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''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]].''
''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 founding legend and the deity's form here — to be filled by the contributor -->
== The temple in history ==
<!-- Dynasties, patrons, destructions and rebuildings, with inscriptions and chronicles as sources -->
== Architecture ==
<!-- Style, plan, and what a pilgrim sees -->
== Legacy ==
<!-- The shrine's place in the faith and the region -->
== References ==
<references />
[[Category:Jyotirlingas]]
[[Category:Jyotirlingas]]
[[Category:Temples & Architecture]]
[[Category:Temples & Architecture]]

Revision as of 00:15, 12 June 2026

Bhimashankar, sixth of the twelve, stands in the cloud-forests of the Sahyadris in Maharashtra, where the river Bhima rises from the hill behind the shrine. Here Shiva is remembered as the destroyer of the demon Tripurasura — the sweat of that battle, says the legend, became the river. The present Nagara-style temple grew under Maratha patronage: Nana Phadnavis raised its sabhamandapa, and the great bell before it is Portuguese — war booty from Chimaji Appa's conquest of Vasai (1739), ringing for Shiva ever since.

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