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Varanasi - Medieval History

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More of her communal works throughout India.

Works throughout India[edit]



Fort Ahilya in Maheshwar


Ahilya Ghat, Varanasi


The current structure of Vishnupad Temple is built by Maharani Ahilya Bai Holkar in 1787


Ahilya Bai's Fort


Ahilya Bai's TempleShikhar
It was the speciality of Holkar family that they did not use public funds to meet their personal and family expenses. They had their personal fund from their private property. Devi Ahilya inherited personal fund which at that time was estimated to be sixteen crores rupees. Ahilyabai used personal fund in charitable works.[12]



Ahilya Bai's Temple
  • Alampur (MP) – Harihareshwar, Batuk, Malharimarthand, Surya, Renuka, Ram Hanuman Temples, Shriram Temple, Laxmi Narayan Temple, Maruti Temple, Narsinh Temple, Khanderao Martand Temple, Memorial of Malharrao (I)
  • Amarkanthak- Shri Vishweshwar Temple, Kotithirth Temple, Gomukhi Temple, Dharamshala, Vansh Kund
  • Amba Gaon – Lamps for temple
  • Anand Kanan – Vishweshwar Temple
  • Ayodhya (U.P)– Built Shri Ram Temple, Shri Treta Ram Temple, Shri Bhairav Temple, Nageshwar/Siddhnath Temple, Sharayu Ghat, well, Swargadwari Mohatajkhana, Dharamshalas
  • Badrinath Temple (UP) – Shri Kedareshwar and Hari Temples, Dharamshalas (Rangdachati, Bidarchati, Vyasganga, Tanganath, Pawali), Manu kunds (Gaurkund, Kundachatri), Garden and Warm Water Kund at Dev Prayag, Pastoral land for cows
  • Beed – Jirnnodhar of a Ghat.
  • Belur (Karnataka) – Ganpati, Pandurang, Jaleshwar, Khandoba, Tirthraj and Fire temples, Kund
  • Bhanpura – Nine Temples and Dharmashala
  • Bharatpur – Temple, Dharmashala, Kund
  • Bhimashankar – Garibkhana
  • Bhusawal – Changadev Temple
  • Bitthur – Bhramaghat
  • Burhanpur (MP) – Raj Ghat, Ram Ghat, Kund
  • Chandwad Waphegaon – Vishnu Temple and Renuka Temple
  • Chaundi – Chaudeshwaridevi Temple, Sineshwar Mahadev temple,
  • Ahilyeshwar Temple, Dharamshala, Ghat,
  • Chitrakoot – Pranpratishta of Shri Ramchandra
  • Cikhalda – Annakshetra
  • Dwarka(Gujrath) – Mohatajkhana, Pooja House and gave some villages to priest
  • ElloraGrishneshwar Temple of Red Stone
  • GangotriVishwanath, Kedarnath, Annapurna, Bhairav Temples, many Dharmashalas
  • Gaya (Bihar) – Vishnupad Temple
  • Gokarn – Rewaleshwar Mahadev temple, Holkar wada, Garden and Garibkhana
  • Gruneshwar (Verul) – Shivalaya Tirth
  • Handiya – Siddhanath Temple, ghat and dharmashala
  • Haridwar (Uttarakhand) – Kushawarth Ghat and a Huge Dharmashala
  • Hrishikesh – Many temples, Shrinathji and Govardhan ram temples
  • Indore – Many Temples and ghats
  • Jagannath Puri (Orrisa) – Shri Ramchandra Temple, Dharmashala and Garden
  • Jalgaon – Ram Mandir
  • Jamghat – Bhumi dwar
  • Jamvgaon – Donated for Ramdas swami Math
  • Jejuri – Malhargautameshwar, Vitthal, Martand Temple, Janai Mahadev and Malhar lakes
  • Karmanasini River – Bridge
  • Kashi (Benaras) – Kashi Vishwanath Temple, Shri Tarakeshwar, Shri Gangaji, Ahilya Dwarkeshwar, Gautameshwar, Many Mahadev Temples, Temple Ghats, Manikarnika Ghat, Dashaaswamegh Ghat, Janana Ghat, Ahilya Ghat, UttarKashi Dharmashala, Rameshwar Panchkoshi Dharmashala, Kapila Dhara Dharmashala, Shitala Ghat
  • Kedarnath – Dharmashala and Kund
  • Kolhapur – Facilities for temple pooja
  • Kumher – Well and Memorial of Prince Khanderao
  • Kurukshetra (Haryana) – Shiv Shantanu Mahadev Temple, Panchkund Ghat, Laxmikund Ghat
  • Maheshwar – Hundreds of temples, ghats, dharmashalas and houses
  • Mamaleshwar Mahadev Himachal Pradesh – Lamps
  • Manasa Devi – Seven temples
  • Mandaleshwar – Shiv Temple Ghat
  • Datta Mandir (Mangaon) – Datta Mandir, Near Sawantwadi, Konkan, Maharashtra, India
  • Miri (Ahmednagar) – Bhairav Temple in 1780
  • Naimabar(MP) – Temple
  • Nandurbar[1] – Temple, Well
  • Nathdwara – Ahilya Kund, Temple, Well
  • Neelkantha Mahadev – Shivalaya and Gomukh
  • Nemisharanya(UP) – Mahadev Madi, Nimsar Dharmashala, Go-ghat, Cakrithirth kund
  • Nimgaon (Nashik) – Well
  • Omkareshwar (MP) – Mamaleshwar Mahadev, Amaleshwar, Trambakeshwar Temples (Jirnnodhar), Gauri Somnath Temple, Dharmashalas, Wells
  • Ozar (Ahmednagar) – 2 wells and kund
  • Panchawati, Nasik – Shri Ram Temple, Gora Mahadev temple, Dharmashala, Vishweshwar Temple, Ramghat, Dharmashala
  • Parli Vaijnath, Parli Vaijnath – Shri Vaidyanath Mandir
  • Pandharpur (Maharashtra) – Shri Ram Temple, Tulsibag, Holkar wada, Sabha Mandap, Dharmashala and gave silver utensil for the temple,Well-Which known by Bagirao well.
  • Pimplas(Nashik) – well
  • Prayag (Allahabad UP) – Vishnu Temple, Dharmashala, Garden, Ghat, Palace
  • Pune – Ghat
  • Puntambe (Maharashtra) – Ghat on Godavari river
  • Pushkar – Ganpati Temple, Dharmashala, Garden
  • Rameshwar (TN) – Hanuman Temple, Shri Radha Krishna Temple, Dharmashala, Well, Garden etc.
  • Rampura – Four Temples, Dharmashala and houses
  • Raver – Keshav Kund
  • Sakargaon – well
  • Sambhal – Laxmi Narayan Temple and two wells
  • Sangamner – Ram Temple
  • Saptashrungi – Dharmashala
  • Sardhana Meerut – Chandi Devi Temple
  • Saurashtra (Guj) – Somnath Temple in 1785. (Jirnnodhdhar and Pran Prathistha)
  • Siddhivinayak temple's inner sanctum at Siddhatek in Ahmednagar District
  • Shri Nagnath (Darukhvan) – Started pooja in 1784
  • Srisailam Mallikarjun (Kurnool, AP) – Temple of Lord Shiva
  • Shri Shambhu Mahadev Mountain Shingnapur (Maharashtra) – Well
  • Shri Vaijenath (Parali, Maha) – Jirnnodhar of Baijenath Temple in 1784
  • Shri Vhigneshwar – Lamps
  • Sinhpur – Shiv Temple and ghat
  • Sulpeshwar – Mahadev Temple, annakshetra
  • Sultanpur (Khandesh) – Temple
  • Tarana – Tilabhandeshwar Shiv temple, Khedapati, Shriram Temple, Mahakali Temple
  • Tehari (Bundelkhand) – Dharmashala
  • Trimbakeshwar (Nashik) – Bridge on Kushawarth Ghat
  • Ujjain (MP) – Chintaman Ganapati, Janardhan, Shrilila urushottam, Balaji Tilakeshwar, Ramjanaki Ras Mandal, Gopal, Chitnis, Balaji, Ankpal, Shiv and many other temples, 13 ghats, well and many Dharmashalas etc.
  • Varanasi, Kashi Vishwanath Temple 1780.[13]
  • Vrindavan (Mathura) – Chain Bihari Temple, Kaliyadeha Ghat, Chirghat and many other ghats, Dharmashala, Annakstra
  • Waphegaon (Nashik) – Holkar wada and one well
  • Ambad (maharashtra) -Matsodari Devi Mandir
 
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Such tenacity :enjoy: Our history books have not done justice. :disagree: I am reading her name for the first time in my life.
Seriously you did not hear about Rani Ahalya bai?I have a book of a vedic scholar who in his twenties traveled around Narmada in the 50's. He says,all the magnificent Ghats were build by Rani Ahalya Bai. Not only that, people revere her like their own mother for her magnanimity and generosity. She is a legend. Strange you didn't hear about her.
 
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Seriously you did not hear about Rani Ahalya bai?I have a book of a vedic scholar who in his twenties traveled around Narmada in the 50's. He says,all the magnificent Ghats were build by Rani Ahalya Bai. Not only that, people revere her like their own mother for her magnanimity and generosity. She is a legend. Strange you didn't hear about her.
:cray: I will go through them soon. I really had no clue. Thanks :tup:
 
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Don't want to be the spoiler , but having lived in close proximity of Varanasi I have seen too much of too much. I mean apart from the fact that this city is Ancient and home to religious places, this place is sick to the core .

People have no respect when it comes to treating Ganga properly . Seen plenty of dead bodies , garbage floating around. Pandit and baba's are no less than thugs and local guides are worst of their kind.

Recently my Japanese friend visited Varanasi and had several bad experiences.

I guess the plan of cleaning Ganga has been on paper for quite sometime but i don't see any progress. Varanasi is all good when it comes to paying your homage and all but no one really cares about this city.

If an ancient city like Varanasi is being treated this way , i have no clue how we as Indians and Hindus will preserve our heritage and showcase it to the world.

Sorry once again to spoil the Pride ride :(
 
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I believe Varanasi and the Ganga need to be regulated properly, permits should be used for religious rituals. There should also be a volunteer effort to clean the river and restore it to its former glory.
 
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Don't want to be the spoiler , but having lived in close proximity of Varanasi I have seen too much of too much. I mean apart from the fact that this city is Ancient and home to religious places, this place is sick to the core .

People have no respect when it comes to treating Ganga properly . Seen plenty of dead bodies , garbage floating around. Pandit and baba's are no less than thugs and local guides are worst of their kind.

Recently my Japanese friend visited Varanasi and had several bad experiences.

I guess the plan of cleaning Ganga has been on paper for quite sometime but i don't see any progress. Varanasi is all good when it comes to paying your homage and all but no one really cares about this city.

If an ancient city like Varanasi is being treated this way , i have no clue how we as Indians and Hindus will preserve our heritage and showcase it to the world.

Sorry once again to spoil the Pride ride :(
"I guess the plan of cleaning Ganga has been on paper for quite sometime but i don't see any progress. Varanasi is all good when it comes to paying your homage and all but no one really cares about this city. "
True. :(
 
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VARANASI: Is Varanasi older than its known history? In an effort to find an answer to this vexed question, a group of archeologists led by former professor of archeology at the Banaras Hindu University (BHU) Prof Vidula Jayaswal is busy "unearthing the antiquity" of this city through excavations at the ASI protected site at Rajghat with help from the Archaeological Survey of India.

"Based on archaeological remains unearthed at the Kashi-Rajghat area about four decades ago, findings had suggested that the city was inhabited around 9th century BC. But our venture aims at finding answers to a number of questions like how old is Varanasi actually? What are the factors which helped this city to survive till today -- particularly when other old cities on the banks of the Ganga died out? The news excavations could push the date back by several centuries," Vidula told TOI on Wednesday.

"We are digging the earth in 5X5 meter blocks till a depth of 5-6 meters to find out archeological remains," she said. Based on the earlier findings, the ASI records say that the site of Rajghat perhaps represents the ancient Kashi. This area has been one of the oldest settlement sites and still possesses natural groves and old remains. This mound was excavated by BHU and from 1960 to 1969 and a trial trench was dug in 1957. The excavation carried out at Rajghat brought to light artifacts dating back to 8th century BC to 18th century AD.

"We would take help of carbon dating technique to ascertain the antiquity of our findings," she said.

Vidula, who is associated with Jnana Pravaha, Centre for Cultural Studies and Research, said, "During my tenure at BHU I had led the excavations in the periphery of Varanasi at Ramnagar (2004-2005 & 2006-2007) and Akatha (2001-2002 & 2002-2003). The archaeological remains found at Akatha suggested that it had a settlement in 1800 BC while Ramnagar had settlement in 1750 BC. These findings of Akatha and Ramnagar compelled us to do a fresh exercise to ascertain the actual age of Kashi (Varanasi), which has a living history from 800 BC based on earlier excavations at Rajghat."

"The undisrupted occupation of Kashi region since ancient times till date played a vital role in the make up of modern Varanasi. The fact is that Kashi was not established by any royalty, but it has been nurtured by people and folk culture," she said.

Vidula, who has also authored a book, Ancient Varanasi (An Archaeological Perspective), had already mentioned in it that ancient remains of Varanasi, which were unearthed at Kashi-Rajghat about four decades ago, could demonstrate that this holy city was inhabited around 9th century BC and had attained status of a promising urban centre by 3rd century BC.

Sarnath, the place of first sermon of Gautam Buddha, retains archeological remains from the time of the Maurya king Ashoka. But, excavations as Aktha reveal that this settlement had greater antiquity than that has been obtained at Kashi-Rajghat. Glimpses of its past come through the descriptions of ancient texts and archaeological remains. The information available from the former is fragmentary in nature, while archaeological records, an authentic base for the reconstruction of the past, are ever growing. The discoveries and findings add and modify the known history. The recent archaeological investigations, as the one at Aktha, has brought to light new evidence which is significant and needs to be added to the history of Varanasi, she mentioned.

According to her book, on account of the archaeological remains of Kashi-Rajghat and Sarnath -- the stretch of the cultural zone of Kashi -- was considered to be within a five kilometre radius from the nucleus of the modern city of Varanasi -- the Pucca Mahal locality. Besides, ancient texts and modern studies on human geography suggest that the large urban set ups like Varanasi needed to be supported by a number of satellite settlements of feeding centres which, though small entities occupying peripheral region, remain integral part of settlements of Varanasi-Sarnath region. The first colonization of Kashi region, on account of these findings, could be pushed back about 500-600 years.

An Nice article

There is book on Banaras

Banaras: Vision of a Living Ancient Tradition
By Winand M. Callewaert


This guy has described Banaras as no one knows it better :P Every aspect of Banaras from architecture to Commissions of tour guide for bringing foreigners. 8-):p:
 
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Nonsense. All our religious sites are in bad shape due to neglect and the govt takeover of the temples. Mathura, Varanasi, Brindavan none of these are exceptions.

Ganga does not get spoiled due to 80 bodies being creamated on its ghats everyday. This is the river with the greatest discharge of water on planet Earth after the Amazon river. Traveling over the Himalayas it carries millions of tons of forest debris and silt. So what is a few thousand people bathing in it or a few hundred bodies ashes immersed in it. Do not know how many dead bodies are floated in it, but guess it will not be more than 2-3 a day. For that huge a river this is nothing.

The river is polluted primarily because all the cities on its course discharge their effluents in it including all the industrial zone toxins along the way. Add untreated sewage water to it.

It has become popular to just attack some rituals on the River by Hindus, but everything used in the Hindu ritual is organic. Flowers, leaves, coconuts, these are supposed to be the major pollutants according to our ignoramuses.

Cremation on Ghats[edit]


Cremations in progress at Manikarnika Ghat, Varanasi.
In Hindu traditions, cremation is one of the rites of passage and the Ghats of Varanasi are considered one of the auspicious locations for this ritual.[2] At the time of the cremation or "last rites," a "Puja" (prayer) is performed. Hymns and mantras are recited during cremation to mark the ritual. The Manikarnika and Harishchandra Ghats are dedicated to the cremation ritual. Annually, less than 2 in 1000 people who die in India, or 25,000 to 30,000 bodies are cremated on various Varanasi Ghats; about an average of 80 per day. This practice has become controversial for the pollution it causes to the river.[3] In 1980s, the Government of India funded a Clean Ganga initiative, to address cremation and other sources of pollution along the Ghats of Varanasi. In many cases, the cremation is done elsewhere and only the ashes are dispersed into the river near these Ghats.[4]

Pollution of Ghats[edit]
Untreated sewage in a pervasive source of river pollution in India. City municipal waste and untreated sewage is the largest source of pollution of Ganges river near the Ghats of Varanasi.[5]
 
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An Nice article
It really is a shame - the way the place is dirtied. But then I won't blame only the Government. Though they have played a vital role (corruption, scams you name it) but the people also have failed to do their duty.

See for example Amritsar, Sikhs and Hindus clean up the place (Golden temple only though :( ) and it looks beautiful. I did seva when I was a kid.
 
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It really is a shame - the way the place is dirtied. But then I won't blame only the Government. Though they have played a vital role (corruption, scams you name it) but the people also have failed to do their duty.

See for example Amritsar, Sikhs and Hindus clean up the place (Golden temple only though :( ) and it looks beautiful. I did seva when I was a kid.

Golden temple is not under govt control. Its coffers have not been seized.
 
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Nonsense. All our religious sites are in bad shape due to neglect and the govt takeover of the temples. Mathura, Varanasi, Brindavan none of these are exceptions.

Ganga does not get spoiled due to 80 bodies being creamated on its ghats everyday. This is the river with the greatest discharge of water on planet Earth after the Amazon river. Traveling over the Himalayas it carries millions of tons of forest debris and silt. So what is a few thousand people bathing in it or a few hundred bodies ashes immersed in it. Do not know how many dead bodies are floated in it, but guess it will not be more than 2-3 a day. For that huge a river this is nothing.

The river is polluted primarily because all the cities on its course discharge their effluents in it including all the industrial zone toxins along the way. Add untreated sewage water to it.

It has become popular to just attack some rituals on the River by Hindus, but everything used in the Hindu ritual is organic. Flowers, leaves, coconuts, these are supposed to be the major pollutants according to our ignoramuses.

Cremation on Ghats[edit]


Cremations in progress at Manikarnika Ghat, Varanasi.
In Hindu traditions, cremation is one of the rites of passage and the Ghats of Varanasi are considered one of the auspicious locations for this ritual.[2] At the time of the cremation or "last rites," a "Puja" (prayer) is performed. Hymns and mantras are recited during cremation to mark the ritual. The Manikarnika and Harishchandra Ghats are dedicated to the cremation ritual. Annually, less than 2 in 1000 people who die in India, or 25,000 to 30,000 bodies are cremated on various Varanasi Ghats; about an average of 80 per day. This practice has become controversial for the pollution it causes to the river.[3] In 1980s, the Government of India funded a Clean Ganga initiative, to address cremation and other sources of pollution along the Ghats of Varanasi. In many cases, the cremation is done elsewhere and only the ashes are dispersed into the river near these Ghats.[4]

Pollution of Ghats[edit]
Untreated sewage in a pervasive source of river pollution in India. City municipal waste and untreated sewage is the largest source of pollution of Ganges river near the Ghats of Varanasi.[5]
He just mentioned the issue - he wrote what he saw. Everybody knows the pollution of a river is entirely due to industrial waste. Point is that this has remained unchecked. And that is a national shame.
 
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