Jump to content

Grishneshwar Temple: Difference between revisions

From Indopedia
Add fill-in section skeleton for the contributor
Recategorise: Jyotirlingas is now a standalone collection
 
Line 19: Line 19:


[[Category:Jyotirlingas]]
[[Category:Jyotirlingas]]
[[Category:Temples & Architecture]]

Latest revision as of 00:32, 12 June 2026

Grishneshwar, counted twelfth and last in the traditional stotra, stands at Verul in Maharashtra — a few hundred steps from the rock-cut thunder of the Ellora caves, the smallest of the twelve shrines beside the mightiest of India's carved mountains. Its legend is domestic and tender: the devotee Ghushma, whose murdered son Shiva restored from the temple tank. The present red-stone temple is — once more — the work of Ahilyabai Holkar, her third appearance in the story of the twelve: Kashi, Grishneshwar, and the shore of Somnath.

This page awaits its full Indopedia treatment — history from inscriptions and chronicles, period images with provenance, and the chain of builders and rebuilders, in the manner of Somnath Temple — The Shrine Eternal. To take up this temple, see Indopedia:Contribute.

Sacred tradition

The temple in history

Architecture

Legacy

References