After a small walk through the village
fields, we reached the forgotten town of Mahdeshwara. At the entrance of this
village was a ruined temple of Lord Shiva and looked quite grand. Our guide left
us to ourselves to enjoy exploring the temple and also mentioned about a small cave
besides the temple. Meanwhile he went to arrange some lunch for us. This temple
was simply beautiful and kudos to our guide and his family who are actually taking
care of this temple inspite of not receiving help from anyone. The Shiva Linga is a large one and resembles Chola architecture.
There is also a Tamil inscription on a stone by the side of the temple.
|
Mukaneshwara Temple |
|
Decorative Door Frame |
|
Interior Decorative Frame Work |
|
Art work on the Ceiling |
|
Lord Mukaneshwara |
|
Tamil Inscription |
|
Entrance to the Cave besides the Temple |
The next temple we visited was dedicated to
Lord NarashimaSwamy. This temple currently has been renovated to give it a modern
look. The spacious place all around this temple served as a dinning hall
for us where we were accompanied by two other little friends for a sumptuous
and tasty
lunch comprising of
Bisi Bele Bath (Dal and Rice
with Vegetables) and Kosambari (Dal and
Coconut Salad). After this heavy and much needed lunch, we rested for a while
and walked towards a mantap that housed another huge Nandi. A little further,
we were amazed to see an open air temple of Lord Hanuman. The image of Hanuman
carved on a big rock was magnificent and looked like it had been painted
recently.
|
Our Sumptuous Lunch |
|
Nandi Mantapa |
|
Beautiful Nandi |
|
Lord Hanuman |
|
Way to Mahdeshwara |
Our journey came to an end here and we walked through the fields
towards our vehicle. We chatted for a while with our guide and then came the
time to say goodbye to him, thus ending one of those journeys, which initially
looked unworthy but later turned out be one of
the most exciting and interesting trips of
ours. We wholeheartedly thank our guide for taking us around this place and
sharing everything he knew and dedicate this to him and his family.
|
Hulukudi Veerabhadra Swami |
References :
1
Travel blog .
2
Wikimapia
This is an interesting discovery. Where exactly is this located?
ReplyDeletewww.rajniranjandas.blogspot.in
http://wikimapia.org/3644146/Hulukadi-Betta
DeleteAnother wonderful journey, another hidden jewel seen through your lens! The tamil inscription on the stone intrigues me most. The meal looks so delicious, must have taken out all the tiredness of the climb, if any.
ReplyDeleteYou do indeed take us on wonderful, fascinating journeys and, as always, your photos are superb! Thank you for sharing the history and beauty of your country! Hope your week is going well!
ReplyDeleteAmazing place and really nice set of shots.
ReplyDeleteFascinating. Those rock cut steps look scary :)
ReplyDeleteGood One. Loved the temple. Nice Discovery. Enjoyed the temple shots very much. Small yet beautiful.
ReplyDeleteWhat a wonderful excursion. Often the unexpected finds are the most interesting and rewarding.
ReplyDeleteInteresting place. Should visit some time.
ReplyDeletevery beautiful :)
ReplyDeleteNever knew of this place. Great sights.
ReplyDeleteFascinating post. The fort seems completely devastated & in total ruins. But the Nandi, The Butterball & entrance arch are intact. The Siva temple & the Siva Linga are simply superb. I am always drawn to Siva Temples - many of them have some kind of magnetic pull & power!
ReplyDeleteInteresting..!
ReplyDeleteThis was an informative story.. so did you find ruined houses in the village ?
ReplyDeleteBeautiful. Looking at the crumbling walls of the fort, I also think about, time ravaging all the glories.
ReplyDelete