Sacred Abodes of Vishnu & Shiva — Catalogue of Vishnu and Shiva’s Sacred Abodes (Tirtha-Mahatmya within the Pulastya–Narada Frame)
त्रिणाचिकेतं ब्रह्मर्षे प्रभासे च कपर्दिनम् तथैवात्रापि विख्यातं तृतीयं शशिसेखरम्
triṇāciketaṃ brahmarṣe prabhāse ca kapardinam tathaivātrāpi vikhyātaṃ tṛtīyaṃ śaśisekharam
O brahmarṣi, (there is) Triṇāciketa; and at Prabhāsa (there is) Kapardin. Likewise, here too the third (is) famed as Śaśiśekhara.
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They are not separate gods but distinct Śaiva epithets marking localized manifestations: Kapardin emphasizes the ascetic, matted-haired icon; Śaśiśekhara emphasizes the moon on Śiva’s crest. The verse uses these names as tīrtha-identifiers.
Prabhāsa is a major western Indian coastal tīrtha (Prabhāsa-kṣetra), widely praised across Purāṇas and Itihāsa traditions as a powerful pilgrimage zone where specific Śiva-forms are worshipped.
In this catalogue-style passage it functions as a place-name/tīrtha. Its etymology evokes Nāciketa and the ‘three fires’ motif, but the Purāṇic intent here is primarily cartographic: to list a recognized sacred station.