दशमं ब्रह्मवैवर्तं तावत्संख्यमिहोच्यते । लैङ्गमेकादशं ज्ञेयं तथैकादशसंख्यया
daśamaṃ brahmavaivartaṃ tāvatsaṃkhyamihocyate | laiṅgamekādaśaṃ jñeyaṃ tathaikādaśasaṃkhyayā
The tenth is the Brahmavaivarta, said here to have that same extent (as just stated). The Liṅga Purāṇa should be known as the eleventh, with a count of eleven thousand verses.
Sūta (Lomaharṣaṇa/Sauti), addressing Śaunaka and the sages (deduced)
Listener: Śaunaka
Scene: A balanced diptych: on one side a radiant liṅga with bilva leaves; on the other a Viṣṇu/Kṛṣṇa emblem; sages in the center recite the canon list, symbolizing harmony of traditions.
Purāṇic tradition maintains a disciplined catalog of texts, enabling reliable study and sectarian/theological orientation (e.g., Liṅga for Śaiva focus).
No site is mentioned; the verse is a bibliographic enumeration.
None; it provides ordering and verse-counts.
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