Now listen to Kusadvipa, the third (continent). Kusadvipa is surrounded by a milky ocean, and is double in extent of
the Sakadvipa. There are seven major mountains here also, each with two names such as Kumuda, also called
Vidruma. The high Hemaparvata is also Drona, Puspavan is also Kanka, Kusesaya is also Agniman, and the sixth
Mahisa is also Hari. Agni remains there.
The seventh is Kakudhra; it is the same as Mandara. These are the mountains in Kusadvipa. The divisions in it have
also two names each. Kumuda is Sveta, it is named first. The high Lolita is also Venumandala. Valahaka is Jimuta and
is the same as Rathakara. Drona is Hari and is the same as Baladhana.
The rivers there have also two names. Pratoya is also called Pravesa. The second is Siva, also called Yasoda. The
third is Citra, also known as Krsna. The fourth is Hradini, also called Candra. The fifth is Vidyullata, also called
Sukla.
The sixth is Varna, it is the same as Dhrti. These are the main rivers. The others are minors ones. This is the
arrangement in Kusadvipa.
Note: Sircar D. C. has in several of his books put forward the idea that Kusadvipa is related to Kush; the country on
the Nile between Egypt and Ethiopia. It got to be known in India as it was the border of the neighboring Persian empire
where several inscriptions mention it.
According to numerous authors (but not all) East Africa should be Sancha dwipa. The following extract is taken from:
Asiatick Researches: Or, Transactions of the Society Instituted in Bengal, for Inquiring Into the...By India Asiatic Society
Calcutta P307-308 (1808). The dwipa of Sancha is supposed, by the Pauranics, to join the island of Sumatra, or of the
Moon. This mistaken notion has been adopted by Ptolemy, and after him by Oriental writers. In the beginning of
the
Brahmanda-purana, Lanca or the peninsula of Malaya, and Sumatra join the island of Sancha, or Zengh…..
The tract of islands called Raneh by Arabian writers, and including Madagascar and the surrounding islands, is
obviously the dwipa of Harina, mentioned in the Bhagavata, along with Sancha, in the South-West quarter of the old
continent. This island being also called in Arabic, the island of the moon, has occasioned some
confusion.