The Jyeṣṭha Full-Moon Vow, the Birth of the Maruts, and the Outline of Secondary Creation
Manvantaras
तदा देवाश्च तुषिताः स्मृता स्वारोचिषेंतरे । हवींद्रसुःकृतो मूर्तिरापो ज्योतिरथः स्मृतः
tadā devāśca tuṣitāḥ smṛtā svārociṣeṃtare | havīṃdrasuḥkṛto mūrtirāpo jyotirathaḥ smṛtaḥ
ครั้นในสวาโรจิษะมันวันตระ เหล่าเทวะถูกจดจำว่าเป็น “ตุษิตะ”; ฮวีนทราและสุหกฤตถูกกล่าวถึง และมูรติทรงเป็นคู่เทวีนารี; อาปะและชโยติรถะก็เป็นที่ระลึกในกาลนั้น
Unspecified in the provided excerpt (narratorial voice listing Manvantara details).
Concept: Divine functions (devas, Indra, consorts, personified principles) rotate by epoch; stability comes from Vishnu’s overarching preservation despite changing administrations.
Application: Accept change in roles and circumstances while holding to steady devotion and ethics; see offices as service, not identity.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Type: celestial_realm
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A celestial registry scene: the Tuṣita devas stand in luminous ranks like a choir, while Havīndra and Suḥkṛta appear as dignified divine administrators holding lotus-seals. Beside them, Mūrti—serene and maternal—radiates calm, and personified Āpa (as flowing crystal water) and Jyotiratha (as a chariot of light) arc across the sky like living principles.","primary_figures":["Tuṣita devas","Havīndra","Suḥkṛta","Mūrti","Āpa (personified waters)","Jyotiratha (chariot of light)"],"setting":"A bright celestial hall with cloud-pillars, lotus motifs, and a sky-road where a light-chariot moves; water streams float as suspended ribbons.","lighting_mood":"divine radiance","color_palette":["opal white","aqua blue","sunlit gold","lavender mist","coral orange"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: celestial court with Tuṣita devas in symmetrical rows, Havīndra and Suḥkṛta holding lotus-emblems, Mūrti seated with gold-leaf halo and ornate jewelry, Āpa as stylized flowing blue ribbons, Jyotiratha as a radiant golden chariot, heavy gold leaf and jewel-like detailing.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: airy cloud architecture, delicate devas with soft halos, Mūrti portrayed with gentle expression, translucent water-personification for Āpa, a luminous chariot streak for Jyotiratha, cool pastel palette and fine linework.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold outlines, flat yet vibrant celestial hall, Tuṣitas with standardized iconography, Mūrti with large eyes and calm posture, stylized water bands for Āpa, circular radiant chariot motif for Jyotiratha, temple-wall composition with patterned borders.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: lotus-heavy celestial backdrop, Tuṣitas arranged like floral garlands, Mūrti central as a serene goddess figure, Jyotiratha depicted as a golden sun-chariot motif, Āpa as decorative wave patterns, intricate borders with lotuses and vines in deep blue and gold."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"narrative","suggested_raga":"Yaman","pace":"moderate-narrative","voice_tone":"authoritative","sound_elements":["conch shell","soft choir-like humming","wind through clouds","gentle bell chimes"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: देवाश्च → देवाः च; स्वारोचिषेंतरे → स्वारोचिष-अन्तरे; हवींद्रसुःकृतो → हवीन्द्र-सुःकृतः; मूर्तिरापो → मूर्तिः आपः
It is one of the cyclic eras (Manvantaras) in Purāṇic cosmology, each ruled by a Manu; here the text notes the beings and names associated with the Svārociṣa period.
The Tuṣitas are a class of gods (devas) who are identified as the principal deities in this particular Manvantara, as the Purāṇas often assign different groups of gods to different cosmic cycles.
The verse functions as a cosmological register: it preserves traditional memory of who is said to preside or appear in a given Manvantara, emphasizing the Purāṇic view of repeating cosmic cycles and orderly succession.