कोटिलिंगं त्रिनेत्रं च देवं भृगुवनेचरम् । दीपेश्वरं महानादं देवं चैवाचलेश्वरम्
koṭiliṃgaṃ trinetraṃ ca devaṃ bhṛguvanecaram | dīpeśvaraṃ mahānādaṃ devaṃ caivācaleśvaram
Koṭiliṅga, der Dreiaugige Herr (Trinetra), und die Gottheit, die im Wald Bhṛgus weilt; Dīpeśvara, Mahānāda und auch Acaleśvara—gepriesene śivaitische Tīrthas und Gestalten.
Skanda (deduced from Dvārakā Māhātmya narration style within Skanda Purāṇa)
Tirtha: Koṭiliṅga / Dīpeśvara / Acaleśvara (as invoked Śaiva tīrthas within the māhātmya)
Type: temple
Scene: A pilgrim walks through a sacred grove (Bhṛgu-vana) where countless liṅgas appear like stones of light; a lamp-lit shrine (Dīpeśvara) glows at dusk; a mountain-temple (Acaleśvara) stands immovable; subtle sound-waves (Mahānāda) ripple through the sky.
It frames devotion through sacred naming—Śiva’s epithets and shrine-names become a guide to pilgrimage and remembrance.
Koṭiliṅga and Bhṛguvana-associated Śiva are highlighted, alongside Dīpeśvara, Mahānāda, and Acaleśvara as revered Śaiva sites.
None explicitly; the verse is a tīrtha/Śiva-stuti list rather than a procedural injunction.