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पुराण
Purāṇas & Itihāsas
Where cosmology becomes story, dynasty becomes dharma, and the individual life mirrors the cycle of the cosmos. This is not mythology. This is civilizational memory, symbolic philosophy, and ethical imagination encoded in the most powerful medium known to the human mind — the living narrative.
Not Stories.
Formulae.
Master EK — Dr. E. Krishnamacharya — gives us the key: a Purāṇa is not a story. It is a formula. "The Purāṇic author finds the gateway between the cosmic and the mundane worlds. The history is a materialisation of the cyclic mysteries of the universe. The author imbeds the formula in a historical incident."
The Purāṇas render the import of the Vedas in the form of historical events that are simultaneously cosmic and personal. They are, in Master EK's phrase, "like the surface of the still waters of a deep lake, in the bosom of which we can gauge the mysteries of the paramount heights of the Vedic skies, reflected."
Itihāsa — "Thus it happened" — is civilizational memory in the form of living drama. The Rāmāyaṇa and Mahābhārata are not merely epics. They are the ethical imagination of a civilisation at its most searching, watching dharma collide with desire, duty with love, and wisdom with power.
Purāṇa — "that which is ancient and full" — is the narrative vehicle for cosmology. Every Purāṇa contains the five essential features (Pañcalakṣaṇa): Sarga (primary creation), Pratisarga (secondary creation), Vaṃśa (lineage of creative intelligences), Manvantara (cycles of planetary time), and Rājavamśānucarita (dynasties of solar and lunar intelligences descending as rulers).
Sarga
Primary CreationThe unfolding of a cosmos from the cosmic egg through all stages of solar systems, planetary chains, and elemental manifestation.
Pratisarga
Secondary CreationThe secondary stages of creation — the emergence of individual worlds, species, and the differentiated structures of existence.
Vaṃśa
Lineage of IntelligencesThe order of evolution of creative intelligences (Devas, Ṛṣis, Prajāpatis) descending upon Earth — the genealogy of cosmic consciousness.
Manvantara
Cycles of Planetary TimeThe nodes and demarcations of time during the process of creation — the vast rhythmic periods presided over by the fourteen Manus.
Rājavamśa
Solar & Lunar DynastiesThe dynasties of divine intelligences descending as ruling forces — the solar (Sūryavaṃśa) and lunar (Candravamśa) royal lineages of Earth.
Two Gateways of Civilizational Memory
Itihāsa means "thus it happened" — yet it points not merely to historical event but to the eternal drama of consciousness encountering the world. These two great epics are the moral and philosophical imagination of a civilisation at its most searching.
Rāmāyaṇa
Composed by Vālmīki — the first poet — in 24,000 verses across seven kāṇḍas, the Rāmāyaṇa is simultaneously a biography of a solar prince, a cosmology of dharmic kingship, and an interior map of the soul's journey through exile toward integration. Rāma is both historical figure and solar principle — the Ātman in its aspect of radiant, disciplined consciousness. Sītā is the earth's soul and the soul's own depth. Rāvaṇa is not a demon but the ten-headed ego that turns creative power inward upon itself.
At every level — domestic, political, cosmic — the Rāmāyaṇa asks one question: what does it mean to uphold dharma when it costs everything?
Mahābhārata
The largest literary work in human history — over 100,000 verses, eighteen books, the genealogical record of two branches of one royal house arriving at civilizational catastrophe. Veda Vyāsa composed it as a synthesis of the eighteen Purāṇas, embedding their cosmic wisdom in the drama of kinship, statecraft, and war. Its eighteenth chapter is the Bhagavad Gītā — the summary of all Yoga in dialogue between the supreme teacher and his disciple at the moment of ultimate crisis.
The Mahābhārata does not resolve its questions — it deepens them. Dharma in it is never simple, never comfortable, always demanding a confrontation with reality that moves beyond mere rule-following into genuine moral intelligence.
The Purāṇic Universe
Every Purāṇa contains a microscopic and a bird's-eye view of one complete creation — from emanation to merging. Master EK calls this "the formula." The cosmos unfolds in structured cycles, each embedding the same pattern at every scale.
Full dharma on all four legs. Direct perception of the real. The age of the seers. Consciousness is transparent to itself.
Three-quarter dharma. The age of ritual, of sacrifice, of the Rāmāyaṇa. The solar line holds the dharmic order.
Half dharma. The age of the Mahābhārata. Dharma under crisis. The knowledge is edited, compiled, Purāṇas written.
One-quarter dharma. The Purāṇas are our guides. Narrative replaces direct perception. Parasara sees this age and writes for us.
The Purāṇic Atlas
Parasara, the son of Śakti and grandson of Vasiṣṭha, compiled the Viṣṇu Purāṇa as the first and synthesis of all eighteen formulas. His son Veda Vyāsa then developed the remaining seventeen into separate books. Together they form one complete encyclopaedia of cosmic wisdom embedded in narrative.
Brahma Purāṇa
The Self-Expanding PrincipleThe ādya Purāṇa — the first in enumeration. Contains sacred geography of Brahma's creation, the Godāvarī-tīrtha, and the origin of the universe from the lotus of Brahmā's navel.
Padma Purāṇa
The Expanding Lotus PatternNamed for the lotus of creation from which the cosmos unfolds. Encyclopaedic in scope — sacred geographies, dharma codes, avatāra accounts, and the Rāmāyaṇa retelling.
Viṣṇu Purāṇa
Consciousness of PervasionThe first Purāṇa compiled — by Parasara — and the most comprehensive. All eighteen formulas synthesised into one. Master EK calls it the king of all Purāṇas. Contains the story of Lord Kṛṣṇa as its master key.
Śiva Purāṇa
The Withdrawing PrincipleThe grand Śaiva encyclopaedia — the philosophy of Śiva as the principle of dissolution into pure consciousness. Contains the twelve Jyotirliṅgas, the story of Satī, and the deepest Śaiva theology.
Bhāgavata Purāṇa
The Final Word — Sāma Veda EmbodiedVeda Vyāsa's masterpiece — the book he wrote after all others still left him unsatisfied. Narada's inspiration brought forth this grand synthesis with special stress on the Sāma Veda. The Tenth Book's Kṛṣṇa story is the summit of all Purāṇic literature.
Nārada Purāṇa
The Formula of the Messenger of GodsNārada — the devarṣi who moves between all planes — as subject and transmitter of wisdom. Contains the philosophy of bhakti and the transmission from cosmos to world through divine instruction.
Mārkaṇḍeya Purāṇa
The Man Who Survives the DelugeThe allegory of the sage who outlives the cosmic dissolution. Home of the Devī Māhātmya — the supreme text of the Śakta tradition. Mārkaṇḍeya sees the universe dissolve and Viṣṇu resting on the cosmic ocean.
Agni Purāṇa
The Mystic Fire · Light of the VedasAn encyclopaedia of civilizational knowledge narrated by Agni to Vasiṣṭha. Covers cosmology, avatāras, temple architecture (Āgama), Āyurveda, poetics, grammar, and statecraft.
Bhaviṣya Purāṇa
The Key to the FutureThe Purāṇa of prophecy — containing the trends of things to come across all Yugas. The workings of Kali Yuga as foreseen by the seers. A prophetic text describing the nature of time unfolding.
Brahmavaivarta Purāṇa
Precipitation of the Expanding PrincipleThe formula of how Brahma's expanding principle precipitates into universes. Centred on Kṛṣṇa and Rādhā as the original pair — the male and female principles of creation in their primordial dance.
Liṅga Purāṇa
The Divine Symbol of AbstractionThe Liṅga as the cosmic pillar of light — the jyotirliṅga that appeared before Brahma and Viṣṇu without beginning or end. The philosophy of the formless Śiva as pure consciousness and the nature of śakti.
Varāha Purāṇa
Lifting the Earth from Passive NothingThe formula of the Great Boar who lifts the Divine Essence from passive nothing into active something. Varāha — the third avatāra — as the cosmic force that establishes the physical earth in equilibrium.
Skanda Purāṇa
The Allegory of the Celibate HeroThe largest of all Purāṇas by verse count. Skanda-Kārttikeya as the concentrated force of brahmacarya that destroys the asura of ego. Contains sacred geography, tīrtha-māhātmya, and vast Śaiva traditions.
Vāmana Purāṇa
The Physical Dwarf as Potential GodThe formula of the fifth avatāra — the Dwarf who traverses all three worlds in three steps. Cosmic potential contained in the smallest form, able to encompass the entirety of existence.
Kūrma Purāṇa
The Formula of the Stellar DomeThe stellar dome as the second avatāra — the cosmic foundation that supports the churning of existence. Contains the Kūrma-gītā and a profound account of the nature of Brahman.
Matsya Purāṇa
The Formula of the Great Fish GodThe first avatāra — the Fish who preserves the Vedas across the deluge. Manu and the ark as the preservation of dharmic memory through cosmic dissolution. Encyclopaedic in scope — temples, astronomy, dharmaśāstra.
Garuḍa Purāṇa
The Greatest Cycle · Bird of Eternal PeriodicitiesGaruḍa — the cosmic bird of Viṣṇu — as the symbol of the greatest orbital periodicities. Contains the philosophy of death, after-death states, karma, and liberation — the most used Purāṇa in funerary rites.
Brahmāṇḍa Purāṇa
The Formula of the Cosmic EggThe cosmic egg as the first unit of manifested creation — a universe entire unto itself. Contains the Lalitopākhyāna, one of the principal texts of the Śrīvidyā Śākta tradition, and vast cosmological data.
Twelve Story Worlds
The Purāṇic and epic universe can be entered through twelve thematic pathways — each a complete arc of inquiry from the most accessible narrative level to the deepest philosophical core.
Creation & Dissolution
The cosmic breath — Sarga and Pralaya — as the background rhythm of all Purāṇic narrative. How the universe inhales and exhales through Yugas and Kalpas.
Avatāras
The descents of Viṣṇu as cosmic interventions at moments of maximal dharmic crisis. Each avatāra a formula for restoration — not miraculous, but evolutionary.
Dharma Under Crisis
The central question of both Itihāsas: what is right action when every choice entails cost? The moral philosophy of a civilisation that refused easy answers.
Kings & Dynasties
The solar and lunar lineages as cosmic principles descending into earthly governance. Kingship as dharmic stewardship of the earth's beings.
Sacred Geography
The seven dvīpas, the Himālaya as Meru's foothills, the four dhāmas, the twelve jyotirliṅgas — geography as cosmo-theological map.
Devī Traditions
The Goddess as Śakti — the dynamic power of creation itself. From Satī to Durgā to Kālī to Lalitā: the many faces of the one feminine principle.
Śaiva Worlds
Śiva as the withdrawing principle — the cosmic dissolution that is also the deepest liberation. The Liṅga, the tāṇḍava, the Gaṅgā, the third eye.
Vaiṣṇava Worlds
Viṣṇu as the sustaining consciousness of pervasion. From Vaikuṇṭha to Mathurā to Dvārakā — the geography and theology of devotion.
Sages & Lineages
The Ṛṣis are not individuals but rays of cosmic light. Each lineage — Bhṛgu, Aṅgiras, Atri, Vasiṣṭha — represents a stream of consciousness descending into creation.
Time Cycles
The Manvantaras, the Mahāyugas, the Kalpas, the Brahmā's day and night — time as the breath of God, structured not linearly but cyclically.
Pilgrimage
The tīrtha as a point where the cosmic and mundane planes touch — where the physical geography of India becomes a map of inner transformation.
Exemplary Lives
Dhruva, Prahlāda, Bharata, Śabarī, Vidura — the Purāṇas preserve their lives not as hagiographies but as demonstrations of what consciousness can achieve.
Story Architecture
These traditions are not isolated stories. They are linked worlds — every character, lineage, and event connected to every other through the common grammar of cosmic time.
Solar & Lunar Dynasties
The Daśāvatāra — Ten Descents
Featured Gateways
Six entry points into the narrative universe — each a self-sufficient world, each connected to all others through the common grammar of the Purāṇic tradition.
Rāmāyaṇa
Solar Line · Tretā YugaThe first poem and the most complete portrait of the dharmic person under the most extreme conditions. 24,000 verses, seven books — from Ayodhyā to Laṅkā to return.
Enter the World of Rāma →Mahābhārata
Lunar Line · Dvāpara YugaThe great war of dharma at the end of the Dvāpara Yuga. 100,000 verses, eighteen books — the synthesis of all Purāṇic wisdom in narrative form.
Enter the World of the Bhārata →Bhāgavata Purāṇa
Vaiṣṇava · Sāma Veda EmbodiedVyāsa's final and supreme work — the text that finally gave him satisfaction. The Tenth Book's Kṛṣṇa narration is the master key of all Purāṇic literature.
Enter the World of Bhāgavata →Viṣṇu Purāṇa
Parasara · Formula of PervasionThe first Purāṇa and the synthesis of all eighteen formulas. Master EK's primary text for unlocking the esoteric science of creation, time, and consciousness.
Enter the World of Viṣṇu →Śiva Purāṇa
The Withdrawing Principle · DissolutionThe grand Śaiva encyclopaedia. Philosophy of Śiva as consciousness itself — the one who withdraws all expansion back into the pure silence of the Absolute.
Enter the World of Śiva →Mārkaṇḍeya Purāṇa
Survival Beyond DissolutionHome of the Devī Māhātmya — the supreme Śākta text. The sage Mārkaṇḍeya sees the universe dissolve and remains. He witnesses the deepest secret of creation: the Goddess as the supreme reality.
Enter the World of the Devī →How to Enter This World
The Purāṇic universe can be approached through many doors. These six pathways are designed for different modes of inquiry — narrative, philosophical, devotional, genealogical, cosmological, and thematic.
By Itihāsa
Enter through the Rāmāyaṇa or Mahābhārata. Follow the narrative from first kāṇḍa to last — or enter at any node, any character, any crisis. These epics have no wrong door.
Explore Rāmāyaṇa · Mahābhārata →By Purāṇa
Choose one of the eighteen Mahāpurāṇas and go deep. Begin with the Viṣṇu Purāṇa (as Master EK recommends) or follow your pull toward any tradition — Śaiva, Vaiṣṇava, Śākta.
Browse the 18 Mahāpurāṇas →By Deity or Tradition
Follow Viṣṇu through his avatāras, Śiva through his manifestations, or the Devī through her many faces. Each tradition contains the whole — approached from a particular angle.
Explore by Tradition →By Theme
Trace a single philosophical concept across multiple texts — dharma, kāla, mokṣa, avatāra. Watch how the same insight unfolds differently across Viṣṇu Purāṇa, Bhāgavata, and the epics.
Explore by Theme →By Dynasty or Lineage
Follow the solar dynasty from Ikṣvāku to Rāma, or the lunar from Pūru to the Pāṇḍavas. The genealogies embed the cosmic intelligences (Vaṃśa) in biographical narrative.
Explore Lineages →By Cosmology
Begin with creation — Sarga, the seven-layered cosmic egg, the Saptalokas, the Manvantaras. Read the Purāṇas as the most detailed cosmological account produced by any civilisation.
Explore Cosmology →A Living Archive
This page is the scaffold of a knowledge system that will grow continuously — Purāṇa by Purāṇa, narrative by narrative, lineage by lineage. The architecture is established. The filling begins now.
Each of the 18 Mahāpurāṇas will receive a full philosophical summary in Master EK's interpretive tradition — formula, structure, key allegories, and esoteric import.
Visual narrative maps of the Rāmāyaṇa, Mahābhārata, and major Purāṇic cycles — showing characters, lineages, events, and philosophical arcs.
Complete lineage charts of the Solar and Lunar dynasties, the Ṛṣi lineages, the Prajāpati families — the cosmic family tree of Indian civilisation.
Discourses on key passages — the Varāha episode, the Churning of the Ocean, the Bhāgavata's Prahlāda — following Master EK's method of symbolic and cosmic interpretation.
Connections across all Svarloka pages — Vedas, Upaniṣads, Bhagavad Gītā, Yoga Sūtras, and the full Purāṇic universe forming one integrated knowledge system.
The first dedicated epic page — every character, every kāṇḍa, the esoteric meaning of Rāma as solar avatāra, Sītā as the soul's ground, Laṅkā as the ego-citadel.
