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देवता

The Loka Yātrā

a descent through the worlds

The Purāṇas map the Brahmāṇḍa — the cosmic egg — as fourteen worlds strung on one axis: seven rising from the earth into ever-subtler light, seven descending into jeweled dark. Above them all, outside the egg entirely, the eternal abodes. Scroll, and descend.

beyond the fourteen · outside the egg

The Eternal Abodes

Not floors of the cosmos but its beyond — each tradition names the timeless home of its Lord. All four are shown; none is ranked.

वैकुण्ठ

Vaikuntha

Vishnu and Lakshmi, amid liberated souls who wear his own four-armed form

Vaikuntha — the place “without anxiety” — is not the highest of the fourteen worlds. It lies beyond them altogether, past the seven coverings of the material egg, and the Bhagavata says so plainly: creation and dissolution, which make and unmake everything below, never touch it. Brahma is granted a vision of it at the dawn of his work — a realm lit by its own radiance, where time has no dominion and every resident wears a four-armed form like Vishnu’s own. There the Lord sits with Lakshmi in eternal attendance, served by Garuda and the liberated. No one who reaches Vaikuntha returns; that is the whole meaning of the name.

Vishnu Vishnu enter the world →

sources: Bhagavata Purana 2.9.9–16 · Bhagavata Purana, Canto 10 (descriptions of the supreme abode)

कैलास

Kailasa

Shiva and Parvati among the ganas, with Nandi keeping the gate

There are two Kailasas, and the tradition keeps both. One is the silver peak in the Himalaya that pilgrims still circle on foot, never climbing it. The other — the Kailasa of the Shiva Purana — stands beyond the fourteen worlds entirely, an eternal abode no dissolution reaches, and it is this one the Shaiva scriptures mean when they call it Shiva’s home. There the great renouncer keeps house: Parvati beside him, the ganas tumbling about, Nandi watchful at the gate, the Ganga in his hair. The Bhagavata’s own description of the mountain lingers on its gardens and sages — an ascetic’s paradise, austere and abundant at once.

sources: Shiva Purana (Rudra Samhita; Kailasa Samhita) · Bhagavata Purana 4.5–6 (description of Kailasa)

मणिद्वीप

Manidvipa

The Devi as Bhuvaneshvari, enthroned amid her shaktis on an island of gems

In the Shakta cosmology of the Devi Bhagavata, Manidvipa — the “island of jewels” — floats in an ocean of nectar above every other world: beyond the fourteen, higher even than the abodes of Vishnu and Shiva, which is precisely the theological claim. The pilgrim of Book 12 approaches through concentric ramparts, each built of a nobler substance than the last — iron, bronze, copper, gold, the nine gems — with gardens and courts of divinities between them. At the centre stands the Chintamani palace, and in it the Devi as Bhuvaneshvari, sovereign of the worlds, her shaktis around her. Whatever exists, the text says, is a fragment of this place.

sources: Devi Bhagavata Purana, Book 12, chs. 10–12

स्वानन्दधाम

Svananda-dhama

Ganesha, at rest in the bliss his name for the place declares

Svananda-dhama is Ganesha’s eternal abode as the Ganapatya tradition tells it — and that framing matters, so we say it honestly: this is the cosmology of a specific school, preserved in the Mudgala Purana, in which Ganesha is not the beloved doorkeeper of the gods but the supreme reality itself. Most Hindus picture him on Kailasa with his parents. But for the Ganapatyas his true home lies beyond the fourteen worlds, and its name is the doctrine: sva-ananda, “own bliss” — the self at rest in itself, the state he grants when the last obstacle is removed.

sources: Mudgala Purana · Ganesha Purana (Ganapatya tradition)

the rising worlds · 01 of 14

Satyaloka सत्यलोक

Brahma on his lotus-seat, Saraswati beside him, ringed by the subtlest sages

Satyaloka, the world of truth, is the crown of the fourteen — the lotus-seat of Brahma himself, with Saraswati beside him and the subtlest sages in attendance. Souls who arrive here do not fall back into rebirth; they live out the life of Brahma and, when he is liberated at the end of his hundred years, are liberated with him. That is the loka’s quiet lesson: even the summit of the created stack has an ending, which is why the eternal abodes are counted beyond it. Until then it endures, the Puranas say, longer than anything else that was made.

Brahma Brahma enter the world →

sources: Bhagavata Purana 2.5.36–42 · Vishnu Purana, Book 2, ch. 7

the rising worlds · 02 of 14

Tapoloka तपोलोक

The Vairaja deities and ascetics whose austerity outlasts the fires of dissolution

Tapoloka is named for tapas — the heat of austerity — and its residents have earned the name. Here dwell the Vairaja deities and ascetics of immense discipline, beings the Vishnu Purana singles out for a startling immunity: when the fire of dissolution consumes the worlds below, it does not consume them. It is a world made almost entirely of renunciation — nothing here to own, and no one grieving the lack. Set between Janaloka below and Satyaloka above, it is the last stretch of the long ascent that effort alone can climb; past it, only Brahma’s own world remains.

sources: Bhagavata Purana 2.5.36–42 · Vishnu Purana, Book 2, ch. 7

the rising worlds · 03 of 14

Janaloka जनलोक

The four Kumaras — Sanaka, Sanandana, Sanatana, Sanatkumara — forever young

Janaloka belongs to the Kumaras — Sanaka, Sanandana, Sanatana and Sanatkumara, the mind-born sons of Brahma who refused creation itself, choosing perpetual childhood and perpetual inquiry over progeny. Around them gather other celibate sages of their temper. The world has a practical office in the cosmology, too: when the night of Brahma approaches and the three worlds below burn, the seers of Maharloka rise to Janaloka the way one moves upwind of a fire. It is a refuge built from renunciation — inhabited by those who wanted nothing, and who therefore keep everything that matters.

sources: Bhagavata Purana 2.5.36–42 · Vishnu Purana, Book 2, ch. 7

the rising worlds · 04 of 14

Maharloka महर्लोक

Bhrigu and the great seers who live out a full day of Brahma

Maharloka is the first world above the three that perish together — the first rung, the Puranas say, that a partial dissolution does not drown. Here live Bhrigu and the great seers who endure for a full day of Brahma, a thousand ages of the worlds below. Endure, but not absolutely: when Brahma’s night falls and the fire of the three worlds rises, even Maharloka grows too hot to bear, and its residents ascend to Janaloka until the making begins again. It is greatness with a horizon — the Puranic reminder that longevity, however vast, is not eternity.

sources: Bhagavata Purana 2.5.36–42 · Vishnu Purana, Book 2, ch. 7

the rising worlds · 05 of 14

Svarloka स्वर्लोक

Indra and the thirty-three devas, with apsaras and gandharvas in Amaravati

Svarloka is heaven as merit builds it — Indra’s realm, with Amaravati its capital, which the Bhagavata sets among the cities of the world-guardians on the golden summit of Meru. Here are the thirty-three devas, the apsaras and gandharvas, Airavata the white elephant, the Nandana pleasure-groves, the soma. Sacrifice and good works purchase a residence here — and that is exactly its limitation. When the merit is spent, the soul returns to earth to begin again. The tradition honours Svarloka and refuses to confuse it with liberation: a place of reward rather than release, splendid precisely because nothing in it lasts.

sources: Bhagavata Purana 5.16.28–29 · Vishnu Purana, Book 2, ch. 7

the rising worlds · 06 of 14

Bhuvarloka भुवर्लोक

Siddhas, munis, and the airy beings of the middle sky

Bhuvarloka is the middle air — the stretch between the earth and the sun, which the Vishnu Purana marks out as a world in its own right. It is the realm of the in-between: siddhas and munis in their subtle bodies, the semi-divine wanderers, the atmosphere’s own traffic of beings ascending and descending. Nothing here is fully heavenly or fully earthly, which is its character and its charm. In the old threefold formula recited daily — bhur, bhuvah, svah — it is the middle word: the sky you can see, imagined all the way up to where heaven properly begins.

sources: Bhagavata Purana 2.5.36–42 · Vishnu Purana, Book 2, ch. 7

the middle world · 07 of 14

Bhuloka भूलोक

Humankind — the one order of beings that can change its destiny by its deeds

Bhuloka is our world, drawn by the Bhagavata at a scale that dwarfs geography: a vast disc of concentric island-continents and ringing oceans, Jambudvipa at the centre and golden Meru rising from it like the pericarp of a lotus. Within Jambudvipa lies Bharata-varsha — and here the cosmology makes its sharpest point. This is the karma-bhumi, the field of works: the one region where action ripens freely into destiny, where a soul can earn any world above or below, or step off the wheel entirely. The gods themselves, the text says, sing of those born here. Every other loka is a consequence; this one is a choice.

sources: Bhagavata Purana, Canto 5, chs. 16–20 · Vishnu Purana, Book 2, chs. 1–4

the descending worlds · 08 of 14

Atala अतल

Bala, son of the architect Maya, master of ninety-six enchantments

Atala is the first step down — and the descent, the Bhagavata insists, is not into gloom. The seven lower worlds are bila-svargas, “subterranean heavens,” more opulent than Indra’s realm, lit not by the sun but by the blaze of jewels on serpent hoods. Atala belongs to Bala, son of the architect Maya, master of ninety-six enchantments and inventor of arts of seduction still practised, the text says, by worldly people. From his yawning came three orders of bewitching women who welcome the traveller with an intoxicating draught called hataka — after which he forgets everything, including the way out. Delight, here, is the danger.

sources: Bhagavata Purana 5.24.16 · Vishnu Purana, Book 2, ch. 5

the descending worlds · 09 of 14

Vitala वितल

Hatakeshvara — Shiva as lord of gold — with Bhavani and his ghostly retinue

Vitala is presided over — remarkably — by Shiva himself. The Bhagavata (5.24.17) places him here as Hatakeshvara, “lord of gold,” dwelling with his consort Bhavani among his ghostly attendants, present in the depths so that the work of generation may continue there. From their union flows the river Hataki, and from its froth, touched by fire and wind, comes the gold called hataka that the region’s residents wear as ornament. A god of ash and renunciation ruling a world named for its gold — Vitala keeps Shiva’s oldest paradox intact, even underground.

sources: Bhagavata Purana 5.24.17 · Vishnu Purana, Book 2, ch. 5

the descending worlds · 10 of 14

Sutala सुतल

Bali Maharaja, with Vishnu himself standing guard at his gate

Sutala holds the strangest honour in the cosmology: a world whose doorkeeper is God. It belongs to Bali, the asura emperor who once owned the three worlds — until a dwarf brahmana asked him for three paces of land. Vamana took the cosmos in two strides, and Bali, unflinching, offered his own head for the third. For that surrender Vishnu gave him Sutala, a realm the Bhagavata calls more splendid than the heaven he lost — and gave him something greater still: the Lord himself stands at Bali’s gate, mace in hand, guarding his devotee’s kingdom. The story is told in full in Canto 8; the address is here.

sources: Bhagavata Purana 5.24.18 · Bhagavata Purana, Canto 8, chs. 15–23 (the Vamana story) · Vishnu Purana, Book 2, ch. 5

the descending worlds · 11 of 14

Talatala तलातल

Maya Danava, architect of the asuras, secure under Shiva's protection

Talatala is the domain of Maya Danava, architect of the asuras — builder of flying cities and engineer of illusions, the craftsman whose three aerial fortresses Shiva famously burned. And yet here, below the worlds, the same Shiva protects him: the Bhagavata says Maya won the favour of the lord of the trident and lives secure in it, honoured by his fellow danavas as their great master of maya. The tradition lets the enmity and the grace stand together in a single frame — the destroyer of the triple city keeping watch over the man who built it.

sources: Bhagavata Purana 5.24.28 · Vishnu Purana, Book 2, ch. 5

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Mahatala महातल

The Krodhavasha serpents — Kuhaka, Takshaka, Kaliya, Sushena — and their broods

Mahatala belongs to the serpents — the Krodhavasha band, “those given to wrath”: many-hooded nagas led by Kuhaka, Takshaka, Kaliya and Sushena, with their vast families around them. They live, the Bhagavata says, in the pleasures of household life, among wives and children and friends — and in permanent unease, because Garuda, the eagle who carries Vishnu, hunts serpents, and they know it. It is a vivid piece of Puranic honesty: even in a jewel-lit underworld, even among the powerful, comfort and fear keep house together.

sources: Bhagavata Purana 5.24.29 · Vishnu Purana, Book 2, ch. 5

the descending worlds · 13 of 14

Rasatala रसातल

The Daityas and Danavas — Panis, Nivatakavachas, the dwellers of Hiranyapura

Rasatala is the garrison world of the asuras — the Daityas and Danavas born as enemies of the gods, among them the Panis of Vedic memory, the Nivatakavachas in their impenetrable armour, the Kaleyas, and the dwellers of golden Hiranyapura. Mighty by nature, the Bhagavata says, their strength has nonetheless been broken: defeated by the discus of the Lord, they live like serpents in holes — and are kept anxious, the text adds with a straight face, by a mantra of Sarama, Indra’s she-messenger. Power in exile, still armed and still waiting: that is Rasatala’s whole atmosphere.

sources: Bhagavata Purana 5.24.30 · Vishnu Purana, Book 2, ch. 5

the descending worlds · 14 of 14

Patala पाताल

Vasuki and the great naga lords, their hoods crowned with light-giving gems

Patala is the deepest of the fourteen — the floor of the stack, and the seat of the naga courts. Vasuki rules here among the great serpent lords — Shankha, Kulika, Mahashankha, Shveta, Dhananjaya and the rest — hooded beings of five, seven, ten, a hundred heads, the gems on those hoods lighting the whole region in place of a sun. And below even this the Bhagavata sets its final wonder: thirty thousand yojanas down rests Ananta-Shesha, the endless serpent who is a form of the Lord, holding the worlds steady on his head. The cosmos, descended rung by rung, ends by resting on God.

sources: Bhagavata Purana 5.24.31 · Bhagavata Purana, Canto 5, ch. 25 (Ananta below Patala) · Vishnu Purana, Book 2, ch. 5