Kuru's Consecration — Kuru’s Consecration and the Sanctification of Samantapañcaka (Kurukshetra)
तथा च सर्वाणा महार्णवानि तीर्थानि नद्यः स्त्रवणाः सरांसि संनिर्मितानीह महाभुजेन तच्चैक्यमागात् सलिलं महीषु
tathā ca sarvāṇā mahārṇavāni tīrthāni nadyaḥ stravaṇāḥ sarāṃsi saṃnirmitānīha mahābhujena taccaikyamāgāt salilaṃ mahīṣu
ดังนั้น ณ ที่นี้ผู้ทรงกรอันยิ่งใหญ่ได้สร้างมหาสมุทรทั้งปวง ตีรถะ แม่น้ำ ลำธารที่ไหล และสระน้ำทั้งหลาย แล้วสายน้ำนั้นบนแผ่นดินก็ถูกรวบรวมให้เป็นเอกภาพเดียว
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The verse frames sacred geography as intentionally “made” (saṃnirmitāni) rather than accidental: tīrthas are loci where the world is ordered toward purification. Ethically, it supports pilgrimage and reverence for water-bodies as instruments of pāpa-kṣaya (sin-diminution) and dharma-support.
Primarily within Sarga/Pratisarga-style cosmological ordering applied to terrestrial sacred space (a localized ‘creation’ of tīrthas). In Purāṇic taxonomy it also aligns with ‘tīrtha-māhātmya’ material, often embedded alongside cosmography.
The ‘aikya’ (unity) of waters symbolizes convergence: diverse rivers and tīrthas function as many access-points to one purifying principle. In non-sectarian Purāṇic reading, this can mirror the text’s broader harmonizing impulse—many forms and names, one sanctifying reality.