एकादशरुद्रावतारकथनम् / Account of the Eleven Rudra Manifestations
Rudrāvatāras
एकादशैते रुद्रास्तु सुरभतिनयाः स्मृताः । देवकार्य्यार्थमुत्पन्नाश्शिवरूपास्सुखास्पदम्
ekādaśaite rudrāstu surabhatinayāḥ smṛtāḥ | devakāryyārthamutpannāśśivarūpāssukhāspadam
รุดระทั้งสิบเอ็ดนี้ระลึกกันว่าเป็นโอรสของสุรภติ พวกท่านอุบัติขึ้นเพื่อให้กิจของเหล่าเทพสำเร็จ เป็นปางของศิวะเอง และเป็นที่สถิตแห่งความปีติอันเป็นมงคล
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Rudra
Type: stotra
Role: creative
Offering: dhupa
It affirms that the eleven Rudras are not separate deities but Śiva’s own manifested powers, arising to restore divine order; contemplating them leads the devotee toward Śiva as the source of ānanda (bliss) and auspiciousness.
By declaring the Rudras as śivarūpāḥ, the verse supports Saguna worship—approaching the One Śiva through specific forms—while the Liṅga remains the unifying symbol of that single Supreme reality manifesting as many.
A practical takeaway is Rudra-smaraṇa (remembrance of Śiva’s Rudra forms) alongside japa of the Pañcākṣarī “Om Namaḥ Śivāya,” optionally supported by Tripuṇḍra (bhasma) and Rudrākṣa as Shaiva marks of devotion and discipline.