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Vishvam Vishnur Vashatkaro

Vishvam Vishnur Vashatkaro in English · English

🕉️ hindu·📿 9× repetitions·🕐 Thursday mornings, Ekadashi, or during Vishnu / Satyanarayana worship·📜 Vishnu Sahasranama, first naama verse (Mahabharata, Anushasana Parva)
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Meaning

This is the very first verse of the thousand names of the Vishnu Sahasranama, opening with 'Hari Om' and the names Vishvam, Vishnu and Vashatkara. In a few syllables it declares the Lord to be the universe itself, the all-pervading one, lord of all three times, and the creator, sustainer, indwelling soul and nourisher of every being. It is the seed from which the whole Sahasranama unfolds.

Origin & Story

Vishnu Sahasranama, first naama verse (Mahabharata, Anushasana Parva) · Sage Veda Vyasa; spoken by Bhishma to Yudhishthira · Itihasa period (traditionally Dvapara Yuga)

The Vishnu Sahasranama appears in the Anushasana Parva of the Mahabharata, where Bhishma, lying on the bed of arrows, answers Yudhishthira's question — who is the one supreme refuge? — by reciting the thousand names of Vishnu. After the preliminary salutations and meditation verses, the names themselves begin here, with 'Vishvam Vishnur Vashatkaro', naming the Lord as the universe and the all-pervading reality.

As told in scripture

The phalashruti of the Sahasranama promises that one who hears or recites these names daily, with devotion, meets with nothing inauspicious and crosses all difficulties. Devotees regard the very first verse as auspicious enough to begin any worship, invoking the Lord who is the universe and the Self within all beings.

Complete Text with Meaning

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Verse 1

Harih Om

Meaning:Hari Om. He is the Universe (Vishvam); the All-Pervading Vishnu; He who is invoked by the Vashatkara in sacrifice; the Lord of past, present and future. He is the creator of beings (Bhutakrit), the sustainer of beings (Bhutabhrit), pure Existence (Bhava), the Self of all beings (Bhutatma) and the nourisher of all beings (Bhutabhavana).

Verse 2

Vishvam vishnurvashatkaro bhutabhavyabhavatprabhuh Bhutakridbhutabhridbhavo bhutatma bhutabhavanah

Word-by-Word Meaning

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Vishvam🔊The Universe — He who is the universe itself
Vishnuh🔊The All-Pervading One who enters everywhere
Vashatkarah🔊He who is invoked by the 'Vashat' call in every sacrifice
Bhuta-bhavya-bhavat-prabhuh🔊Lord of the past, the future and the present
Bhutakrit🔊The creator of all beings
Bhutabhrit🔊The sustainer of all beings
Bhavah🔊Pure existence; He who becomes all
Bhutatma🔊The innermost Self of all beings
Bhutabhavanah🔊He who nourishes and brings forth all beings
Harih Om🔊The auspicious invocation 'Hari is Om' that begins the recitation

Benefits of Chanting Vishvam Vishnur Vashatkaro

The sacred opening verse of the Vishnu Sahasranama — traditionally chanted first to begin the thousand names

Establishes Vishnu as the universe itself and the Self of all beings within the very first names

Reciting these opening names is believed to bring peace, protection and purification of the mind

An ideal short verse for those who wish to begin a daily Vishnu Sahasranama practice

Especially auspicious on Thursdays, Ekadashi and during Vishnu worship

Said to dispel inauspiciousness and grant the steady remembrance of the Lord

How to Chant Vishvam Vishnur Vashatkaro

Repetitions9times
Best TimeThursday mornings, Ekadashi, or during Vishnu / Satyanarayana worship

Begin with the invocation 'Hari Om', then recite the verse slowly and clearly, dwelling on each name. It may be chanted on its own as a daily opening, or as the first verse of the complete Vishnu Sahasranama. Sit facing east before an image of Vishnu, with a calm and devoted mind, ideally after the preliminary dhyana verses such as 'Shantakaram Bhujagashayanam'.

Frequently Asked Questions

This page shows the complete Vishvam Vishnur Vashatkaro written in the English script — the same Sanskrit/Hindi verses, transliterated character-by-character so you can read and chant comfortably. Tap any line (or the ▶ button) to hear it recited aloud.
Yes — only the script changes; the words and their meaning are the original. The verse-by-verse meaning, benefits and how-to-chant guidance on this page apply exactly the same.
The very first name is 'Vishvam' — 'the Universe', meaning the Lord who is the universe itself. It is followed immediately by 'Vishnu' (the all-pervading) and 'Vashatkara', opening the thousand names of the Lord.
'Hari Om' is the traditional auspicious invocation chanted before the names. 'Hari' is a name of Vishnu and 'Om' is the supreme sound (Pranava); together they sanctify the beginning of the Sahasranama recitation.
They declare the Lord to be the universe (Vishvam), the all-pervading (Vishnu), the one invoked in sacrifice (Vashatkara), and the Lord of past, present and future, who creates, sustains, indwells and nourishes all beings.
Yes. While the full Sahasranama has a thousand names, chanting this first verse with devotion is a beautiful way to begin a practice or to invoke Vishnu when time is short.

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