The Slaying of Raktabīja and Niśumbha–Śumbha; the Manifestation of the Mātṛkās and the Devas’ Hymn
गगनस्थास्ततो देवाः शतक्रतुपुरोगमाः जयस्व विजयेत्यूचुर्हृष्टाः शत्रौ निपातिते
gaganasthāstato devāḥ śatakratupurogamāḥ jayasva vijayetyūcurhṛṣṭāḥ śatrau nipātite
随后,立于空中的诸天,由沙多迦罗都(因陀罗)为首,见敌陨落而欢喜,齐声呼喊:“愿汝得胜!愿汝凯旋!”
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Śatakratu (“hundred-sacrifice performer”) is a standard Vedic-Purāṇic epithet of Indra, highlighting his sovereignty validated through sacrificial power and his leadership among the devas.
The verse does not name the addressee explicitly; in the Andhaka-vadha narrative it is typically the victorious divine agent—most naturally Śiva (or the empowered Devī/Śakti force) who has brought down the sura-śatru.
It indicates the devas observing from the sky/heavenly realm in a general sense; it is not a named loka (like Svarga) in this śloka, and it carries no tīrtha-geography data.