Kuru's Consecration — Kuru’s Consecration and the Sanctification of Samantapañcaka (Kurukshetra)
तथैवोरुयुगं प्रादान्मया छिन्नौ च तावुभौ ततः स मे शिरः प्रादात् तेन प्रीते ऽस्मि तस्य च वरदो ऽस्मीत्यथेत्युक्ते कुरुर्वरमयाचत
tathaivoruyugaṃ prādānmayā chinnau ca tāvubhau tataḥ sa me śiraḥ prādāt tena prīte 'smi tasya ca varado 'smītyathetyukte kururvaramayācata
同样地,他献上双腿之股,我亦将二者斩断。继而他又献出自己的头颅;因此我对他心生欢喜。当说出“我乃赐福者”之时,俱卢(国王)便请求一项恩赐。
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The climax is the offering of the head—symbolically the seat of identity and pride—showing that the highest dāna is self-surrender. Divine pleasure (prasāda) arises not from the quantity given but from the completeness of relinquishment.
This is didactic-carita within Vamśānucarita: a king in the Kuru line (or addressed as ‘Kuru’) exemplifies dharma, culminating in divine boon-bestowal—typical Purāṇic moral narrative rather than genealogical listing or cosmogenesis.
Thighs represent stability/support; the head represents ego and selfhood. The sequence (arms → thighs → head) maps a progressive stripping of power, foundation, and identity, ending in grace: when the self is surrendered, the Lord becomes ‘varada’ (boon-giver).