HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 31Shloka 38
Previous Verse

Vamana Purana — Birth of Skanda (Kartikeya), Shloka 38

The Birth and Consecration of Skanda (Kartikeya) at Kurukshetra

संप्राप्तास्ते शरवणं हराग्निकुटिलाम्बिकाः ददृशुः शिशुकं तं च कृत्तिकोत्सङ्गशायिनम्

saṃprāptāste śaravaṇaṃ harāgnikuṭilāmbikāḥ dadṛśuḥ śiśukaṃ taṃ ca kṛttikotsaṅgaśāyinam

Hara, Agni, Kuṭilā và Ambikā, khi đã đến Śaravaṇa, liền trông thấy đứa trẻ ấy đang nằm trong lòng các Kṛttikā.

Narrator describing the divine party’s arrival and sight.
Śiva (Hara)AgniAmbikā/Umā (Pārvatī)KuṭilāKṛttikās (Pleiades)Skanda/Kārttikeya (as infant)
Sacred landscape as mythic stageDivine maternity (Kṛttikās as nurses)Skanda’s epiphanyŚaiva family narrative with Vedic deity Agni

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

FAQs

Śaravaṇa literally denotes a reed-thicket/forest. In Skanda traditions it becomes a sacral geography marker: the liminal, watery-vegetal landscape where the divine child is revealed and cared for, anchoring the myth to a recognizable ‘tīrtha-like’ terrain.

The Kṛttikās are the star-deities of the Pleiades, frequently cast as foster-mothers of Skanda. Their ‘lap’ symbolizes celestial nurture and legitimizes Skanda’s epithet Kārttikeya (“son of the Kṛttikās”).

Skanda’s birth-cycle often involves transmission of Śiva’s energy through Agni, culminating in the child’s manifestation in a liminal natural setting. Their joint presence emphasizes continuity between Śiva’s power, Agni’s mediating role, and the child’s divine identity.