त्रिकूटे चैव गोविंदः पाताले वासुकिस्तथा । कोविदारे युगाध्यक्षः स्त्रीराज्ये च सुरप्रियः
trikūṭe caiva goviṃdaḥ pātāle vāsukistathā | kovidāre yugādhyakṣaḥ strīrājye ca surapriyaḥ
Auf Trikūṭa ist Er Govinda; in Pātāla ist Er Vāsuki. In Kovidāra ist Er Yugādhyakṣa (Aufseher der Weltzeitalter), und in Strīrājya ist Er Surapriya (der von den Göttern Geliebte) — so zeichnet das Purāṇa die Gegenwart des Herrn von den Bergen bis zu den Unterwelten und durch wundersame Länder.
Sūta (Lomaharṣaṇa) to the sages (deduced)
Tirtha: Trikūṭa / Pātāla / Kovidāra / Strīrājya (as nāma-sthāna list)
Type: kshetra
Scene: A cosmic map tableau: the Lord’s presence radiates simultaneously—on a triple-peaked mountain (Trikūṭa) as Govinda; in the jeweled netherworld (Pātāla) amid nāgas as Vāsuki; beneath a flowering kovidāra tree as Yugādhyakṣa; and in a wondrous ‘Strīrājya’ court as Surapriya, adored by devas.
The Divine pervades all realms—mountain, underworld, and distant lands—governing time itself as the Lord of the ages.
Trikūṭa and Kovidāra are cited as sacred locales; Pātāla and Strīrājya broaden the map to cosmological and legendary regions.
None explicitly; the verse is a mahatmya-style proclamation encouraging reverent remembrance of these divine abodes.