The Birth and Consecration of Skanda (Kartikeya) at Kurukshetra
प्रादात् खटकटां चान्यां सर्वपापविमोचनः संतानिकां विकलिकां क्रमश्चत्वरवासिनीम्
prādāt khaṭakaṭāṃ cānyāṃ sarvapāpavimocanaḥ saṃtānikāṃ vikalikāṃ kramaścatvaravāsinīm
Ele—o removedor de todos os pecados—concedeu também Khaṭakaṭā e outra (daquele grupo); e Saṃtānikā, Vikalikā e Kramā, que habita na encruzilhada (ou no cruzamento de quatro vias).
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "adbhuta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
In māhātmya diction it is typically an epithet of a purifying sacred power—often the tīrtha itself (personified) or the presiding deity of that tīrtha—emphasizing the site’s capacity to remove all sins.
It points to a shrine or sacred presence located at a ‘catvara’—a junction, crossroads, or public square. Such liminal nodes are common in Indian sacred mapping, marking places for offerings, protective deities, and ritual transitions during yātrā.
Tīrtha catalogues often preserve vernacular, onomatopoetic, or region-specific names. Their primary function is identificatory (linking to a local cult/site) rather than semantic; fuller meaning may depend on regional commentarial traditions or adjacent verses naming the exact locality.