Rājābhiṣeka-kathana
Account of the Royal Consecration
राज्ञोमुकुटबन्धञ्च पञ्चचर्मोत्तरं ददेत् ध्रुवाद्यैर् इति च विशेद् वृषजं वृषदंशजं
rājñomukuṭabandhañca pañcacarmottaraṃ dadet dhruvādyair iti ca viśed vṛṣajaṃ vṛṣadaṃśajaṃ
又当为国王施行冠冕系结之礼,并赐以由五种皮革制成的上衣。随后诵念 Dhruvā 等所规定的真言,进入仪式,召请 Vṛṣaja 与 Vṛṣadaṃśaja。
Lord Agni (narrating to Sage Vasiṣṭha in the Agni Purana’s instructional dialogue style)
Vidya Category: {"primary_vidya":"Vrata","secondary_vidya":"Mantra","practical_application":"Investiture of royal insignia: binding the crown, clothing with pañca-carma upper garment, and proceeding with Dhruvā and related mantras including invocations of Vṛṣaja/Vṛṣadaṃśaja.","sutra_style":true}
Encyclopedic Reference: {"reference_type":"Procedure","entry_title":"Mukuṭa-bandha, pañca-carma uttarīya, and Dhruvā-mantra in investiture","lookup_keywords":["mukuṭa bandha","pañca carma","dhruvā mantra","rāja insignia","vṛṣaja vṛṣadaṃśaja"],"quick_summary":"Specifies the conferral of crown and a five-skin upper garment, followed by entry into the rite with Dhruvā and allied mantras—formalizing sovereignty through mantra and regalia."}
Concept: Kingship is a vowed office (vrata-like): regalia and mantra together ‘fix’ (dhruvā—steadfast) the ruler in dharma.
Application: Use Dhruvā-type mantras to symbolize stability and continuity when conferring authority; ensure regalia is ritually and socially legitimate.
Khanda Section: Rajadharma (Royal consecration, insignia, and courtly investiture rites)
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: vira
Type: Kingdom
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"The purohita places and binds a crown on the king; the king is draped in an upper garment made of five skins; priests recite Dhruvā mantras as the rite proceeds, with attendants holding ritual trays.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural, frontal king receiving mukuṭa, pañca-carma garment stylized with patterned hides, priest chanting, attendants with lamps and flowers, bold lines and sacred symmetry","tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting, king with ornate crown being tied, heavy gold leaf on mukuṭa and jewelry, richly patterned five-skin cloak, ceremonial grandeur, temple-like backdrop","mysore_prompt":"Mysore style, clear investiture scene: priest adjusting crown band, garment draping steps shown, mantra-recitation posture, soft shading and precise ornament detail","mughal_miniature_prompt":"Mughal miniature, durbar investiture, detailed crown-binding, textured cloak suggesting multiple hides, scribes and attendants, refined architecture and textiles"}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"epic","suggested_raga":"Bhairavi","pace":"medium","voice_tone":"devotional"}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: राज्ञोमुकुटबन्धञ्च = राज्ञः + मुकुटबन्धम् + च; ध्रुवाद्यैर् = ध्रुवाद्यैः; विशेद् = विशेत् (त्→द् before voiced consonant in some recensions).
Related Themes: Agni Purana 218 (insignia bestowal sequence); Agni Purana mantra sections (Dhruvā and related consecration mantras)
It gives a precise coronation sequence: investiture with the crown-binding, conferral of a ritually specified five-skin upper garment, and proceeding while reciting the Dhruvā and related mantras, with invocations tied to Vṛṣaja/Vṛṣadaṃśaja.
It preserves a procedural manual for statecraft and sacred kingship—detailing regalia, textiles/skins used in rites, and mantra-sequencing—showing the Agni Purana’s coverage beyond mythology into governance and applied ritual technology.
By correctly investing the king with sanctioned insignia and mantra-recitation, the rite is believed to sacralize political authority, align the ruler with dharma, and confer ritual purity and legitimacy to the reign.