Arakeshwara Temple, Haleyedatore

Hale Yedatore, a village in the Krishnaraja Nagara taluk of the Mysore district, Karnataka state, India is located about four kilometers north of the commercially important newly built town of Krishnarajanagara, and about 44km north-west of the historically important city of Mysore.[1] The name Yedatore derives from two Kannada language words, yeda (lit, "left") and tore (lit, "river") - a name that arises from the "bend to the left" made by the river at that spot which is considered sacred by Hindus. There are steps leading from the temple down to the bathing areas ("ghats") by the river.[2] Yedatore village was severely damaged in the 1920s from the flood waters of the River Kaveri, prompting the Mysore ruler to build the new town, named Krishnarajanagar, little southerly on an elevated land.

Arakeshwara Temple
Hindu temple
Dravidian architecture of Arakeshwara temple (early 12th century or earlier)
Arakeshwara Temple
Location in Karnataka, India
Coordinates: 12.46°N 76.39°E / 12.46; 76.39
CountryIndia
StateKarnataka
DistrictMysore
TalukasKrishnaraja Nagara
Languages
  OfficialKannada
Time zoneUTC+5:30 (IST)

The Arakeshwara Temple is a Hindu temple in Hale Yedatore. The present temple complex dates back at least to early 19th century rule of the Mysore Kingdom and is built in typical dravidian style. According to the British Raj era historian and epigraphist B. Lewis Rice, the temple was endowed by Maharaja Krishnaraja Wodeyar III, the ruler of the princely Mysore, during the British rule over India. However, the original temple as such is much older, of the era of Kulottunga Chola I.[3] The Arakeshwara temple is a protected monument under the Karnataka state division of the Archaeological Survey of India.[4]

Yadatore Sri Yogandeshwara Saraswathi samasthanam in Krishnarajanagar, Mysore District is also located on the banks of Kaveri, opposite to Arakeshwara Temple, westerly. Yadatore Shri Mutt is one of several institutions that follow Sri Shankara’s adhvaita tradition. Many highly learned ascetics adorned this Peeta, which has a history of more than 700 years. Of them Sri Rama Brahmanda, who installed a very rare idol of Sri Chaturbhuja Pattabhirama and Sri Neelakanteshwara at Holenarasipura on the banks of river Hamavathi, is of legendary fame.[5]


gollark: *Technically*, though, as long as you keep basic I/O - which is necessary for the lua prompt to function - you can implement a "shell" or something on top of what you have.
gollark: You can't meddle with them for obvious security reasons.
gollark: Not entirely!
gollark: There's a neat web UI.
gollark: Right now incidents are handled by just sending in a report to me and printing a warning message.

References

  1. Rice B.L. (1870), p282, Mysore and Coorg: Mysore, by districts, Chapter: Mysore district, Section:Yedaore, Vol 2, Mysore Government Press
  2. Rice B.L. (1887), p316, Mysore: A Gazetteer Compiled for Government - vol 2, Asian Educational Services, ISBN 81-206-0977-8
  3. http://www.karnatakaarchaeology.gov.in/arkeshwara-temple-yedatore-krishnarajanagar-mysuru/
  4. "Protected Monuments in Karnataka". Archaeological Survey of India, Government of India. Indira Gandhi National Center for the Arts. Retrieved 2 June 2015.
  5. http://www.vedantabharati.org/sri-math.html
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.