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Shloka 11

सप्तद्वीप-सप्तसमुद्र-वर्णनम् तथा प्रियव्रतवंश-राज्यविभागः

सनन्दनश् च भगवान् सनकश् च सनातनः वालखिल्याश् च सिद्धाश् च मित्रावरुणकौ तथा

sanandanaś ca bhagavān sanakaś ca sanātanaḥ vālakhilyāś ca siddhāś ca mitrāvaruṇakau tathā

بھگوان سنندن، سنک اور سناتن؛ والکھلیہ رشی اور سدھ گن؛ نیز مِتر اور ورُن—یہ معزز ہستیاں بھی (اس مقدس مجلس میں) موجود تھیں۔

सनन्दनःSanandana (a Kumāra-sage)
सनन्दनः:
and
:
भगवान्the venerable one / divine sage
भगवान्:
सनकःSanaka
सनकः:
and
:
सनातनःSanātana
सनातनः:
वालखिल्याःthe Vālakhilya sages
वालखिल्याः:
and
:
सिद्धाःperfected beings (Siddhas)
सिद्धाः:
and
:
मित्रावरुणकौMitra and Varuṇa (Vedic deities)
मित्रावरुणकौ:
तथाlikewise / also
तथा:

Suta Goswami

S
Sanandana
S
Sanaka
S
Sanatana
V
Valakhilyas
S
Siddhas
M
Mitra
V
Varuna

FAQs

It establishes that Shiva’s Linga-centered revelation is witnessed and affirmed by authoritative Vedic and yogic beings (Kumāras, Siddhas, and Vedic deities), strengthening the scriptural legitimacy of Linga worship.

By gathering Kumāras and Siddhas—symbols of jñāna (gnosis) and yogic perfection—the verse implies Shiva-tattva as Pati: the supreme reality known through purity, tapas, and direct realization beyond ordinary bondage (pāśa) of the pashu (individual soul).

The verse foregrounds tapas and siddhi-oriented discipline—an atmosphere aligned with Pāśupata-style yogic striving—where realized beings gather around Shiva’s teaching and the sanctity of the Linga narrative.