Skanda’s Svastyayana and the Slaying of Taraka and Mahisha
दैत्यानापततो दृष्ट्वा कार्तिकेयगणास्ततः अभ्यद्रवन्त सहसा स चोग्रो मातृमण्डलः
daityānāpatato dṛṣṭvā kārtikeyagaṇāstataḥ abhyadravanta sahasā sa cogro mātṛmaṇḍalaḥ
见代底耶奔突来攻,迦尔蒂凯耶的军众随即猛然冲锋;而凶烈的诸母神(Mātṛ)之环亦一同涌向前方。
{ "primaryRasa": "raudra", "secondaryRasa": "vira", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
The term typically denotes the Mātṛkās—powerful mother-goddesses who function as Śiva’s (and sometimes Skanda’s) śaktis in battle narratives. They appear as a collective ‘circle’ (maṇḍala), emphasizing coordinated, overwhelming divine force.
Skanda is the paradigmatic commander of divine armies. Mentioning his gaṇas signals an organized counter-assault against the Daityas and situates the episode within the broader Śaiva martial mythology that culminates in the suppression of demonic forces like Andhaka.
No explicit tīrtha, river, forest, or locale is named in 32.49; the verse is purely martial and collective in focus.