PUNYCODEX

The Authentic Orthography

विष्णु Viṣṇu

Preservation, Protection, Universe · All-pervading (from विष्णु)

Tier 2 Viṣṇu.com
Viṣṇu — Preservation, Protection, Universe
01

The Authentic Name

Why Viṣṇu.com is the correct form

Original Script

विष्णु

The name in its original Sanskrit form. Viṣṇu (विष्णु) is attested as preservation, protection, universe — “All-pervading (from विष्णु)”. Its emphatic consonants, nasal retroflexes, and palatal/retroflex sibilants carry the full phonetic and orthographic weight of the source tradition.

ASCII Constraint

vishnu

Reduced to plain vishnu, the name loses everything that made it specific: emphatic consonants, nasal retroflexes, and palatal/retroflex sibilants. What remains is an ASCII string that machines can parse but that no longer speaks with its original voice.

Unicode Restoration

Viṣṇu

The Unicode restoration recovers what ASCII flattened. Viṣṇu restores emphatic consonants, nasal retroflexes, and palatal/retroflex sibilants, returning the name to its original written dignity. The domain encodes to Punycode, but the browser displays the truth.

Punycode Encoding
Viṣṇu.com → xn--viu-j5ytg.com

The non-ASCII characters in Viṣṇu are encoded while the ASCII remains visible. To the DNS, it is Punycode. To humanity, it is Viṣṇu.

02

Original Script Provenance

How Viṣṇu travels from ancient script to scholarly transliteration

03

Pronunciation

How Viṣṇu was spoken

/ʋɪʂ.ɳʊ/ Sanskrit/Vedic Reconstruction
Vi- Labiodental or dental approximant [ʋ] plus short [ɪ] — the prefix of pervasion, the sound that spreads.
-ṣṇu Retroflex sibilant [ʂ] plus retroflex nasal cluster [ɳʊ], from the root viṣ- ('to pervade, to work') — the name's active core.
04

The Preserver Who Pervades

Preservation, Protection, Universe

Viṣṇu is the second great power of the Hindu triad, the one who sustains what Brahmā creates and what Śiva will one day dissolve. But preservation is not passivity. It requires constant intervention, which is why Viṣṇu descends again and again as an avatāra — a deliberate crossing-down into history.

Preservation

He maintains cosmic order (dharma) across the ages, keeping the universe from collapsing into chaos.

The Three Strides

As Trivikrama he measures earth, sky, and heaven in three steps; as Vāmana he does it as a dwarf.

Avatāras

From fish to future horseman, he enters the world whenever dharma declines and adharma rises.

Cosmic Sleep

Between cosmic cycles he sleeps on Śeṣa, the thousand-hooded serpent, floating on the ocean of milk.

Sacred Symbols

Discus (cakra) Sudarśana, the wheel of divine will that cuts through illusion and evil.
Conch (śaṅkha) The primeval sound Oṃ, announcing divine presence and the dissolution of boundaries.
Mace (gadā) The power of knowledge; often identified with Kāmadeva or the force of cosmic law.
Lotus (padma) Purity and the unfolding of creation; Brahmā is born from the lotus rising from Viṣṇu's navel.
Garuda The eagle-king, his mount, symbolizing the Vedas and the swiftness of divine knowledge.
Śeṣa The cosmic serpent upon whom Viṣṇu reclines between universes.
05

Mythology

Stories of Viṣṇu

Viṣṇu's mythology grows from a minor Vedic solar figure into the preserver of the cosmos. Its center is movement: the three strides, the ten descents, the sleep between worlds.

Vedic

The Three Strides

In Ṛgveda 1.154, Viṣṇu strides out three times. With each step he measures a realm — earth, atmosphere, and heaven — until the gods themselves find his third step unreachable. This is the seed of his later title Trivikrama, 'he who makes three strides.' The myth imagines the sun's daily arc as the god's footfall across the cosmos.

Avatāra

The Daśāvatāra

The Purāṇas systematize Viṣṇu's descents into ten principal incarnations: Matsya the fish, Kūrma the tortoise, Varāha the boar, Narasiṃha the man-lion, Vāmana the dwarf, Paraśurāma the axe-bearer, Rāma the prince, Kṛṣṇa the cowherd, the Buddha, and the future Kalkī. Each appears in a different cosmic age to counter a specific threat. The list itself is a theology of history: divine response to evolving evil.

Epic

Rāma and Kṛṣṇa

The Rāmāyaṇa tells of Rāma, the ideal king whose exile, fidelity, and war against Rāvaṇa define dharmic rule. The Mahābhārata tells of Kṛṣṇa, the divine charioteer whose Bhagavad Gītā transforms a battlefield into a discourse on duty, devotion, and knowledge. These two avatāras are the most widely worshipped forms of Viṣṇu in India and the diaspora.

Cosmology

The Cosmic Sleep

At the end of each cosmic cycle, Viṣṇu withdraws the universe into himself and sleeps on the serpent Śeṣa, floating on the causal ocean of milk. From his navel sprouts a lotus, and from the lotus emerges Brahmā to begin creation anew. This image is one of Hinduism's most sublime visions: preservation as rest, creation as dream, and the universe as the breathing of one divine body.

Go Deeper

Extended Lore

Viṣṇu teaches that the highest power is not the power that destroys but the power that keeps things going. Maintenance is harder than creation; it requires patience, repetition, and the willingness to return to the same task age after age. Every parent who wakes in the night, every farmer who plants again after a flood, every healer who stays with a patient long after the drama has faded — they are images of Viṣṇu.

Enter Extended Lore
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