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Ayodhya

Ayodhya (Hindustani: [əˈjoːdʱjaː] (listen); IAST: Ayodhyā) is a city situated on the banks of holy river Saryu in the Indian state of Uttar Pradesh. It is the administrative headquarters of the Faizabad district as well as the Faizabad division of Uttar Pradesh, India.[5][6] Ayodhya city is administered by the Ayodhya Municipal Corporation, the governing civic body of the city.

Ayodhya
City
Clockwise from the top:
Ram ki Paidi Ghat, Ayodhya Ghaat on the Ghaghara river, Kanak Bhawan Temple, Vijayraghav Mandir in Ayodhya
Nickname: 
The Temple Town[1]
Ayodhya
Ayodhya
Coordinates: 26°48′N 82°12′E / 26.80°N 82.20°E / 26.80; 82.20Coordinates: 26°48′N 82°12′E / 26.80°N 82.20°E / 26.80; 82.20
CountryIndia
StateUttar Pradesh
DivisionFaizabad
DistrictFaizabad
Government
 • TypeMunicipal Corporation
 • BodyAyodhya Municipal Corporation
 • MayorRishikesh Upadhyay (BJP)
 • Deputy MayorSudha Mishra
 • MPLallu Singh (BJP)
Area
 • Total120.8 km2 (46.6 sq mi)
Elevation
93 m (305 ft)
Population
 (2011[2])
 • Total55,890
 • Density460/km2 (1,200/sq mi)
Demonym(s)Ayodhyawasi, Awadhwasi
Language
 • OfficialHindi[3]
 • Additional officialUrdu[3]
 • RegionalAwadhi[4]
Time zoneUTC+05:30 (IST)
PIN(s)
224001, 224123, 224133, 224135
Area code+91-5278
Vehicle registrationUP-42
Websiteayodhya.nic.in

Ayodhya was historically known as Saketa. The early Buddhist and Jain canonical texts mention that the religious leaders Gautama Buddha and Mahavira visited and lived in the city. The Jain texts also describe it as the birthplace of five tirthankaras namely, Rishabhanatha, Ajitanatha, Abhinandananatha, Sumatinath and Anantnath, and associate it with the legendary Bharata Chakravarti. From the Gupta period onwards, several sources mention Ayodhya and Saketa as the name of the same city.

The legendary city of Ayodhya, popularly identified as the present-day Ayodhya, is the birthplace of the Hindu deity Rama of Kosala Kingdom and setting of the great epic Ramayana. Owing to the belief as the birthplace of Rama, Ayodhya (Awadhpuri) has been regarded as first one of the seven most important pilgrimage sites (Mokshdayini Sapt Puris) for Hindus.[5] It is believed that a temple stood at the supposed birth spot of Rama, which was demolished by the orders of the Mughal emperor Babur and a mosque erected in its place.[7] In 1992, the dispute over the spot led to the demolition of the mosque by Hindu mobs, who aimed to rebuild a grand temple of Rama at the site.[8] A five-judge full bench of the Supreme Court heard the title cases from August to October 2019 and ruled that the land belonged to the government per tax records, and ordered it to be handed over to a trust to build a Hindu temple. It also ordered the government to give an alternative 5 acres (2.0 ha) of land to the Uttar Pradesh Sunni Central Waqf Board to build a mosque in lieu of the demolished Babri mosque. The construction of Ram Mandir commenced in August 2020.[9]

Etymology and names

The word "Ayodhya" is a regularly formed derivation of the Sanskrit verb yudh, "to fight, to wage war".[10] Yodhya is the future passive participle, meaning "to be fought"; the initial a is the negative prefix; the whole, therefore, means "not to be fought" or, more idiomatically in English, "invincible".[11] This meaning is attested by the Atharvaveda, which uses it to refer to the unconquerable city of gods.[12] The ninth century Jain poem Adi Purana also states that Ayodhya "does not exist by name alone but by the merit" of being unconquerable by enemies. Satyopakhyana interprets the word slightly differently, stating that it means "that which cannot be conquered by sins" (instead of enemies).[13]

"Saketa" is the older name for the city, attested in Sanskrit, Jain, Buddhist, Greek and Chinese sources.[14] According to Vaman Shivram Apte, the word "Saketa" is derived from the Sanskrit words Saha (with) and Aketen (houses or buildings). The Adi Purana states that Ayodhya is called Saketa "because of its magnificent buildings which had significant banners as their arms".[15] According to Hans T. Bakker, the word may be derived from the roots sa and ketu ("with banner"); the variant name saketu is attested in the Vishnu Purana.[16]

The older name in English was "Oudh" or "Oude", and the princely state it was the capital of until 1856 is still known as Oudh State.[citation needed]

Ayodhya was stated to be the capital of the ancient Kosala kingdom in the Ramayana. Hence it was also referred to as "Kosala". The Adi Purana states that Ayodhya is famous as su-kośala "because of its prosperity and good skill".[15]

The cities of Ayutthaya (Thailand), and Yogyakarta (Indonesia), are named after Ayodhya.[17][18]

History

 
Terracotta image of Jain Tirthankar dated fourth century BCE excavated from Ayodhya
 
Gold carving depiction of the legendary Ayodhya at the Ajmer Jain temple

Ancient Hindu Sanskrit-language epics, such as the Ramayana and the Mahabharata mention a legendary city called Ayodhya, which was the capital of the legendary Ikshvaku kings of Kosala, including Rama.[19] Neither these texts, nor the earlier Sanskrit texts such as the Vedas, mention a city called Saketa. Non-religious, non-legendary ancient Sanskrit texts, such as Panini's Ashtadhyayi and Patanjali's commentary on it, do mention Saketa.[19] The later Buddhist text Mahavastu describes Saketa as the seat of the Ikshvaku king Sujata, whose descendants established the Shakya capital Kapilavastu.[20]

The earliest of the Buddhist Pali-language texts and the Jain Prakrit-language texts mention a city called Saketa (Sageya or Saeya in Prakrit) as an important city of the Kosala mahajanapada.[21] Topographical indications in both Buddhist and Jain texts suggest that Saketa is the same as the present-day Ayodhya.[22] For example, according to the Samyutta Nikaya and the Vinaya Pitaka, Saketa was located at a distance of six yojanas from Shravasti. The Vinaya Pitaka mentions that a big river was located between the two cities, and the Sutta Nipata mentions Saketa as the first halting place on the southward road from Shravasti to Pratishthana.[20]

Fourth century onwards, multiple texts, including Kalidasa's Raghuvamsha, mention Ayodhya as another name for Saketa.[23] The later Jain canonical text Jambudvipa-Pannati describes a city called Viniya (or Vinita) as the birthplace of Lord Rishabhanatha, and associates this city with Bharata Chakravartin; the Kalpa-Sutra describes Ikkhagabhumi as the birthplace of Rishabhadev. The index on the Jain text Paumachariya clarifies that Aojjha (Aodhya), Kosala-puri ("Kosala city"), Viniya, and Saeya (Saketa) are synonyms. The post-Canonical Jain texts also mention "Aojjha"; for example, the Avassagacurni describes it as the principal city of Kosala, while the Avassaganijjutti names it as the capital of Sagara Chakravartin.[24] The Avassaganijjutti implies that Viniya ("Vinia"), Kosalapuri ("Kosalapura"), and Ikkhagabhumi were distinct cities, naming them as the capitals of Abhinamdana, Sumai, and Usabha respectively. Abhayadeva's commentary on the Thana Sutta, another post-canonical text, identifies Saketa, Ayodhya, and Vinita as one city.[24]

According to one theory, the legendary Ayodhya city is the same as the historical city of Saketa and the present-day Ayodhya. According to another theory, the legendary Ayodhya is a mythical city,[25] and the name "Ayodhya" came to be used for the Saketa (present-day Ayodhya) only around the fourth century, when a Gupta emperor (probably Skandagupta) moved his capital to Saketa, and renamed it to Ayodhya after the legendary city.[16][26] Alternative, but less likely, theories state that Saketa and Ayodhya were two adjoining cities, or that Ayodhya was a locality within the Saketa city.[27]

As Saketa

Archaeological and literary evidence suggests that the site of present-day Ayodhya had developed into an urban settlement by the fifth or sixth-century BC.[22] The site is identified as the location of the ancient Saketa city, which probably emerged as a marketplace located at the junction of the two important roads, the Shravasti-Pratishthana north–south road, and the Rajagriha-Varanasi-Shravasti-Taxila east–west road.[28] Ancient Buddhist texts, such as Samyutta Nikaya, state that Saketa was located in the Kosala kingdom ruled by Prasenajit (or Pasenadi; c. sixth–5th century BC), whose capital was located at Shravasti.[29] The later Buddhist commentary Dhammapada-atthakatha states that the Saketa town was established by merchant Dhananjaya (the father of Visakha), on the suggestion of king Prasenajit.[20] The Digha Nikaya describes it as one of the six large cities of India.[20] The early Buddhist canonical texts mention Shravasti as the capital of Kosala, but the later texts, such as the Jain texts Nayadhammakahao and Pannavana Suttam, and the Buddhist Jatakas, mention Saketa as the capital of Kosala.[30]

As a busy town frequented by travellers, it appears to have become important for preachers such as Gautama Buddha and Mahavira.[28] The Samyutta Nikaya and Anguttara Nikaya mention that Buddha resided at Saketa at times.[20] The early Jain canonical texts (such as Antagada-dasao, Anuttarovavaiya-dasao, and Vivagasuya) state that Mahavira visited Saketa; Nayadhammakahao states that Parshvanatha also visited Saketa.[24] The Jain texts, both canonical and post-canonical, describe Ayodhya as the location of various shrines, such as those of snake, yaksha Pasamiya, Muni Suvratasvamin, and Surappia.[24]

It is not clear what happened to Saketa after Kosala was conquered by the Magadha emperor Ajatashatru around fifth century BC. There is lack of historical sources about the city's situation for the next few centuries: it is possible that the city remained a commercial centre of secondary importance, but did not grow into a political centre of Magadha, whose capital was located at Pataliputra.[31] Several Buddhist buildings may have been constructed in the town during the rule of the Maurya emperor Ashoka in the third century BC: these buildings were probably located on the present-day man-made mounds in Ayodhya.[32] Excavations at Ayodhya have resulted in the discovery of a large brick wall, identified as a fortification wall by archaeologist B. B. Lal.[22] This wall probably erected in the last quarter of the third-century BC.[33]

 
The Dhanadeva-Ayodhya inscription, first-century BC
 
Coin of ruler Muladeva, of the Deva dynasty minted in Ayodhya, Kosala. Obv: Muladevasa, elephant to left facing symbol. Rev: Wreath, above symbol, below snake.

After the decline of the Maurya empire, Saketa appears to have come under the rule of Pushyamitra Shunga. The first century BC inscription of Dhanadeva suggests that he appointed a governor there.[34] The Yuga Purana mentions Saketa as the residence of a governor, and describes it as being attacked by a combined force of Greeks, Mathuras, and Panchalas.[35] Patanjali's commentary on Panini also refers to the Greek siege of Saketa.[36]

Later, Saketa appears to have become part of a small, independent kingdom.[37] The Yuga Purana states that Saketa was ruled by seven powerful kings after the retreat of the Greeks.[34] The Vayu Purana and the Brahmanda Purana also state that seven powerful kings ruled in the capital of Kosala. The historicity of these kings is attested by the discovery of the coins of the Deva dynasty kings, including Dhanadeva, whose inscription describes him as the king of Kosala (Kosaladhipati).[38] As the capital of Kosala, Saketa probably eclipsed Shravasti in importance during this period. The east–west route connecting Pataliputra to Taxila, which earlier passed through Saketa and Shravasti, appears to have shifted southwards during this period, now passing through Saketa, Ahichhatra and Kanyakubja.[39]

After the Deva kings, Saketa appears to have been ruled by the Datta, Kushan, and Mitra kings, although the chronological order of their rule is uncertain. Bakker theorises that the Dattas succeeded the Deva kings in the mid-1st century AD, and their kingdom was annexed to the Kushan Empire by Kanishka.[40] The Tibetan text Annals of Li Country (c. 11th century) mentions that an alliance of king Vijayakirti of Khotan, king Kanika, the king of Gu-zan, and the king of Li, marched to India and captured the So-ked city. During this invasion, Vijayakirti took several Buddhist relics from Saketa, and placed them in the stupa of Phru-no. If Kanika is identified as Kanishka, and So-ked as Saketa, it appears that the invasion of Kushans and their allies led to the destruction of the Buddhist sites at Saketa.[41]

Nevertheless, Saketa appears to have remained a prosperous town during the Kushan rule.[41] The second century geographer Ptolemy mentions a metropolis "Sageda" or "Sagoda", which has been identified with Saketa.[37] The earliest inscription that mentions Saketa as a place name is dated to the late Kushan period: it was found on the pedestal of a Buddha image in Shravasti, and records the gift of the image by Sihadeva of Saketa.[40] Before or after the Kushans, Saketa appears to have been ruled by a dynasty of kings whose names end in "-mitra", and whose coins have been found at Ayodhya. They may have been members of a local dynasty that was distinct from the Mitra dynasty of Mathura. These kings are attested only by their coinage: Sangha-mitra, Vijaya-mitra, Satya-mitra, Deva-mitra, and Arya-mitra; coins of Kumuda-sena and Aja-varman have also been discovered.[42]

Gupta period

Around the fourth century, the region came under the control of the Guptas, who revived Brahmanism.[43] The Vayu Purana and the Brahmanda Purana attest that the early Gupta kings ruled Saketa.[19] No Gupta-era archaeological layers have been discovered in present-day Ayodhya, although a large number of Gupta coins have been discovered here. It is possible that during the Gupta period, the habitations in the city were located in the areas that have not yet been excavated.[44] The Buddhist sites that had suffered destruction during the Khotanese-Kushan invasion appear to have remained deserted.[45] The fifth-century Chinese traveller Faxian states that the ruins of Buddhist buildings existed at "Sha-chi" during his time.[46] One theory identifies Sha-chi with Saketa, although this identification is not undisputed.[47] If Sha-chi is indeed Saketa, it appears that by the fifth century, the town no longer had a flourshing Buddhist community or any important Buddhist building that was still in use.[37]

An important development during the Gupta time was the recognition of Saketa as the legendary city of Ayodhya, the capital of the Ikshvaku dynasty.[43] The 436 AD Karamdanda (Karmdand) inscription, issued during the reign of Kumaragupta I, names Ayodhya as the capital of the Kosala province, and records commander Prithvisena's offerings to Brahmins from Ayodhya.[48] Later, the capital of the Gupta Empire was moved from Pataliputra to Ayodhya. Paramartha states that king Vikramaditya moved the royal court to Ayodhya; Xuanzang also corroborates this, stating that this king moved the court to the "country of Shravasti", that is, Kosala.[49] A local oral tradition of Ayodhya, first recorded in writing by Robert Montgomery Martin in 1838,[50] mentions that the city was deserted after the death of Rama's descendant Brihadbala. The city remain deserted until King Vikrama of Ujjain came searching for it, and re-established it. He cut down the forests that had covered the ancient ruins, erected the Ramgar fort, and built 360 temples.[50]

Vikramditya was a title of multiple Gupta kings, and the king who moved the capital to Ayodhya is identified as Skandagupta.[49] Bakker theorises that the move to Ayodhya may have been prompted by a flooding of the river Ganges at Pataliputra, the need to check the Huna advance from the west, and Skandagupta's desire to compare himself with Rama (whose Ikshvaku dynasty is associated with the legendary Ayodhya).[50] According to Paramaratha's Life of Vasubandhu, Vikramaditya was a patron of scholars, and awarded 300,000 pieces of gold to Vasubandhu.[51] The text states that Vasubandhu was a native of Saketa ("Sha-ki-ta"), and describes Vikramaditya as the king of Ayodhya ("A-yu-ja").[52] This wealth was used to build three monasteries in the country of A-yu-ja (Ayodhya).[51] Paramartha further states that the later king Baladitya (identified with Narasimhagupta) and his mother also awarded large sums of gold to Vasubandhu, and these funds were used to build another Buddhist temple at Ayodhya.[53] These structures may have been seen by the seventh century Chinese traveller Xuanzang, who describes a stupa and a monastery at Ayodhya ("O-yu-t-o").[54]

Decline as a political centre

Ayodhya probably suffered when the Hunas led by Mihirakula invaded the Gupta empire in the sixth century. After the fall of the Guptas, it may have been ruled by the Maukhari dynasty, whose coins have been found in the nearby areas. It was not devastated, as Xuanzang describes it as a flourishing town and a Buddhist centre.[55] However, it had lost its position as an important political centre to Kanyakubja (Kannauj).[56] At the time of Xuanzang's visit, it was a part of Harsha's empire, and was probably the seat of a vassal or an administrative officer. Xuanzang states that the city measured about 0.6 km (20 li) in circumference. Another seventh-century source, Kāśikāvṛttī, mentions that the town was surrounded by a moat similar to that around Pataliputra.[57]

After the fall of Harsha's empire, Ayodhya appears to have been variously controlled by local kings and the rulers of Kannauj, including Yashovarman and the Gurjara-Pratiharas. The town is not mentioned in any surviving texts or inscriptions composed during 650–1050 AD, although it may be identified with the "city of Harishchandra" mentioned in the eighth-century poem Gaudavaho. Archaeological evidence (including images to Vishnu, Jain tirthankaras, Ganesha, the seven Matrikas, and a Buddhist stupa) suggests that the religious activity in the area continued during this period.[58]

Early medieval period

According to Indologist Hans T. Bakker, the only religious significance of Ayodhya in the first millennium AD was related to the Gopratara tirtha (now called Guptar Ghat), where Rama and his followers are said to have ascended to heaven by entering the waters of Sarayu.[59][60][61]

In the 11th century, the Gahadavala dynasty came to power in the region, and promoted Vaishnavism. They built several Vishnu temples in Ayodhya, five of which survived till the end of Aurangzeb's reign. Hans Bakker concludes that there might have been a temple at the supposed birth spot of Rama built by the Gahadavalas (see Vishnu Hari inscription). In subsequent years, the cult of Rama developed within Vaishnavism, with Rama being regarded as the foremost avatar of Vishnu. Consequently, Ayodhya's importance as a pilgrimage centre grew.[60]

In 1226 AD, Ayodhya became the capital of the province of Awadh (or "Oudh") within the Delhi sultanate. Muslim historians state that the area was little more than wilderness prior to this. Pilgrimage was tolerated, but the tax on pilgrims ensured that the temples did not receive much income.[62]

Mughal and British period

 
Ayodhya in 1785 as seen from river Ghaghara; painting by William Hodges. It depicts the Svargadvar Ghat. A mosque of Aurangzeb period in the background.[63]

Under Mughal rule, the Babri mosque was constructed in Ayodhya. The city was the capital of the province of Awadh (mispronounced as "Oudh" by the British), which is also believed to be a variant of the name "Ayodhya".[64]

After the death of Aurangzeb in 1707 AD, the central Muslim rule weakened, and Awadh became virtually independent, with Ayodhya as its capital. However, the rulers became increasingly dependent on the local Hindu nobles, and control over the temples and pilgrimage centres was relaxed.[62][better source needed]

 
United Provinces of Agra and Oudh, showing 'Ajodhia', 1903 map

In the 1850s, a group of Hindus attacked the Babri mosque, on the grounds that it was built over the birthplace of the Hindu deity Rama.[65] To prevent further disputes, the British administrators divided the mosque premises between Hindus and Muslims.[66]

Ayodhya was annexed in 1856 by the British rulers. The rulers of Awadh were Shia, and the Sunni groups had already protested against the permissive attitude of the former government. The British intervened and crushed the Sunni resistance. In 1857, the British annexed Oudh (Awadh) and subsequently reorganised it into the United Provinces of Agra and Oudh.[62]

Independent India

A movement was launched in 1984 by the Vishva Hindu Parishad party to reclaim the Babri mosque site for a Rama temple. In 1992, a right wing Hindu nationalist rally turned into a riot, leading to the demolition of the Babri mosque.[67] A makeshift temple at Ram Janmabhoomi for Ram Lalla, infant Rama was constructed.[68] Under the Indian government orders, no one was permitted near the site within 200 yards, and the gate was locked to the outside. Hindu pilgrims, however, began entering through a side door to offer worship.[citation needed]

In 2003, the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) carried out an excavation at the mosque site to determine if it was built over the ruins of a temple. The excavation uncovered pillar bases indicating a temple had been in existence under the mosque.[69][70] Besides Hindus, the Buddhist and Jain representatives claimed that their temples existed at the excavated site.[71]

On 5 July 2005, five terrorists attacked the site of the makeshift Ramlalla temple in Ayodhya. All five were killed in the ensuing gunfight with security forces, and one civilian died in the bomb blast triggered as they attempted to breach the cordon wall.

On 30 September 2010, the Lucknow bench of the Allahabad High Court ruled that one-third of the disputed land should be given to the Uttar Pradesh Sunni Central Waqf Board, one-third to the Nirmohi Akhara and one-third to the Hindu party for the shrine of "Ram Lalla" (infant Rama). The court further ruled that the area where the idols of Ram are present be given to Hindus in the final decree, while the rest of the land shall be divided equally by metes and bounds among the three parties.[72][73] The judgment, along with evidences provided by the Archaeological Survey of India, upheld that the Babri Masjid was built after demolishing the Hindu temple, which is the birthplace of Rama, and that the mosque was not constructed according to the principles of Islam. The final verdict by the Supreme Court on the case ruled the disputed land in the favour of Hindus for the construction of Ram Mandir and ordered an alternative piece of land be given to the Muslim community for the construction of a mosque.[74][75]

In a judgement pronounced by a 5 judge bench of the Supreme Court of India on 9 November 2019, the land was handed over to the government to form a trust for the construction of a temple. The court instructed the government to also allot a plot of 5 acres (2.0 ha) in Ayodhya to the Uttar Pradesh Sunni Central Waqf Board to construct a mosque/Masjid.[76]

Some South Koreans have identified the "Ayuta" mentioned in their ancient Samgungnyusa legend with Ayodhya. According to this legend, the ancient Korean princess Heo Hwang-ok came from Ayuta. In the 2000s, the local government of Ayodhya and South Korea acknowledged the connection and held a ceremony to raise a statue of the princess.[77][78][79]

Ram temple

On 5 August 2020, the prime minister of India, Narendra Modi, laid the ceremonial foundation stone for a new temple at what is believed to be the birthplace of the god, Ram.[80][81] It is planned to build a new township, Navya Ayodhya, on a 500-acre (2.0 km2) site next to the Faizabad-Gorakhpur highway, which will have luxury hotels and apartment complexes.[82]

Demographics

  Hinduism (93.23%)
  Islam (6.19%)
  Jainism (0.16%)
  Sikhism (0.14%)
  Buddhism (0.12%)
  Others^ (0.16%)

^ includes Christians and other religion

[needs update] As of the 2011 Census of India, Ayodhya had a population of 55,890. Males constituted 56.7% of the population and females 43.3%. Ayodhya had an average literacy rate of 78.1%.[2] As per the religion data of 2011 Census, the majority population is of Hindu religion with 93.23%, and Muslims comes the second with 6.19%.[83]

Geography and climate

 
Deepawali being celebrated at Ram ki Paidi ghat on the banks of Sarayu river in Ayodhya

Ayodhya has a humid subtropical climate, typical of central India. Summers are long, dry and hot, lasting from late March to mid-June, with average daily temperatures near 32 °C (90 °F).[84] They are followed by the monsoon season which lasts till October, with annual precipitation of approximately 1,067 mm (42.0 in) and average temperatures around 28 °C (82 °F). Winter starts in early November and lasts till the end of January, followed by a short spring in February and early March. Average temperatures are mild, near 16 °C (61 °F), but nights can be colder.[84]

Places of interest

 
Panoramic view of Ram ki Paidi ghat
 
Sant Sri Paltds Temple

Ayodhya is an important place of pilgrimage for the Hindus. A verse in the Brahmanda Purana names Ayodhya among "the most sacred and foremost cities", the others being Mathura, Haridvara, Kashi, Kanchi and Avantika. This verse is also found in the other Puranas with slight variations.[11] In Garuda Purana, Ayodhya is said to be one of seven holiest places for Hindus in India, with Varanasi being the most sacrosanct.[85]

Hanuman Garhi Fort

Hanuman Garhi, a massive four-sided fort with circular bastions at each corner and a temple of Hanuman inside, is the most popular shrine in Ayodhya. Situated in the center of town, it is approachable by a flight of 76 steps. Its legend is that Hanuman lived here in a cave and guarded the Janambhoomi, or Ramkot. The main temple contains the statue of Maa Anjani with Bal Hanuman seated on her lap. The faithful believe wishes are granted with a visit to the shrine. Kanak Bhawan is a temple said to have been given to Sita and Rama by Rama's stepmother Kaikeyi as a wedding gift, and only contains statues of Sita with her husband.[86]

Ramkot

Ramkot is the main place of worship in Ayodhya, and the site of the ancient citadel of its namesake, standing on elevated ground in the western city. Although visited by pilgrims throughout the year, it attracts devotees from all over the world on "Ram Navami", the day of the birth of Rama. Ram Navami is celebrated with great pomp in the Hindu month of Chaitra, which falls between March and April. Swarg Dwar is believed to be the site of cremation of Rama. Mani Parbat and Sugriv Parbat are ancient earth mounds, the first identified by a stupa built by the emperor Ashoka, and the second is an ancient monastery. Treta ke Thakur is a temple standing at the site of the Ashvamedha Yajnya of Rama. Three centuries prior, the Raja of Kulu built a new temple here, which was improved by Ahilyabai Holkar of Indore in 1784, the same time the adjacent Ghats were built. The initial idols in black sandstone were recovered from Sarayu and placed in the new temple, which was known as Kaleram-ka-Mandir. Chhoti Devkali Mandir is the temple of goddess Ishani, or Durga, Kuldevi of Sita.[87]

Nageshwarnath Temple

The temple of Nageshwarnath was established by Kush, son of Rama. Legend has it that Kush lost his armlet while bathing in the Sarayu, and it was retrieved by a Nag-Kanya who fell in love with him. As she was a devotee of Shiva, Kush built her this temple. It was the only temple to survive when Ayodhya was abandoned until the time of Vikramaditya. While the rest of city was in ruin and covered by dense forest, this temple allowed Vikramaditya to recognise the city. The festival of Shivratri is celebrated here with great splendor.[88]

Other places of interest

Memorial of Heo Hwang-ok

The legendary princess Heo Hwang-ok, who married king Suro of Geumgwan Gaya of Korea, is believed by some to be a native of Ayodhya.[89] In 2001, a Memorial of Heo Hwang-ok was inaugurated by a Korean delegation, which included over a hundred historians and government representatives.[90] In 2016, a Korean delegation proposed to develop the memorial. The proposal was accepted by the Uttar Pradesh chief minister Akhilesh Yadav.[91]

Sister cities

  •   Gimhae, South Korea
    • The mayors of Ayodhya and Gimhae signed a sister city bond in March 2001, based on Ayodhya's identification as the birthplace of the legendary queen Heo Hwang-ok.[92]
  •   Janakpur, Nepal.[93]
    • Ayodhya and Janakpur became sister cities in November 2014.[94] Ayodhya is the birthplace of Rama and Janakpur is the birthplace of his consort, Sita.

Transportation

Road

Ayodhya is connected by road to several major cities and towns, including Lucknow (130 km [81 mi]), Gorakhpur (140 km [87 mi]), Allahabad (160 km [99 mi]), Varanasi (200 km [120 mi]) and Delhi (636 km [395 mi]).[95]

A direct bus service has been started between Ayodhya and Janakpur (birthplace of Sita), in Nepal as a part of Ramayana circuit.[96]

Rail

The city is on the broad gauge Northern Railway line on Mughal Sarai on the Lucknow main route with Ayodhya and Faizabad railway stations.

Ramayana Circuit Train : Special Train that runs from Delhi to main sites of the Ramayana Circuit[97]

Flight

The nearest airports are Ayodhya, 5 km (3.1 mi) away, Amausi in Lucknow, 134 km (83 mi) away, Allahabad, 166 km (103 mi) away.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Ayodhya decked up for 'Vikas Deepotsav'; over 9 lakh earthen lamps to illuminate temple town". November 2021.
  2. ^ a b "AYODHYA in Faizabad (Uttar Pradesh)". .citypopulation.de. Retrieved 1 August 2020.
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Sources

  • Arya, S. N. (1990). "Historicity of Ayodhya". Proceedings of the Indian History Congress. Indian History Congress. 51: 44–48. JSTOR 44148186.
  • Bakker, Hans T. (1982). "The rise of Ayodhya as a place of pilgrimage". Indo-Iranian Journal. 24 (2): 103–126. doi:10.1163/000000082790081267. S2CID 161957449.
  • Bakker, Hans (1984), Ayodhya, Part 1: The History of Ayodhya from the seventh century BC to the middle of the 18th century, Groningen: Egbert Forsten, ISBN 9069800071
  • Bakker, Hans T. (1991). "Ayodhyā: A Hindu Jerusalem: An Investigation of 'Holy War' as a Religious Idea in the Light of Communal Unrest in India". Numen. 38 (1): 80–109. doi:10.2307/3270005. JSTOR 3270005.
  • Jain, Meenakshi (2013). Rama and Ayodhya. New Delhi: Aryan Books. ISBN 978-8173054518.
  • Hill, John E. (2009). Through the Jade Gate to Rome: A Study of the Silk Routes During the Later Han Dynasty first to second Centuries CE. BookSurge. ISBN 978-1-4392-2134-1.
  • Kunal, Kishore (2016). Ayodhya Revisited. Ocean. ISBN 978-81-8430-357-5.
  • Lutgendorf, Philip (1997). "Imagining Ayodhya: Utopia and its Shadows in a Hindu Landscape". International Journal of Hindu Studies. 1 (1): 19–54. doi:10.1007/s11407-997-0011-z. JSTOR 20106448. S2CID 144225912.
  • Pandey, Gyanendra (2006). Routine Violence: Nations, Fragments, Histories. Stanford University Press. p. 97. ISBN 978-0-8047-5264-0.
  • Paul, Herman (2015). Key Issues in Historical Theory. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-317-51946-1.
  • Narain, Harsh (1993), The Ayodhya Temple Mosque Dispute: Focus on Muslim Sources, Delhi: Penman Publishers

Further reading

  • Dhavalikar, M. K. (1988), "Reviewed Work(s): AYODHYĀ Part I (Pts. I-III) by Hans Bakker", Annals of the Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute, 69 (1/4): 319–320, JSTOR 41693795
  • Jain, Meenakshi (2017), The Battle for Rama: Case of the Temple at Ayodhya, Aryan Books International, ISBN 978-8173055799
  • B. B. Lal (2008), Rāma, His Historicity, Mandir, and Setu: Evidence of Literature, Archaeology, and Other Sciences, Aryan Books, ISBN 978-81-7305-345-0
  • Legge, James (1886), A Record of Buddhistic Kingdoms: Being an account by the Chinese Monk Fa-Hien of his travels in India and Ceylon (A.D. 399–414), New York, Paragon Book Reprint Corp. 1965, Oxford, Clarendon Press
  • Shourie, Arun (1995), The Ayodhya Reference: Supreme Court Judgement and Commentaries, New Delhi: Voice of India, ISBN 978-8185990309
  • Shourie, Arun; Goel, Sita Ram; Narain, Harsh; Dubashi, Jay; Swarup, Ram (1990), Hindu Temples – What Happened to Them Vol. I, A Preliminary Survey, ISBN 81-85990-49-2
  • Thomas, F. W. (1944), "New Indian Antiquary VII", Sandanes, Nahapāna, Caṣṭana and Kaniṣka: Tung-li P'an-ch'i and Chinese Turkestan, p. 90
  • Watters, Thomas (1904–1905), On Yuan Chwang's travels in India, 629–645 A.D., vol. 5, Mushiram Manoharlal: Delhi, London: Royal Asiatic Society
  • Ajodhya State, The Imperial Gazetteer of India, p. 174

External links

  •   Ayodhya travel guide from Wikivoyage

ayodhya, this, article, about, city, india, railway, station, city, junction, railway, station, other, uses, disambiguation, hindustani, əˈjoːdʱjaː, listen, iast, ayodhyā, city, situated, banks, holy, river, saryu, indian, state, uttar, pradesh, administrative. This article is about the city in India For the railway station in city see Ayodhya Junction railway station For other uses see Ayodhya disambiguation Ayodhya Hindustani eˈjoːdʱjaː listen IAST Ayodhya is a city situated on the banks of holy river Saryu in the Indian state of Uttar Pradesh It is the administrative headquarters of the Faizabad district as well as the Faizabad division of Uttar Pradesh India 5 6 Ayodhya city is administered by the Ayodhya Municipal Corporation the governing civic body of the city AyodhyaCityClockwise from the top Ram ki Paidi Ghat Ayodhya Ghaat on the Ghaghara river Kanak Bhawan Temple Vijayraghav Mandir in AyodhyaNickname The Temple Town 1 AyodhyaShow map of Uttar PradeshAyodhyaShow map of IndiaCoordinates 26 48 N 82 12 E 26 80 N 82 20 E 26 80 82 20 Coordinates 26 48 N 82 12 E 26 80 N 82 20 E 26 80 82 20CountryIndiaStateUttar PradeshDivisionFaizabadDistrictFaizabadGovernment TypeMunicipal Corporation BodyAyodhya Municipal Corporation MayorRishikesh Upadhyay BJP Deputy MayorSudha Mishra MPLallu Singh BJP Area Total120 8 km2 46 6 sq mi Elevation93 m 305 ft Population 2011 2 Total55 890 Density460 km2 1 200 sq mi Demonym s Ayodhyawasi AwadhwasiLanguage OfficialHindi 3 Additional officialUrdu 3 RegionalAwadhi 4 Time zoneUTC 05 30 IST PIN s 224001 224123 224133 224135Area code 91 5278Vehicle registrationUP 42Websiteayodhya wbr nic wbr inThis article contains Indic text Without proper rendering support you may see question marks or boxes misplaced vowels or missing conjuncts instead of Indic text Ayodhya was historically known as Saketa The early Buddhist and Jain canonical texts mention that the religious leaders Gautama Buddha and Mahavira visited and lived in the city The Jain texts also describe it as the birthplace of five tirthankaras namely Rishabhanatha Ajitanatha Abhinandananatha Sumatinath and Anantnath and associate it with the legendary Bharata Chakravarti From the Gupta period onwards several sources mention Ayodhya and Saketa as the name of the same city The legendary city of Ayodhya popularly identified as the present day Ayodhya is the birthplace of the Hindu deity Rama of Kosala Kingdom and setting of the great epic Ramayana Owing to the belief as the birthplace of Rama Ayodhya Awadhpuri has been regarded as first one of the seven most important pilgrimage sites Mokshdayini Sapt Puris for Hindus 5 It is believed that a temple stood at the supposed birth spot of Rama which was demolished by the orders of the Mughal emperor Babur and a mosque erected in its place 7 In 1992 the dispute over the spot led to the demolition of the mosque by Hindu mobs who aimed to rebuild a grand temple of Rama at the site 8 A five judge full bench of the Supreme Court heard the title cases from August to October 2019 and ruled that the land belonged to the government per tax records and ordered it to be handed over to a trust to build a Hindu temple It also ordered the government to give an alternative 5 acres 2 0 ha of land to the Uttar Pradesh Sunni Central Waqf Board to build a mosque in lieu of the demolished Babri mosque The construction of Ram Mandir commenced in August 2020 9 Contents 1 Etymology and names 2 History 2 1 As Saketa 2 2 Gupta period 2 3 Decline as a political centre 2 4 Early medieval period 2 5 Mughal and British period 2 6 Independent India 2 6 1 Ram temple 3 Demographics 4 Geography and climate 5 Places of interest 5 1 Hanuman Garhi Fort 5 2 Ramkot 5 3 Nageshwarnath Temple 5 4 Other places of interest 5 5 Memorial of Heo Hwang ok 6 Sister cities 7 Transportation 7 1 Road 7 2 Rail 7 3 Flight 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksEtymology and namesThe word Ayodhya is a regularly formed derivation of the Sanskrit verb yudh to fight to wage war 10 Yodhya is the future passive participle meaning to be fought the initial a is the negative prefix the whole therefore means not to be fought or more idiomatically in English invincible 11 This meaning is attested by the Atharvaveda which uses it to refer to the unconquerable city of gods 12 The ninth century Jain poem Adi Purana also states that Ayodhya does not exist by name alone but by the merit of being unconquerable by enemies Satyopakhyana interprets the word slightly differently stating that it means that which cannot be conquered by sins instead of enemies 13 Saketa is the older name for the city attested in Sanskrit Jain Buddhist Greek and Chinese sources 14 According to Vaman Shivram Apte the word Saketa is derived from the Sanskrit words Saha with and Aketen houses or buildings The Adi Purana states that Ayodhya is called Saketa because of its magnificent buildings which had significant banners as their arms 15 According to Hans T Bakker the word may be derived from the roots sa and ketu with banner the variant name saketu is attested in the Vishnu Purana 16 The older name in English was Oudh or Oude and the princely state it was the capital of until 1856 is still known as Oudh State citation needed Ayodhya was stated to be the capital of the ancient Kosala kingdom in the Ramayana Hence it was also referred to as Kosala The Adi Purana states that Ayodhya is famous as su kosala because of its prosperity and good skill 15 The cities of Ayutthaya Thailand and Yogyakarta Indonesia are named after Ayodhya 17 18 History Terracotta image of Jain Tirthankar dated fourth century BCE excavated from Ayodhya Gold carving depiction of the legendary Ayodhya at the Ajmer Jain temple Ancient Hindu Sanskrit language epics such as the Ramayana and the Mahabharata mention a legendary city called Ayodhya which was the capital of the legendary Ikshvaku kings of Kosala including Rama 19 Neither these texts nor the earlier Sanskrit texts such as the Vedas mention a city called Saketa Non religious non legendary ancient Sanskrit texts such as Panini s Ashtadhyayi and Patanjali s commentary on it do mention Saketa 19 The later Buddhist text Mahavastu describes Saketa as the seat of the Ikshvaku king Sujata whose descendants established the Shakya capital Kapilavastu 20 The earliest of the Buddhist Pali language texts and the Jain Prakrit language texts mention a city called Saketa Sageya or Saeya in Prakrit as an important city of the Kosala mahajanapada 21 Topographical indications in both Buddhist and Jain texts suggest that Saketa is the same as the present day Ayodhya 22 For example according to the Samyutta Nikaya and the Vinaya Pitaka Saketa was located at a distance of six yojanas from Shravasti The Vinaya Pitaka mentions that a big river was located between the two cities and the Sutta Nipata mentions Saketa as the first halting place on the southward road from Shravasti to Pratishthana 20 Fourth century onwards multiple texts including Kalidasa s Raghuvamsha mention Ayodhya as another name for Saketa 23 The later Jain canonical text Jambudvipa Pannati describes a city called Viniya or Vinita as the birthplace of Lord Rishabhanatha and associates this city with Bharata Chakravartin the Kalpa Sutra describes Ikkhagabhumi as the birthplace of Rishabhadev The index on the Jain text Paumachariya clarifies that Aojjha Aodhya Kosala puri Kosala city Viniya and Saeya Saketa are synonyms The post Canonical Jain texts also mention Aojjha for example the Avassagacurni describes it as the principal city of Kosala while the Avassaganijjutti names it as the capital of Sagara Chakravartin 24 The Avassaganijjutti implies that Viniya Vinia Kosalapuri Kosalapura and Ikkhagabhumi were distinct cities naming them as the capitals of Abhinamdana Sumai and Usabha respectively Abhayadeva s commentary on the Thana Sutta another post canonical text identifies Saketa Ayodhya and Vinita as one city 24 According to one theory the legendary Ayodhya city is the same as the historical city of Saketa and the present day Ayodhya According to another theory the legendary Ayodhya is a mythical city 25 and the name Ayodhya came to be used for the Saketa present day Ayodhya only around the fourth century when a Gupta emperor probably Skandagupta moved his capital to Saketa and renamed it to Ayodhya after the legendary city 16 26 Alternative but less likely theories state that Saketa and Ayodhya were two adjoining cities or that Ayodhya was a locality within the Saketa city 27 See also Ayodhya legendary city Historicity As Saketa Archaeological and literary evidence suggests that the site of present day Ayodhya had developed into an urban settlement by the fifth or sixth century BC 22 The site is identified as the location of the ancient Saketa city which probably emerged as a marketplace located at the junction of the two important roads the Shravasti Pratishthana north south road and the Rajagriha Varanasi Shravasti Taxila east west road 28 Ancient Buddhist texts such as Samyutta Nikaya state that Saketa was located in the Kosala kingdom ruled by Prasenajit or Pasenadi c sixth 5th century BC whose capital was located at Shravasti 29 The later Buddhist commentary Dhammapada atthakatha states that the Saketa town was established by merchant Dhananjaya the father of Visakha on the suggestion of king Prasenajit 20 The Digha Nikaya describes it as one of the six large cities of India 20 The early Buddhist canonical texts mention Shravasti as the capital of Kosala but the later texts such as the Jain texts Nayadhammakahao and Pannavana Suttam and the Buddhist Jatakas mention Saketa as the capital of Kosala 30 As a busy town frequented by travellers it appears to have become important for preachers such as Gautama Buddha and Mahavira 28 The Samyutta Nikaya and Anguttara Nikaya mention that Buddha resided at Saketa at times 20 The early Jain canonical texts such as Antagada dasao Anuttarovavaiya dasao and Vivagasuya state that Mahavira visited Saketa Nayadhammakahao states that Parshvanatha also visited Saketa 24 The Jain texts both canonical and post canonical describe Ayodhya as the location of various shrines such as those of snake yaksha Pasamiya Muni Suvratasvamin and Surappia 24 It is not clear what happened to Saketa after Kosala was conquered by the Magadha emperor Ajatashatru around fifth century BC There is lack of historical sources about the city s situation for the next few centuries it is possible that the city remained a commercial centre of secondary importance but did not grow into a political centre of Magadha whose capital was located at Pataliputra 31 Several Buddhist buildings may have been constructed in the town during the rule of the Maurya emperor Ashoka in the third century BC these buildings were probably located on the present day man made mounds in Ayodhya 32 Excavations at Ayodhya have resulted in the discovery of a large brick wall identified as a fortification wall by archaeologist B B Lal 22 This wall probably erected in the last quarter of the third century BC 33 The Dhanadeva Ayodhya inscription first century BC Coin of ruler Muladeva of the Deva dynasty minted in Ayodhya Kosala Obv Muladevasa elephant to left facing symbol Rev Wreath above symbol below snake After the decline of the Maurya empire Saketa appears to have come under the rule of Pushyamitra Shunga The first century BC inscription of Dhanadeva suggests that he appointed a governor there 34 The Yuga Purana mentions Saketa as the residence of a governor and describes it as being attacked by a combined force of Greeks Mathuras and Panchalas 35 Patanjali s commentary on Panini also refers to the Greek siege of Saketa 36 Later Saketa appears to have become part of a small independent kingdom 37 The Yuga Purana states that Saketa was ruled by seven powerful kings after the retreat of the Greeks 34 The Vayu Purana and the Brahmanda Purana also state that seven powerful kings ruled in the capital of Kosala The historicity of these kings is attested by the discovery of the coins of the Deva dynasty kings including Dhanadeva whose inscription describes him as the king of Kosala Kosaladhipati 38 As the capital of Kosala Saketa probably eclipsed Shravasti in importance during this period The east west route connecting Pataliputra to Taxila which earlier passed through Saketa and Shravasti appears to have shifted southwards during this period now passing through Saketa Ahichhatra and Kanyakubja 39 After the Deva kings Saketa appears to have been ruled by the Datta Kushan and Mitra kings although the chronological order of their rule is uncertain Bakker theorises that the Dattas succeeded the Deva kings in the mid 1st century AD and their kingdom was annexed to the Kushan Empire by Kanishka 40 The Tibetan text Annals of Li Country c 11th century mentions that an alliance of king Vijayakirti of Khotan king Kanika the king of Gu zan and the king of Li marched to India and captured the So ked city During this invasion Vijayakirti took several Buddhist relics from Saketa and placed them in the stupa of Phru no If Kanika is identified as Kanishka and So ked as Saketa it appears that the invasion of Kushans and their allies led to the destruction of the Buddhist sites at Saketa 41 Nevertheless Saketa appears to have remained a prosperous town during the Kushan rule 41 The second century geographer Ptolemy mentions a metropolis Sageda or Sagoda which has been identified with Saketa 37 The earliest inscription that mentions Saketa as a place name is dated to the late Kushan period it was found on the pedestal of a Buddha image in Shravasti and records the gift of the image by Sihadeva of Saketa 40 Before or after the Kushans Saketa appears to have been ruled by a dynasty of kings whose names end in mitra and whose coins have been found at Ayodhya They may have been members of a local dynasty that was distinct from the Mitra dynasty of Mathura These kings are attested only by their coinage Sangha mitra Vijaya mitra Satya mitra Deva mitra and Arya mitra coins of Kumuda sena and Aja varman have also been discovered 42 Gupta period Around the fourth century the region came under the control of the Guptas who revived Brahmanism 43 The Vayu Purana and the Brahmanda Purana attest that the early Gupta kings ruled Saketa 19 No Gupta era archaeological layers have been discovered in present day Ayodhya although a large number of Gupta coins have been discovered here It is possible that during the Gupta period the habitations in the city were located in the areas that have not yet been excavated 44 The Buddhist sites that had suffered destruction during the Khotanese Kushan invasion appear to have remained deserted 45 The fifth century Chinese traveller Faxian states that the ruins of Buddhist buildings existed at Sha chi during his time 46 One theory identifies Sha chi with Saketa although this identification is not undisputed 47 If Sha chi is indeed Saketa it appears that by the fifth century the town no longer had a flourshing Buddhist community or any important Buddhist building that was still in use 37 An important development during the Gupta time was the recognition of Saketa as the legendary city of Ayodhya the capital of the Ikshvaku dynasty 43 The 436 AD Karamdanda Karmdand inscription issued during the reign of Kumaragupta I names Ayodhya as the capital of the Kosala province and records commander Prithvisena s offerings to Brahmins from Ayodhya 48 Later the capital of the Gupta Empire was moved from Pataliputra to Ayodhya Paramartha states that king Vikramaditya moved the royal court to Ayodhya Xuanzang also corroborates this stating that this king moved the court to the country of Shravasti that is Kosala 49 A local oral tradition of Ayodhya first recorded in writing by Robert Montgomery Martin in 1838 50 mentions that the city was deserted after the death of Rama s descendant Brihadbala The city remain deserted until King Vikrama of Ujjain came searching for it and re established it He cut down the forests that had covered the ancient ruins erected the Ramgar fort and built 360 temples 50 Vikramditya was a title of multiple Gupta kings and the king who moved the capital to Ayodhya is identified as Skandagupta 49 Bakker theorises that the move to Ayodhya may have been prompted by a flooding of the river Ganges at Pataliputra the need to check the Huna advance from the west and Skandagupta s desire to compare himself with Rama whose Ikshvaku dynasty is associated with the legendary Ayodhya 50 According to Paramaratha s Life of Vasubandhu Vikramaditya was a patron of scholars and awarded 300 000 pieces of gold to Vasubandhu 51 The text states that Vasubandhu was a native of Saketa Sha ki ta and describes Vikramaditya as the king of Ayodhya A yu ja 52 This wealth was used to build three monasteries in the country of A yu ja Ayodhya 51 Paramartha further states that the later king Baladitya identified with Narasimhagupta and his mother also awarded large sums of gold to Vasubandhu and these funds were used to build another Buddhist temple at Ayodhya 53 These structures may have been seen by the seventh century Chinese traveller Xuanzang who describes a stupa and a monastery at Ayodhya O yu t o 54 Decline as a political centre Ayodhya probably suffered when the Hunas led by Mihirakula invaded the Gupta empire in the sixth century After the fall of the Guptas it may have been ruled by the Maukhari dynasty whose coins have been found in the nearby areas It was not devastated as Xuanzang describes it as a flourishing town and a Buddhist centre 55 However it had lost its position as an important political centre to Kanyakubja Kannauj 56 At the time of Xuanzang s visit it was a part of Harsha s empire and was probably the seat of a vassal or an administrative officer Xuanzang states that the city measured about 0 6 km 20 li in circumference Another seventh century source Kasikavṛtti mentions that the town was surrounded by a moat similar to that around Pataliputra 57 After the fall of Harsha s empire Ayodhya appears to have been variously controlled by local kings and the rulers of Kannauj including Yashovarman and the Gurjara Pratiharas The town is not mentioned in any surviving texts or inscriptions composed during 650 1050 AD although it may be identified with the city of Harishchandra mentioned in the eighth century poem Gaudavaho Archaeological evidence including images to Vishnu Jain tirthankaras Ganesha the seven Matrikas and a Buddhist stupa suggests that the religious activity in the area continued during this period 58 Early medieval period According to Indologist Hans T Bakker the only religious significance of Ayodhya in the first millennium AD was related to the Gopratara tirtha now called Guptar Ghat where Rama and his followers are said to have ascended to heaven by entering the waters of Sarayu 59 60 61 In the 11th century the Gahadavala dynasty came to power in the region and promoted Vaishnavism They built several Vishnu temples in Ayodhya five of which survived till the end of Aurangzeb s reign Hans Bakker concludes that there might have been a temple at the supposed birth spot of Rama built by the Gahadavalas see Vishnu Hari inscription In subsequent years the cult of Rama developed within Vaishnavism with Rama being regarded as the foremost avatar of Vishnu Consequently Ayodhya s importance as a pilgrimage centre grew 60 In 1226 AD Ayodhya became the capital of the province of Awadh or Oudh within the Delhi sultanate Muslim historians state that the area was little more than wilderness prior to this Pilgrimage was tolerated but the tax on pilgrims ensured that the temples did not receive much income 62 Mughal and British period Ayodhya in 1785 as seen from river Ghaghara painting by William Hodges It depicts the Svargadvar Ghat A mosque of Aurangzeb period in the background 63 Under Mughal rule the Babri mosque was constructed in Ayodhya The city was the capital of the province of Awadh mispronounced as Oudh by the British which is also believed to be a variant of the name Ayodhya 64 After the death of Aurangzeb in 1707 AD the central Muslim rule weakened and Awadh became virtually independent with Ayodhya as its capital However the rulers became increasingly dependent on the local Hindu nobles and control over the temples and pilgrimage centres was relaxed 62 better source needed United Provinces of Agra and Oudh showing Ajodhia 1903 map In the 1850s a group of Hindus attacked the Babri mosque on the grounds that it was built over the birthplace of the Hindu deity Rama 65 To prevent further disputes the British administrators divided the mosque premises between Hindus and Muslims 66 Ayodhya was annexed in 1856 by the British rulers The rulers of Awadh were Shia and the Sunni groups had already protested against the permissive attitude of the former government The British intervened and crushed the Sunni resistance In 1857 the British annexed Oudh Awadh and subsequently reorganised it into the United Provinces of Agra and Oudh 62 Independent India See also Ayodhya dispute A movement was launched in 1984 by the Vishva Hindu Parishad party to reclaim the Babri mosque site for a Rama temple In 1992 a right wing Hindu nationalist rally turned into a riot leading to the demolition of the Babri mosque 67 A makeshift temple at Ram Janmabhoomi for Ram Lalla infant Rama was constructed 68 Under the Indian government orders no one was permitted near the site within 200 yards and the gate was locked to the outside Hindu pilgrims however began entering through a side door to offer worship citation needed In 2003 the Archaeological Survey of India ASI carried out an excavation at the mosque site to determine if it was built over the ruins of a temple The excavation uncovered pillar bases indicating a temple had been in existence under the mosque 69 70 Besides Hindus the Buddhist and Jain representatives claimed that their temples existed at the excavated site 71 On 5 July 2005 five terrorists attacked the site of the makeshift Ramlalla temple in Ayodhya All five were killed in the ensuing gunfight with security forces and one civilian died in the bomb blast triggered as they attempted to breach the cordon wall On 30 September 2010 the Lucknow bench of the Allahabad High Court ruled that one third of the disputed land should be given to the Uttar Pradesh Sunni Central Waqf Board one third to the Nirmohi Akhara and one third to the Hindu party for the shrine of Ram Lalla infant Rama The court further ruled that the area where the idols of Ram are present be given to Hindus in the final decree while the rest of the land shall be divided equally by metes and bounds among the three parties 72 73 The judgment along with evidences provided by the Archaeological Survey of India upheld that the Babri Masjid was built after demolishing the Hindu temple which is the birthplace of Rama and that the mosque was not constructed according to the principles of Islam The final verdict by the Supreme Court on the case ruled the disputed land in the favour of Hindus for the construction of Ram Mandir and ordered an alternative piece of land be given to the Muslim community for the construction of a mosque 74 75 In a judgement pronounced by a 5 judge bench of the Supreme Court of India on 9 November 2019 the land was handed over to the government to form a trust for the construction of a temple The court instructed the government to also allot a plot of 5 acres 2 0 ha in Ayodhya to the Uttar Pradesh Sunni Central Waqf Board to construct a mosque Masjid 76 Some South Koreans have identified the Ayuta mentioned in their ancient Samgungnyusa legend with Ayodhya According to this legend the ancient Korean princess Heo Hwang ok came from Ayuta In the 2000s the local government of Ayodhya and South Korea acknowledged the connection and held a ceremony to raise a statue of the princess 77 78 79 Ram temple Main article Ram Mandir On 5 August 2020 the prime minister of India Narendra Modi laid the ceremonial foundation stone for a new temple at what is believed to be the birthplace of the god Ram 80 81 It is planned to build a new township Navya Ayodhya on a 500 acre 2 0 km2 site next to the Faizabad Gorakhpur highway which will have luxury hotels and apartment complexes 82 Demographics Hinduism 93 23 Islam 6 19 Jainism 0 16 Sikhism 0 14 Buddhism 0 12 Others 0 16 includes Christians and other religion needs update As of the 2011 Census of India Ayodhya had a population of 55 890 Males constituted 56 7 of the population and females 43 3 Ayodhya had an average literacy rate of 78 1 2 As per the religion data of 2011 Census the majority population is of Hindu religion with 93 23 and Muslims comes the second with 6 19 83 Geography and climate Deepawali being celebrated at Ram ki Paidi ghat on the banks of Sarayu river in AyodhyaAyodhya has a humid subtropical climate typical of central India Summers are long dry and hot lasting from late March to mid June with average daily temperatures near 32 C 90 F 84 They are followed by the monsoon season which lasts till October with annual precipitation of approximately 1 067 mm 42 0 in and average temperatures around 28 C 82 F Winter starts in early November and lasts till the end of January followed by a short spring in February and early March Average temperatures are mild near 16 C 61 F but nights can be colder 84 Places of interest Panoramic view of Ram ki Paidi ghat Hanuman Garhi Temple Sant Sri Paltds Temple Ayodhya is an important place of pilgrimage for the Hindus A verse in the Brahmanda Purana names Ayodhya among the most sacred and foremost cities the others being Mathura Haridvara Kashi Kanchi and Avantika This verse is also found in the other Puranas with slight variations 11 In Garuda Purana Ayodhya is said to be one of seven holiest places for Hindus in India with Varanasi being the most sacrosanct 85 Hanuman Garhi Fort Hanuman Garhi a massive four sided fort with circular bastions at each corner and a temple of Hanuman inside is the most popular shrine in Ayodhya Situated in the center of town it is approachable by a flight of 76 steps Its legend is that Hanuman lived here in a cave and guarded the Janambhoomi or Ramkot The main temple contains the statue of Maa Anjani with Bal Hanuman seated on her lap The faithful believe wishes are granted with a visit to the shrine Kanak Bhawan is a temple said to have been given to Sita and Rama by Rama s stepmother Kaikeyi as a wedding gift and only contains statues of Sita with her husband 86 Ramkot Ramkot is the main place of worship in Ayodhya and the site of the ancient citadel of its namesake standing on elevated ground in the western city Although visited by pilgrims throughout the year it attracts devotees from all over the world on Ram Navami the day of the birth of Rama Ram Navami is celebrated with great pomp in the Hindu month of Chaitra which falls between March and April Swarg Dwar is believed to be the site of cremation of Rama Mani Parbat and Sugriv Parbat are ancient earth mounds the first identified by a stupa built by the emperor Ashoka and the second is an ancient monastery Treta ke Thakur is a temple standing at the site of the Ashvamedha Yajnya of Rama Three centuries prior the Raja of Kulu built a new temple here which was improved by Ahilyabai Holkar of Indore in 1784 the same time the adjacent Ghats were built The initial idols in black sandstone were recovered from Sarayu and placed in the new temple which was known as Kaleram ka Mandir Chhoti Devkali Mandir is the temple of goddess Ishani or Durga Kuldevi of Sita 87 Nageshwarnath Temple The temple of Nageshwarnath was established by Kush son of Rama Legend has it that Kush lost his armlet while bathing in the Sarayu and it was retrieved by a Nag Kanya who fell in love with him As she was a devotee of Shiva Kush built her this temple It was the only temple to survive when Ayodhya was abandoned until the time of Vikramaditya While the rest of city was in ruin and covered by dense forest this temple allowed Vikramaditya to recognise the city The festival of Shivratri is celebrated here with great splendor 88 Other places of interest Brahma Kund Ram ki Paidi Kanak Bhavan Temple dedicated to Rama and his consort Sita is in the centre of Ayodhya Ayodhya Ghaat on the bank Ghaghara river Ghaghra river locally known as Saryu at Faizabad Hanuman Garhi temple A young priest is operating the Darshan system Vijayraghav Mandir Ayodhya Steps on the bank of the GhagharaMemorial of Heo Hwang ok The legendary princess Heo Hwang ok who married king Suro of Geumgwan Gaya of Korea is believed by some to be a native of Ayodhya 89 In 2001 a Memorial of Heo Hwang ok was inaugurated by a Korean delegation which included over a hundred historians and government representatives 90 In 2016 a Korean delegation proposed to develop the memorial The proposal was accepted by the Uttar Pradesh chief minister Akhilesh Yadav 91 Sister cities Ayodhya Junction railway station Gimhae South Korea The mayors of Ayodhya and Gimhae signed a sister city bond in March 2001 based on Ayodhya s identification as the birthplace of the legendary queen Heo Hwang ok 92 Janakpur Nepal 93 Ayodhya and Janakpur became sister cities in November 2014 94 Ayodhya is the birthplace of Rama and Janakpur is the birthplace of his consort Sita TransportationRoad Ayodhya is connected by road to several major cities and towns including Lucknow 130 km 81 mi Gorakhpur 140 km 87 mi Allahabad 160 km 99 mi Varanasi 200 km 120 mi and Delhi 636 km 395 mi 95 A direct bus service has been started between Ayodhya and Janakpur birthplace of Sita in Nepal as a part of Ramayana circuit 96 Rail The city is on the broad gauge Northern Railway line on Mughal Sarai on the Lucknow main route with Ayodhya and Faizabad railway stations Ramayana Circuit Train Special Train that runs from Delhi to main sites of the Ramayana Circuit 97 Flight The nearest airports are Ayodhya 5 km 3 1 mi away Amausi in Lucknow 134 km 83 mi away Allahabad 166 km 103 mi away See alsoSaket Janakpur Nandigram Chitrakoot Uttar Pradesh Chitrakoot Madhya Pradesh Mahendragiri OdishaReferences Ayodhya decked up for Vikas Deepotsav over 9 lakh earthen lamps to illuminate temple town November 2021 a b AYODHYA in Faizabad Uttar Pradesh citypopulation de Retrieved 1 August 2020 a b 52nd Report of the Commissioner for Linguistic Minorities in India PDF nclm nic in Ministry of Minority Affairs p 49 Archived from the original PDF on 25 May 2017 Retrieved 12 February 2019 Awadhi Ethnologue Retrieved 7 May 2019 a b District Ayodhya Government of Uttar Pradesh City Of Lord Rama India Retrieved 10 August 2021 About District District Ayodhya Government of Uttar Pradesh Jain Meenakshi 2017 The Battle for Rama Case of the Temple at Ayodhya Aryan Books International ISBN 978 8 173 05579 9 page needed Ayodhya verdict No place for fear negativity in New India says PM Business Standard 9 November 2019 Ayodhya Ram Mandir highlights Celebration lamps fireworks light up the nation as it witnesses a historic day Deccan Herald 5 August 2020 Retrieved 15 August 2020 yudh KST Online Sanskrit Dictionary kosha sanskrit today Retrieved 11 June 2022 a b Kunal Ayodhya Revisited 2016 p 2 Bakker The rise of Ayodhya as a place of pilgrimage 1982 p 103 Kunal Ayodhya Revisited 2016 p 4 Lutgendorf Imagining Ayodhya 1997 p 22 a b Kunal Ayodhya Revisited 2016 p 5 a b Bakker Ayodhya Part 1 1984 p 12 Subrahmanyam K 5 December 2018 Ayodhya amp Ayutthaya The Economic Times Retrieved 31 August 2021 Noorduyn Jacobus 1986 The Etymology of the Name of Yogyakarta Archipel 31 1 87 96 doi 10 3406 arch 1986 2272 a b c Bakker Ayodhya Part 1 1984 p 7 a b c d e Bakker Ayodhya Part 1 1984 p 5 Bakker Ayodhya Part 1 1984 pp 5 6 a b c Bakker Ayodhya Part 1 1984 p 2 Bakker Ayodhya Part 1 1984 pp 6 7 a b c d Bakker Ayodhya Part 1 1984 p 6 Arya 1990 p 44 Bhagwan Singh Josh Bipan Chandra Harbans Mukhia K N Panikkar Madhavan K Palat Mridula Mukherjee Muzaffar Alam R Champakalakshmi Rajan Gurukkal Romila Thapar Sarvepalli Gopal et al 1990 The Political Abuse of History Babri Masjid Rama Janmabhumi Dispute Social Scientist 18 1 2 76 81 doi 10 2307 3517330 JSTOR 3517330 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Bakker Ayodhya Part 1 1984 p 3 a b Bakker Ayodhya Part 1 1984 p 13 Bakker Ayodhya Part 1 1984 p 5 13 Bakker Ayodhya Part 1 1984 p 2 5 6 Bakker Ayodhya Part 1 1984 p 14 Bakker Ayodhya Part 1 1984 pp 14 18 Bakker Ayodhya Part 1 1984 pp 19 20 a b Bakker Ayodhya Part 1 1984 p 20 Bakker Ayodhya Part 1 1984 pp 18 19 Bakker Ayodhya Part 1 1984 p 7 19 a b c Bakker Ayodhya Part 1 1984 p 18 Bakker Ayodhya Part 1 1984 p 21 Bakker Ayodhya Part 1 1984 p 22 a b Bakker Ayodhya Part 1 1984 p 24 a b Bakker Ayodhya Part 1 1984 p 25 Bakker Ayodhya Part 1 1984 p 23 a b Bakker Ayodhya Part 1 1984 p 26 Bakker Ayodhya Part 1 1984 p 27 Bakker Ayodhya Part 1 1984 pp 25 26 Bakker Ayodhya Part 1 1984 p 17 J C Aggarwal N K Chowdhry 1991 Ram Janmabhoomi through the ages Babri Masjid controversy S Chand p 7 ISBN 9780836427455 Bakker Ayodhya Part 1 1984 p 28 a b Bakker Ayodhya Part 1 1984 p 29 a b c Bakker Ayodhya Part 1 1984 p 30 a b Bakker Ayodhya Part 1 1984 p 31 Bakker Ayodhya Part 1 1984 p 8 Bakker Ayodhya Part 1 1984 p 32 Bakker Ayodhya Part 1 1984 p 18 31 Bakker Ayodhya Part 1 1984 pp 32 33 Bakker Ayodhya Part 1 1984 pp 33 34 Bakker Ayodhya Part 1 1984 p 33 Bakker Ayodhya Part 1 1984 p 34 Bakker The rise of Ayodhya as a place of pilgrimage 1982 p 105 a b Paramasivan Vasudha 2009 Yah Ayodhya Vah Ayodhya Earthly and Cosmic Journeys in the Anand lahari In Heidi R M Pauwels ed Patronage and Popularisation Pilgrimage and Procession Otto Harrassowitz Verlag pp 101 116 ISBN 978 3 447 05723 3 Kunal Ayodhya Revisited 2016 p 12 a b c Bakker Ayodhya A Hindu Jerusalem 1991 Kunal Ayodhya Revisited 2016 pp 439 440 It is remarkable to note that William Hodges R A who visited Fyzabad and Ayodhya in 1783 made the well known painting of the bank with Svargadvari mosque Service Tribune News Awadh Archives in Ayodhya Tribuneindia News Service Retrieved 31 August 2021 Christophe Jaffrelot 1999 The Hindu Nationalist Movement and Indian Politics 1925 to the 1990s Strategies of Identity building Implantation and Mobilisation with Special Reference to Central India Penguin Books India p 92 ISBN 978 0 14 024602 5 P Carnegy A Historical Sketch of Tehsil Fyzabad Lucknow 1870 cited by Harsh Narain The Ayodhya Temple Mosque Dispute Focus on Muslim Sources 1993 New Delhi Penman Publications ISBN 81 85504 16 4 p 8 9 and by Peter Van der Veer Religious Nationalism p 153 Amy Chua 2007 Day of Empire How Hyperpowers Rise to Global Dominance And Why They Fall Doubleday p 182 ISBN 978 0 385 51284 8 Ram Lalla deity to be taken to Ayodhya The Hindu 19 January 2002 Archived from the original on 23 June 2004 Retrieved 30 September 2010 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint unfit URL link Proof of temple found at Ayodhya ASI report Rediff com 25 August 2003 Archived from the original on 26 September 2010 Retrieved 30 September 2010 Evidence of temple found ASI The Tribune Chandigarh 25 August 2003 Archived from the original on 6 September 2003 Chishti Seema 14 March 2003 Can Ayodhya dig settle the dispute BBC News Retrieved 11 June 2012 Ayodhya verdict Allahabad High Court says divide land in 3 ways NDTV Archived from the original on 2 October 2010 Retrieved 30 September 2010 High Court of Allahabad Ram Janmbhoomi Babri Masjid Judgement Decision of Hon ble Special Full Bench Hearing Ayodhya Matters Rjbm nic in Archived from the original on 2 October 2010 Retrieved 30 September 2010 Gupta Pathikrit Sen 10 November 2019 Ayodhya Verdict Entire Disputed Site Goes to Hindus for Ram Mandir Muslims to Get 5 Acres of Alternate Land News18 Nair Arun Tiwari Vaibhav eds 10 November 2019 Ayodhya Verdict Live Updates Disputed Land To Be Given For Temple Construction Muslims To Get 5 Acre Plot In Ayodhya Says Top Court NDTV Ayodhya verdict live Country s unity strengthened after verdict say religious leaders The Times of India 10 November 2019 Manjul Tarannum 21 January 2010 Korean relative of Kings of Ayodhya goes on evidence hunting The Indian Express Arora V N 12 September 2004 South Korea s Ayodhya connection The Times of India Archived from the original on 11 August 2011 Ahn San Whan 12 May 2000 Festivities organized to honor Indian princess India Abroad Archived from the original on 5 November 2012 via HighBeam Research Mishra Avaneesh 5 August 2020 Ram temple bhoomi pujan Ceremony starts at 12 30 pm PM to offer prayers to idol address gathering The Indian Express Retrieved 31 August 2021 Tikku Aloke ed 5 August 2020 Golden chapter says PM Modi after laying foundation stone for Ram temple Hindustan Times Sinha Rakesh 5 August 2020 Ayodhya breaks ground today The Indian Express Ayodhya Nagar Palika Parishad City Population Census 2011 2021 Uttar Pradesh 2011 Census of India Government of India Retrieved 16 July 2021 a b Official Website of Nagar Nigam Ayodhya Ayodhya City Geographical status nagarnigamayodhya in Retrieved 31 August 2021 Stella Kramrisch Raymond Burnier 1946 The Hindu temple Volume 1 Motilal Banarsidass p 3 ISBN 9788120802230 Kanak Bhawan District Ayodhya Government of Uttar Pradesh India Retrieved 31 August 2021 Prakash Satya 10 October 2018 म त स त क क ल द व क र प म व र जम न ह म छ ट द वक ल Rajasthan Patrika in Hindi Retrieved 31 August 2021 Pandey Dharmendra 13 February 2018 र मनगर अय ध य म आज मह श वर त र पर भ ल क बम बम Dainik Jagran in Hindi Retrieved 31 August 2021 Il yeon tr by Ha Tae Hung amp Grafton K Mintz 1972 Samguk Yusa Seoul Yonsei University Press ISBN 89 7141 017 5 Korean memorial to Indian princess 6 March 2001 via news bbc co uk UP CM announces grand memorial of Queen Huh Wang Ock 1 March 2016 WebIndia123 Arora V N 12 September 2004 South Korea s Ayodhya connection The Times of India Retrieved 23 February 2021 MoU on Twinning arrangements between Kathmandu Varanasi Janakpur Ayodhya and Lumbini Bodh Gaya as sister cities pib gov in Retrieved 8 March 2020 PM Narendra Modi signs 10 agreements with Nepal inaugurates bus service The Times of India 26 November 2014 Retrieved 23 February 2021 How to Reach District Ayodhya Government of Uttar Pradesh India Retrieved 31 August 2021 Modi Oli Jointly Inaugurate Janakpur Ayodhya Direct Bus Service Outlook 11 May 2018 Retrieved 23 February 2021 Explained The Ramayan Railway Circuit That Will Retrace The Epic In 8 000 Kms Journey www outlookindia com 28 May 2022 Retrieved 12 December 2022 Sources Arya S N 1990 Historicity of Ayodhya Proceedings of the Indian History Congress Indian History Congress 51 44 48 JSTOR 44148186 Bakker Hans T 1982 The rise of Ayodhya as a place of pilgrimage Indo Iranian Journal 24 2 103 126 doi 10 1163 000000082790081267 S2CID 161957449 Bakker Hans 1984 Ayodhya Part 1 The History of Ayodhya from the seventh century BC to the middle of the 18th century Groningen Egbert Forsten ISBN 9069800071 Bakker Hans T 1991 Ayodhya A Hindu Jerusalem An Investigation of Holy War as a Religious Idea in the Light of Communal Unrest in India Numen 38 1 80 109 doi 10 2307 3270005 JSTOR 3270005 Jain Meenakshi 2013 Rama and Ayodhya New Delhi Aryan Books ISBN 978 8173054518 Hill John E 2009 Through the Jade Gate to Rome A Study of the Silk Routes During the Later Han Dynasty first to second Centuries CE BookSurge ISBN 978 1 4392 2134 1 Kunal Kishore 2016 Ayodhya Revisited Ocean ISBN 978 81 8430 357 5 Lutgendorf Philip 1997 Imagining Ayodhya Utopia and its Shadows in a Hindu Landscape International Journal of Hindu Studies 1 1 19 54 doi 10 1007 s11407 997 0011 z JSTOR 20106448 S2CID 144225912 Pandey Gyanendra 2006 Routine Violence Nations Fragments Histories Stanford University Press p 97 ISBN 978 0 8047 5264 0 Paul Herman 2015 Key Issues in Historical Theory Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 51946 1 Narain Harsh 1993 The Ayodhya Temple Mosque Dispute Focus on Muslim Sources Delhi Penman PublishersFurther readingDhavalikar M K 1988 Reviewed Work s AYODHYA Part I Pts I III by Hans Bakker Annals of the Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute 69 1 4 319 320 JSTOR 41693795 Jain Meenakshi 2017 The Battle for Rama Case of the Temple at Ayodhya Aryan Books International ISBN 978 8173055799 B B Lal 2008 Rama His Historicity Mandir and Setu Evidence of Literature Archaeology and Other Sciences Aryan Books ISBN 978 81 7305 345 0 Legge James 1886 A Record of Buddhistic Kingdoms Being an account by the Chinese Monk Fa Hien of his travels in India and Ceylon A D 399 414 New York Paragon Book Reprint Corp 1965 Oxford Clarendon Press Shourie Arun 1995 The Ayodhya Reference Supreme Court Judgement and Commentaries New Delhi Voice of India ISBN 978 8185990309 Shourie Arun Goel Sita Ram Narain Harsh Dubashi Jay Swarup Ram 1990 Hindu Temples What Happened to Them Vol I A Preliminary Survey ISBN 81 85990 49 2 Thomas F W 1944 New Indian Antiquary VII Sandanes Nahapana Caṣṭana and Kaniṣka Tung li P an ch i and Chinese Turkestan p 90 Watters Thomas 1904 1905 On Yuan Chwang s travels in India 629 645 A D vol 5 Mushiram Manoharlal Delhi London Royal Asiatic Society Ajodhya State The Imperial Gazetteer of India p 174External linksAyodhya at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Textbooks from Wikibooks Resources from Wikiversity Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Ajodhya Ayodhya travel guide from Wikivoyage Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ayodhya amp oldid 1143939090, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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