Location: 16-km
From Palampur, Kangra District
Houses: Baijnath Temple Or Kirangam
Main Attraction: Shivratri Fair
Famous
As A: Hindu PilgrimageOne of the most remarkable monuments of the Beas
Valley is the temple of Baijnath. The village of Baijnath is situated
23-miles east of Nagarkot, as the crow flies, close to the Mandi border
and on the main road, which leads from the Punjab plains through Kangra,
Kulu , Lahul, and Ladakh to Central Asia.
Known as Kirangama, its name was
changed after the temple was dedicated to Lord Shiva in his form as
Vaidyanath or the "Lord of Physicians". The Temple is a good
example of Nagri style of architecture. The Baijnath temple is
orientated due west. It consists of a puri or adytum, 8-feet-square
inside and 18-feet outside, surmounted by a spire of the usual conical
shape, and of a mandapa or front hall, 20-feet-square inside, covered
with a low pyramid shaped roof.
The adytum, which contains the
linga known as Vaidyanatha, is entered through a small anteroom with two
pillars in antis. This linga enshrined in the sanctum is one of the 12
jyotirlingas in the country. The roof of the mandapa is supported by
four massive pillars connected by raised benches which form, as it were,
a passage leading up to the entrance of the sanctum.
The architrave's resting on these
pillars divide the space of the ceiling into nine compartments, each of
which is closed by means of corbelling slabs. In front of the mandapa
rises a stately porch resting on four columns. "The shafts of these
pillars", Fergusson remarks "are plain cylinders, of very
classical proportions, and the bases also show that they are only
slightly removed from classical design".
"The square plinth, the two
toruses, the cavetto or hollow moulding between are all classical, but
partially hidden by Hindu ornamentation, of great elegance but unlike
anything found after wards". The same author at considerable length
discusses the capitals of the pot-and -foliage type.
Both the south and north wall of
the mandapa are adorned with a graceful balcony window. The four corners
are strengthened by means of massive buttress-like projections in the
shape of half-engaged - miniature sikhara temples, each containing two
niches in which image slabs are placed. Smaller niches in slightly
projecting chapels are found between the corner projections and the
entrance and balcony windows.
Cunningham and Fergusson that the
Baijnath temple had undergone a thorough restoration at the bands of
Raja Sansar Chand Katoch (A.D. 1776-1824) assumed it. But Sir Aurel
Stein, who had the advantage of personally inspecting the temple in
December, 1892, expressed the opinion that the building "has not
under gone such very great alterations as the earlier describers state.
"He points out, that the
doorway of the adytum is still decorated with the images of the river
goddesses mentioned in the inscription. Only the roof seems to be
modern; and according to the - statements of the local priests - it was
renovated in the days of Raja Sansar Chand II".
A life sized stone Nandi,
believed to be the carrier of Lord Shiva stands at the entrance. Also
are other miniature shrines and memorial stones within the complex said
to have been built around 804 A.D.
The temple of Baijnath, although
situated at no great distance from the centre of the earthquake of the
4th April 1905, but suffered slight injury from that catastrophe. The
neighbouring smaller temple of Sidhnath, on the contrary, completely
collapsed.
Every year during Shivratri Fair,
pilgrims descend on Baijnath for the colourful fair and festivities.
HOW TO GET THERE
Road: Baijnath is only 16-km from
Palampur and 132-km from Pathankot, is a motarbus terminus on the
Palampur- Kullu road, and is easily accessible from Kangra and Kullu .
PLACES TO STAY
Kangra is well equipped with
standardised accommodations, which vary from budget hotels to tourist
lodges available at resonable rates. One can also stay at the hotels in Palampur.