Brahma Kund
Brahma Kund[upper-alpha 1] is a stepped temple tank in Sihor town of Bhavnagar district, Gujarat, India. It is located near the southern wall of the old town. It believed that it was constructed by Siddharaj Jaisinh.[1]
History
The exact dates of Brahma Kund is unknown. It mentioned in Skanda Purana.[1]
According to legend, Solanki king Siddharaj Jaisinh was suffering from skin disease following the curse from Ranakdevi, the queen whom he captured from Junagadh. He was cured after bathing in the this tank so he refurbished the tank. The water of the tank is still considered miraculous.[1] It is mentioned in Prabandh Chintamani written by Merutunga. The tank kept finding its reference and mentions citing Siddharaj since 12th century.
It is also mentioned in Ain-e-Akbari. Poet Nanalal Dalpatram Kavi expresses and explains in his Hari Samhita that Krishna had visited the place.
Architecture
Brahma Kund, built in the style of medieval architecture, has a design of steps, small temples, metaphors, motifs and beliefs, idols of Hindu deities, stone work, some scientific entities, everything carved within and across the complex.[2]
There is Neelkanth Mahadev temple near the tank. There is a lake known as Gautam Lake and Gautameshwar temple is located nearby.[1]
The tank is the State Protected Monument (S-GJ-35). It is now poorly maintained.
Culture
On the last day of Shraavana month, called as Bhadarvi Amas or Bhadrapad Amavasya, the fair is organised at the place which is attended by tens of thousands people.[3]
Notes and references
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Notes
References
- 1 2 3 4 Gazetteer of the Bombay Presidency. Printed at the Government Central Press. 1884. p. 541, 655.
- ↑ Shukla, Rakesh (9 March 2014). "ક્યારેક ચાંદીના આભૂષણોના વેપાર માટે જાણીતું હતું ગુજરાતનું આ શહેર-વિસ્તૃત કોતરણી". gujarati.oneindia.com (in Gujarati). Retrieved 3 October 2016.
- ↑ India. Office of the Registrar General (1969). Census of India, 1961: Gujarat. Manager of Publications. pp. 31–32.
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Coordinates: 21°42′28″N 71°57′29″E / 21.7077229°N 71.9580028°E