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{{Short description|Hindu temple in Madhya Pradesh, India}} |
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{{Unreferenced|date=May 2007}} |
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{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2023}} |
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{{Use Indian English|date=March 2023}} |
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'''Pashupatinath Temple''' ({{lang-hi|पशुपतिनाथ मन्दिर}}) in ], ] is a ] of Lord ]. |
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{{Infobox religious building |
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| name = Pashupatinath Temple |
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| image = Pashupatinath Mandsaur.jpg |
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| alt = |
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| caption = Eight faced Mandsaur Shiva Linga |
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| map_type = India #India Madhya Pradesh |
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| relief = yes |
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| religious_affiliation = ] |
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| other_names = |
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| coordinates = {{coord|24|03|17|N|75|04|22.5|E|display=inline,title}} |
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| country = ] |
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| state = ] |
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| location = ] |
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| elevation_m = |
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| deity = ] |
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| festivals = ] |
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| architecture = |
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| year_completed = 5th or 6th-century<ref name="Collins1988p97">{{cite book|author=Charles Dillard Collins|title=The Iconography and Ritual of Siva at Elephanta|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=shgtik9gYnIC&pg=PA97|year=1988|publisher=State University of New York Press|isbn=978-0-7914-9953-5|pages=97–120}}</ref> |
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__NOTOC__ |
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'''Pashupatinath Temple at Mandsaur''', also referred to as the '''Mandsaur Shiva temple''', is a ] dedicated to Lord ] in ], ]. It belongs to ] tradition which is one of 6 major tradition within ]. It is located on ], and is known for its eight-faced ]. The temple sculpture is dated to the 5th or 6th century based on inscriptions, with some referring to the site as Dashapura. It is near the ] border in the historic region of Malwa, about {{convert|200|km}} from ], about {{convert|340|km}} west of Udaigiri Caves and about {{convert|220|km}} east of Shamalaji ancient sites, both a significant source of ] era archaeological discoveries.<ref name="Collins1988p97"/><ref name="Schastok1985p43">{{cite book|author=Sara L. Schastok|title=The Śāmalājī Sculptures and 6th Century Art in Western India|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jh1fF8HvJmMC&pg=PA43|year=1985|publisher=BRILL Academic|isbn=90-04-06941-0|pages=43–52}}</ref> The site has been important to dating and the architectural studies of some distant sites such as the ].<ref name="Schastok1985p43"/> |
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The site's history is traceable to the 2nd-century CE when it was already a Hindu pilgrimage site.<ref name=williamsp55/> It is mentioned by the ancient Indian poet ], who praises the women of Dashapura as "so practiced in their seductive movements". Ten inscriptions found in the area suggest the Mandsaur site was an important cultural and religious center in the first half of the 1st millennium CE.<ref name=williamsp55/> Nine of these inscriptions are Sanskrit poems, most dated between 404 and 487 CE, and all include invocations to Hindu gods such as Vasudeva and Shiva in various forms. They mention kings of Gupta Empire era, as well as temples of Dashapura.<ref name=williamsp55>Joanna Williams (1973), , Archives of Asian Art, Vol. 26 (1972/1973), Duke University Press, pp. 50-66</ref> Together with dozens of temples discovered at a number of sites in western Madhya Pradesh, eastern Rajasthan and northern ] region, the Mandsaur site with the Shiva Stele and the temple reflect what Stella Kramrisch called one of the "Western schools" of ancient and early medieval Indian art.<ref name="Kramrisch1983p202">{{cite book|author=Stella Kramrisch|authorlink=Stella Kramrisch|title=Exploring India's Sacred Art |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pQN7O3hEzpQC&pg=PA202 |year =1983|publisher= Motilal Banarsidass |isbn= 978-0-8122-7856-9|pages =202–203}}</ref> James Harle concurs and includes the nearby Sondni and Kilchipura sites to the Western school along with regions farther west.<ref name="Harle1974p27">{{cite book|author=James C. Harle|title=Gupta sculpture: Indian sculpture of the fourth to the sixth centuries A.D.|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_m3qAAAAMAAJ|year=1996|publisher=Oxford University Press (Reprinted by Munshiram Manoharlal from 1976 edition)|isbn=978-8121506410|pages=27–28}}</ref> According to Harle, the sculpture from the temple and other archaeological findings such as the Mandsaur inscriptions – one of which he calls "the longest and certainly the most beautiful of the Gupta inscriptions" – reflect the "flavor of life at its best in Gupta times".<ref name="Harle1974p3">{{cite book|author=James C. Harle|title=Gupta sculpture: Indian sculpture of the fourth to the sixth centuries A.D.|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_m3qAAAAMAAJ|year=1996|publisher=Oxford University Press (Reprinted by Munshiram Manoharlal from 1976 edition)|isbn=978-8121506410|pages=3–4}}</ref> |
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==External links== |
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* {{Official website|http://shripashupatinath.nic.in}} |
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The inscriptions, state Harle and other scholars, suggest that the sculpture and temples of Mandsaur were built with resources pooled by the common people, such as silk weavers of Dashapura (Mandsaur) who had settled there from Gujarat.<ref name="Harle1974p3"/><ref name="Ayyar1987p17"/> However, these inscriptions mention a ] (Sun) temple, a ] temple and others. They do not mention the Pashupatinath temple. Excavations have yielded several brick temples of Shiva which have been dated to the 6th century, suggesting that Shiva was a prominent deity along with others in ancient Mandasor.<ref name="Ayyar1987p17">{{cite book|author=Sulochana Ayyar|title=Costumes and Ornaments as Depicted in the Sculptures of Gwalior Museum|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=G9eHPXL6UE0C&pg=PA17 |year=1987|publisher=Mittal Publications|isbn=978-81-7099-002-4|pages=17–19}}</ref> Additionally, only the foundations of most early temples and monuments are presently identifiable, as the Buddhist, Hindu and ] temples in Mandsaur were demolished and its stones and relief panels used to build a ] fort after the region was conquered in the late medieval era.<ref name="Ayyar1987p17"/> |
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The eight face Shiva found in the reconstructed Pashupatinath temple is from the 1st millennium CE and a rare iconography. It is {{convert|4.5|m}} tall and was discovered in the river bed of the Shivana.<ref name=goyala172/> It has been reconsecrated into the temple. The upper part of the linga has four heads in a line, while the other four heads are carved below them in the second line. The faces have open eyes, with the third eye on their forehead visible.<ref name="Bajpai2003p38"/> Each face has elaborate hair probably reflecting the culture of its time for men. Each wears jewelry such as earlobes, necklace and more. The eight faces represent the various aspects of Shiva in regional Shaivism theology: Bhava, ], Mahadeva, Isana, Rudra, Sharva, Ugra and Asani. It is sometimes referred to as ''Ashtamukha'' or ''Ashtamurti''. According to Goyala, this Mandsaur linga is likely from the early 6th century.<ref name=goyala172>{{cite book|author=S Goyala|title=Indian Art of the Gupta Age: From Pre-classical Roots to the Emergence of Medieval Trends|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=qKjpAAAAMAAJ|year=2000|publisher=Kusumanjali |page=172}}</ref><ref name="Bajpai2003p38">{{cite book|author1=K. D. Bajpai|author2=Santosha Kumāra Vājapeyī|title=Indological researches in India: selected works of Prof. K.D. Bajpai|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=MOJtAAAAMAAJ|year=2003|publisher=Eastern Book |isbn=978-81-7854-025-2|pages=38–40, 78–79, 397}}</ref> |
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mandsaur temple of lord pashupatinath is biggest in world may be temple of nepal is big but the staute of lord pashupati nath of mandsaur is world biggest pashupatinath staute as per hindu mythology. |
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==See also== |
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==References== |
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{{reflist}} |
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==External links== |
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* {{Commons category inline|Pashupatinath Temple, Mandsaur}} |
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{{Hindu inscriptions and arts|state=autocollapse}} |
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i request wikipedia team to collect all details and submiy in pashupati nath temaple of mandsaur details. |
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{{Hindudharma}} |
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Sitauted in a small town (Mandsaur) of state MP(India) is the only Pashupatinath temple of Lord Shiva in India and 2nd in the world (other is in Nepal which is of 4 faces). Not very much popular as not known to masses or was not promoted by tourism. It is the only Pashupatinath temple with 8 faces of Lord Shiva....and its a biggest in world but coincidence people only knows nepal . |
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The site's history is traceable to the 2nd-century CE when it was already a Hindu pilgrimage site. It is mentioned by the ancient Indian poet Kalidasa, who praises the women of Dashapura as "so practiced in their seductive movements". Ten inscriptions found in the area suggest the Mandsaur site was an important cultural and religious center in the first half of the 1st millennium CE. Nine of these inscriptions are Sanskrit poems, most dated between 404 and 487 CE, and all include invocations to Hindu gods such as Vasudeva and Shiva in various forms. They mention kings of Gupta Empire era, as well as temples of Dashapura. Together with dozens of temples discovered at a number of sites in western Madhya Pradesh, eastern Rajasthan and northern Gujarat region, the Mandsaur site with the Shiva Stele and the temple reflect what Stella Kramrisch called one of the "Western schools" of ancient and early medieval Indian art. James Harle concurs and includes the nearby Sondni and Kilchipura sites to the Western school along with regions farther west. According to Harle, the sculpture from the temple and other archaeological findings such as the Mandsaur inscriptions – one of which he calls "the longest and certainly the most beautiful of the Gupta inscriptions" – reflect the "flavor of life at its best in Gupta times".
The inscriptions, state Harle and other scholars, suggest that the sculpture and temples of Mandsaur were built with resources pooled by the common people, such as silk weavers of Dashapura (Mandsaur) who had settled there from Gujarat. However, these inscriptions mention a Surya (Sun) temple, a Vishnu temple and others. They do not mention the Pashupatinath temple. Excavations have yielded several brick temples of Shiva which have been dated to the 6th century, suggesting that Shiva was a prominent deity along with others in ancient Mandasor. Additionally, only the foundations of most early temples and monuments are presently identifiable, as the Buddhist, Hindu and Jain temples in Mandsaur were demolished and its stones and relief panels used to build a Muslim fort after the region was conquered in the late medieval era.
The eight face Shiva found in the reconstructed Pashupatinath temple is from the 1st millennium CE and a rare iconography. It is 4.5 metres (15 ft) tall and was discovered in the river bed of the Shivana. It has been reconsecrated into the temple. The upper part of the linga has four heads in a line, while the other four heads are carved below them in the second line. The faces have open eyes, with the third eye on their forehead visible. Each face has elaborate hair probably reflecting the culture of its time for men. Each wears jewelry such as earlobes, necklace and more. The eight faces represent the various aspects of Shiva in regional Shaivism theology: Bhava, Pashupati, Mahadeva, Isana, Rudra, Sharva, Ugra and Asani. It is sometimes referred to as Ashtamukha or Ashtamurti. According to Goyala, this Mandsaur linga is likely from the early 6th century.