CC Madhya 9.281 (1975)
Below is the 1996 edition text, ready to be substituted with the 1975 one using the compile form.
TEXT 281
- kolāpure lakṣmī dekhi’ dekhena kṣīra-bhagavatī
- lāṅga-gaṇeśa dekhi’ dekhena cora-pārvatī
SYNONYMS
kolāpure—at Kolāpura; lakṣmī—the goddess of fortune; dekhi’—seeing; dekhena—He visited; kṣīra-bhagavatī—the temple of Kṣīra-bhagavatī; lāṅga-gaṇeśa—the deity Lāṅga-gaṇeśa; dekhi’—seeing; dekhena—He sees; cora-pārvatī—the goddess Pārvatī, who is known as a thief.
TRANSLATION
Śrī Caitanya Mahāprabhu then visited the town of Kolāpura, where He saw the goddess of fortune in the temple of Kṣīra-bhagavatī and saw Lāṅga-gaṇeśa in another temple, known as Cora-pārvatī.
PURPORT
Kolāpura is a town in the Maharashtra province, formerly known as Bombay Pradesh. Formerly Kolāpura was a native state, and it is bordered on the north by the district of Sāṅtārā, on the east and south by the district of Belagāma, and on the west by the district of Ratnagiri. In Kolāpura there is a river named Urṇā. From the Bombay Gazette it is understood that there were about 250 temples there, out of which six are very famous. These are (1) Ambābāi, or Mahālakṣmī Mandira, (2) Viṭhobā Mandira, (3) Ṭemblāi Mandira, (4) Mahākālī Mandira, (5) Phirāṅga-i, or Pratyaṅgirā Mandira, and (6) Yāllāmmā Mandira.