HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 63Shloka 6
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Shloka 6

Sacred Abodes of Vishnu & ShivaCatalogue of Vishnu and Shiva’s Sacred Abodes (Tirtha-Mahatmya within the Pulastya–Narada Frame)

प्राचीने कामपालं च पुण्डरीकं महाम्भसि विशाखयूपे ह्यजितं हंसं हंसपदे तथा

prācīne kāmapālaṃ ca puṇḍarīkaṃ mahāmbhasi viśākhayūpe hyajitaṃ haṃsaṃ haṃsapade tathā

پرَچین (مشرقی) مقدّس خطّے میں وہ کامپال ہیں؛ مہامبھس (عظیم آب) میں پُنڈریک؛ وِشاکھَیوپ میں اجیت؛ اور ہنسپد میں اسی طرح ہنس کے روپ میں قائم ہیں۔

Likely the narrator (traditionally Pulastya) to Nāradacontinuing the enumerative pilgrimage register.
Vishnu
Ritual markers in geography (yūpa as sacral sign)Ocean/Waters as tirtha-spaceViṣṇu epithets distributed across pilgrimage nodesSymbolic theology (lotus, swan) embedded in place-names

{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }

FAQs

Purāṇic catalogues use “Mahāmbhas” both descriptively and as a proper sacred designation. It can denote an oceanic tirtha or a mythically charged ‘great waters’ zone where a specific epithet (Puṇḍarīka) is worshipped.

A yūpa is a durable ritual landmark. Naming a place after a yūpa preserves memory of a paradigmatic sacrifice, turning ritual history into pilgrimage geography.

The swan (haṃsa) symbolizes spiritual discernment and transcendence. The toponym ‘Haṃsapada’ sacralizes that symbolism by locating it in a specific pilgrimage node, where the deity is approached through that emblematic form.