कौर्मं पञ्चदशं प्राहुर्भागद्वयविभूषितम् । दशसप्तसहस्राणि पुरा सांख्यपते कलौ
kaurmaṃ pañcadaśaṃ prāhurbhāgadvayavibhūṣitam | daśasaptasahasrāṇi purā sāṃkhyapate kalau
Declaran que el Kaurma Purāṇa es el decimoquinto, adornado con dos partes; en tiempos antiguos —oh señor del Sāṅkhya— (se decía que) tenía diecisiete mil versos, en la era de Kali.
Sūta (Lomaharṣaṇa) (deduced)
Listener: sāṅkhyapate (addressed ‘lord of Sāṅkhya’)
Scene: A sage addresses a ‘sāṅkhyapate’ interlocutor; behind them a symbolic tortoise (kūrma) motif appears on a manuscript stand, indicating Kūrma Purāṇa; the atmosphere is reflective, acknowledging Kali-yuga context.
It highlights the ordered preservation of Purāṇic literature, including its internal divisions and traditional measures.
No tīrtha is named; the verse remains focused on the Kaurma Purāṇa’s place and structure.
None; it is descriptive (name, order, division, and length), not prescriptive.