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Jatar Deul

Monument in West Bengal, India
Jatar Deul
Religion
Affiliation Hinduism
Deity Shiva
Location
LocationKankan Dighi/Jata
South 24 Parganas
StateWest Bengal
CountryIndia
Location in West Bengal
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Location in India
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Geographic coordinates 21°59′33′′N 88°29′15′′E / 21.99250°N 88.48750°E / 21.99250; 88.48750
Architecture
TypeRekha deul
Date established10th -11th century
Completed10th -11th century
Elevation30 m (98 ft)

Jatar Deul is located in district South 24 Parganas of the Indian state West Bengal.[1] [2] This is a brick temple and is datable between the 10th and 11th century on the basis of its architecture.[1] However, this type of brick temple we can see at Nebia Khera, Uttar Pradesh.[3]

Location

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The Jatar-Deul stands isolated on a small hill in the surroundings of the locality Kanakan Dighi, about 5 km east of the small town of Raidighi in the Mathurapur II community development block in the Diamond Harbour subdivision of the district of South 24 Parganas in West Bengal.[4]

History

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Jatar Deul

The temple is known by the name of "Jatar Deul ".[5] This brick temple is traditionally connected with an inscription (not traceable now) of one Raja Jayantachandra, purported to have been issued in 975 AD.[1] It was probably dedicated to Mahadev or Siva, who also goes by the name of Jatadhari.[5] The Archaeological Department board at the temple site places establishment around 11th century.[4] However, there was no deity inside the temple.[1] The discovery of Jatar Deul dates back to the middle of the nineteenth century, when land surveyors stumbled upon a towering brick structure in the midst of the Sundarban.[4]

Consecration

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What purpose it served is now a matter of conjecture.[6] There is neither a cult nor any other sculptural or inscriptional evidence available, it is also the consecration of the temple is unclear – some believe it was originally for a Buddhist structure; others see it as a building in honor of the Hindu God Shiva (Mahadev).[7]

Architecture

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It towers nearly 100 ft. above the plain.[8] The entrance which is on the east is 9.5 ft. wide and is spanned by a pointed arch.[8] The inside is about 10 ft. square and the walls are about 10 ft. thick.[8] No plinth is visible and the floor is some six feet below the ground, and is reached by a flight of steps.[8]

According to the List of Monuments of National Importance in West Bengal Jatar Deul is an ASI listed monument.[2]

References

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Wikimedia Commons has media related to Jatar Deul .
Bankura
Birbhum
Cooch Behar
Darjeeling
Hooghly
Howrah
Jalpaiguri
Jhargram
Kolkata
Murshidabad
Nadia
North 24 Parganas
Paschim Bardhaman
Purba Bardhaman
Paschim Medinipur
Purba Medinipur
Purulia
South 24 Parganas
Malda
See also

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