indian realms (often linked in scholarship to areas around Mālava/Avanti traditions).
A protection-ethic is foregrounded: when the Earth (Pṛthivī) is portrayed as being harmed by violent forces, legitimate authority is urged to restrain and remove those causing harm—framed as a duty of guardianship rather than sectarian triumph.
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