The Structure of Jambudvipa: Nine Varshas, Navadvipa Bharata, Mountains, Rivers, and Peoples
पारा चर्मण्वती लूपी विदिशा वेणुमत्यपि सिप्रा ह्यवन्ती च तथा पारियात्राश्रयाः स्मृताः
pārā carmaṇvatī lūpī vidiśā veṇumatyapi siprā hyavantī ca tathā pāriyātrāśrayāḥ smṛtāḥ
帕罗(Pārā)、恰尔摩那伐蒂(Carmaṇvatī)、卢毗(Lūpī)、毗地沙(Vidishā)以及韦努玛蒂(Veṇumatī);同样还有西普罗(Siprā)与阿凡提(Avantī)——皆被追忆为依附于帕里亚特罗(Pāriyātra)山系/地域之诸河。
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Holiness is presented as distributed across regions: the pilgrim’s dharma is not confined to one shrine but extends through interconnected landscapes and waterways.
This is tīrtha/geography material embedded within a Purāṇa; it supports dharma and vrata culture by giving a mapped sacred world rather than advancing sarga or vaṃśa narration.
Linking rivers to Pāriyātra/Avanti suggests a ‘sacred corridor’—a mythic cartography where mountains (firmness) and rivers (movement) together structure the pilgrim’s path.