Shukra’s Curse on King Danda and Andhaka’s Challenge to Shiva
स्यन्दनेनाश्वयुक्तेन गन्तुं समुपचक्रमे सप्तगोदावरं तीर्थं यत्र ताः कन्यका गताः
syandanenāśvayuktena gantuṃ samupacakrame saptagodāvaraṃ tīrthaṃ yatra tāḥ kanyakā gatāḥ
Он отправился в путь на колеснице, запряжённой конями, к тиртхе по имени Саптагодавара, туда, куда ушли те девы.
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Saptagodāvara is presented as a specific tīrtha whose identity is anchored in the Godāvarī river complex. The name suggests a septenary sacred configuration—commonly interpreted in Purāṇic tīrtha lists as seven streams/branches, seven fords, or a cluster of seven sanctified spots associated with the Godāvarī.
It ties the geography to narrative causality: the party’s movement is not random but directed by prior events involving kanyakās. This is a typical Purāṇic technique—embedding mythic actors into a map-like itinerary so that place-names become memorable and ritually meaningful.
Primarily it signals royal status and urgency. In tīrtha sections, such details also contrast worldly conveyance with the spiritual goal: even kings travel as pilgrims, implying that tīrtha merit transcends social rank.