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Somnath temple

The Somanath temple (IAST: somanātha) or Deo Patan, is a Hindu temple located in Prabhas Patan, Veraval in Gujarat, India. It is one of the most sacred pilgrimage sites for Hindus and is the first among the twelve jyotirlinga shrines of Shiva.[1] It is unclear when the first version of the Somnath temple was built, with estimates varying between the early centuries of the 1st millennium and about the 9th century CE.[2][3] The temple is not mentioned in the ancient Sanskrit texts of Hinduism; while various texts, including the Mahabharata and Bhagavata Purana, mention a tirtha (pilgrimage site) at Prabhas Patan on the coastline of Saurashtra, where the temple is presently located, there is no evidence that a temple existed at the site in ancient times.[4][5][6]

Somanatha Temple
Somanath Mandir
Religion
AffiliationHinduism
DistrictGir Somnath
DeityShiva
Governing bodyShree Somnath Trust
Location
LocationVeraval(Somnath)
StateGujarat
CountryIndia
Shown within Gujarat
Somnath temple (India)
Geographic coordinates20°53′16.9″N 70°24′5.0″E / 20.888028°N 70.401389°E / 20.888028; 70.401389
Architecture
Creator
  • Unknown - by Unknown
    (Many constructions)
  • 1169 - by Kumarapala
  • 1308 - by Mahipal I
  • 1950 - by The Somnath Trust
    (Present structure)
Completed1951
Demolished
Website
somnath.org

The temple was reconstructed several times in the past after repeated destruction by multiple Muslim invaders and rulers, notably starting with an attack by Mahmud Ghazni in the 11th century.[7][8][9][10]

In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, historians and archaeologists of the colonial era actively studied the Somnath temple because its ruins showed a historic Hindu temple that was turning into an Islamic mosque.[11][12][13] After India's independence, those ruins were demolished, and the present Somnath temple was reconstructed in the Māru-Gurjara style of Hindu temple architecture. The contemporary Somnath temple's reconstruction was started under the orders of the first Deputy Prime Minister of India, Vallabhbhai Patel after receiving approval for reconstruction from Mahatma Gandhi. The reconstruction was completed in May 1951, after Gandhi's death.[14][15]

Location edit

The Somnath temple is located along the coastline in Prabhas Patan, Veraval, Saurashtra region of Gujarat. It is about 400 kilometres (249 mi) southwest of Ahmedabad, 82 kilometres (51 mi) south of Junagadh – another major archaeological and pilgrimage site in Gujarat. It is about 7 kilometres (4 mi) southeast of the Veraval railway junction, about 130 kilometres (81 mi) southeast of the Porbandar airport and about 85 kilometres (53 mi) west of the Diu airport.[16]

The Somnath temple is located close to the ancient trading port of Veraval, one of three in Gujarat from where Indian merchants departed to trade goods. The 11th-century Persian historian Al-Biruni states that Somnath has become so famous because "it was the harbor for seafaring people and a station for those who went to and fro between Sufala in the country of Zanj (east Africa) and China". Combined with its repute as an eminent pilgrimage site, its location was well known to the kingdoms within the Indian subcontinent.[17][18] Literature and epigraphical evidence suggest that the medieval-era Veraval port was also actively trading with the Middle East and Southeast Asia. This brought wealth and fame to the Veraval area, as well as the temple.[19]

The site of Prabhas Patan was occupied during the Indus Valley Civilisation, 2000–1200 BCE. It was one of very few sites in the Junagadh district to be so occupied. After abandonment in 1200 BCE, it was reoccupied in 400 BCE and continued into the historical period. Prabhas is also close to the other sites similarly occupied: Junagadh, Dwarka, Padri and Bharuch.[19]

Nomenclature and significance edit

Somnath means "Lord of the Soma" or "moon".[note 1] The site is also called Prabhasa ("place of splendor").[21] Somnath temple has been a jyotirlinga site for the Hindus, and a holy place of pilgrimage (tirtha ). It is one of five most revered sites on the seacoast of India, along with the nearby Dvaraka in Gujarat, Puri in Odisha, Rameshvaram and Chidambaram in Tamil Nadu.[22]

Scriptural mentions edit

Many Hindu texts provide a list of the most sacred Shiva pilgrimage sites, along with a guide for visiting the site. The best known were the Mahatmya genre of texts. Of these, Somnatha temple tops the list of jyotirlingas in the Jnanasamhita – chapter 13 of the Shiva Purana, and the oldest known text with a list of jyotirlingas. Other texts include the Varanasi Mahatmya (found in Skanda Purana), the Shatarudra Samhita and the Kothirudra Samhita.[23][note 2] All either directly mention the Somnath temple as the number one of twelve sites, or call the top temple as "Somesvara" in Saurashtra – a synonymous term for this site in these texts.[26][27][28][note 3] The exact date of these texts is unknown, but based on references they make to other texts and ancient poets or scholars, these have been generally dated between the 10th and 12th century, with some dating it much earlier and others a bit later.[24][25]

The Somnath temple is not mentioned in ancient Sanskrit texts of Hinduism, but the "Prabhasa-Pattana" is mentioned as a tirtha (pilgrimage site).[4] For example, the Mahabharata (c. 400 CE in its mature form)[citation needed] in Chapters 109, 118 and 119 of the Book Three (Vana Parva), and Sections 10.45 and 10.78 of the Bhagavata Purana state Prabhasa to be a tirtha on the coastline of Saurashtra.[31][6]

Alf Hiltebeitel – a Sanskrit scholar known for his translations and studies on Indic texts including the Mahabharata, states that the appropriate context for the legends and mythologies in the Mahabharata are the Vedic mythologies which it borrowed, integrated and re-adapted for its times and its audience.[32] The Brahmana layer of the Vedic literature already mention tirtha related to the Saraswati river. However, given the river was nowhere to be seen when the Mahabharata was compiled and finalized, the Saraswati legend was modified. It vanishes into an underground river, then emerges as an underground river at holy sites for sangam (confluence) already popular with the Hindus. The Mahabharata then integrates the Saraswati legend of the Vedic lore with the Prabhasa tirtha, states Hiltebeitel.[32] The critical editions of the Mahabharata, in several chapters and books mentions that this "Prabhasa" is at a coastline near Dvaraka. It is described as a sacred site where Arjuna and Balarama go on tirtha, a site where Lord Krishna chooses to go and spends his final days, then dies.[32]

Catherine Ludvik – a Religious Studies and Sanskrit scholar, concurs with Hiltebeitel. She states that the Mahabharata mythologies borrow from the Vedic texts but modify them from Brahmin-centered "sacrificial rituals" to tirtha rituals that are available to everyone – the intended audience of the great epic.[33] More specifically, she states that the sacrificial sessions along the Saraswati river found in sections such as of Pancavimsa Brahmana were modified to tirtha sites in the context of the Saraswati river in sections of Vana Parva and Shalya Parva.[33] Thus the mythology of Prabhasa in the Mahabharata, which it states to be "by the sea, near Dwaraka". This signifies an expanded context of pilgrimage as a "Vedic ritual equivalent", integrating Prabhasa that must have been already important as a tirtha site when the Vana Parva and Shalya Parva compilation was complete.[33][note 4]

The 5th century poem Raghuvamsa of Kalidasa mentions Somanatha-Prabhasa as a tirtha along with Prayaga, Pushkara, Gokarna. Bathing in one of these tirthas is meant to release one from the cycle of births and deaths.[35][note 5]

Archaeologically, there is no evidence that a temple existed at the site in ancient times.[4][36]

History edit

The site of Somnath has been a pilgrimage site from ancient times on account of being a Triveni Sangam (the confluence of three rivers: Kapila, Hiran and Saraswati). Soma, the Moon god, is believed to have lost his lustre due to a curse, and he bathed in the Sarasvati River at this site to regain it. The result is said to be the waxing and waning of the moon. The name of the town, Prabhasa, meaning lustre, as well as the alternative name Someshvara ("the lord of the moon" or "the moon god"), arise from this tradition.[37]

 
Ruined Somnath temple, 1869

The name Someshvara begins to appear starting in the 9th century. The Gurjara-Pratihara king Nagabhata II (r. 805–833) recorded that he has visited tirthas in Saurashtra, including Someshvara.[38] Romila Thapar states that this does not imply the existence of a temple, but rather that it was a pilgrimage site (tirtha). The Chaulukya (Solanki) king Mularaja possibly built the first temple for Soma ("moon god") at the site sometime before 997 CE, even though some historians believe that he may have renovated a smaller earlier temple.[39][note 6]

 
Mahmud of Ghazni, the Turkic Muslim ruler of the Ghaznavid Empire, raided India as far as Somnath, Mathura and Kannauj in Gurjara-Pratihara territory.[43]

In 1026, during the reign of Bhima I, the Turkic Muslim ruler Mahmud of Ghazni raided and plundered the Somnath temple, breaking its jyotirlinga. He took away a booty of 20 million dinars.[44][8] According to Romila Thapar, relying on a 1038 inscription of a Kadamba king of Goa, the condition of Somnath temple in 1026 after Ghazni's is unclear because the inscription is "puzzlingly silent" about Ghazni's raid or temple's condition. This inscription, states Thapar, could suggest that instead of destruction it may have been a desecration because the temple seems to have been repaired quickly within twelve years and was an active pilgrimage site by 1038.[45]

The raid of 1026 by Mahmud is confirmed by the 11th-century Persian historian Al-Biruni, who worked in the court of Mahmud, who accompanied Mahmud's troops between 1017 and 1030 CE on some occasions, and who lived in the northwest Indian subcontinent region – over regular intervals, though not continuously.[46] The invasion of Somnath site in 1026 CE is also confirmed by other Islamic historians such as Gardizi, Ibn Zafir and Ibn al-Athir. However, two Persian sources – one by adh-Dhahabi and other by al-Yafi'i – state it as 1027 CE, which is likely incorrect and late by a year, according to Khan – a scholar known for his studies on Al-Biruni and other Persian historians.[47] According to Al-Biruni:

The location of the Somnath temple was a little less than three miles west of the mouth of the river Sarasvati. The temple was situated on the coast of the Indian ocean so that at the time of flow the idol was bathed by its water. Thus that moon was perpetually occupied in bathing the idol and serving it."

— Translated by M.S. Khan[47]

Al-Biruni states that Mahmud destroyed the Somnath temple. He states Mahmud's motives as, "raids undertaken with a view to plunder and to satisfy the righteous iconoclasm of a true Muslim... [he] returned to Ghazna laden with costly spoils from the Hindu temples." Al-Biruni obliquely criticizes these raids for "ruining the prosperity" of India, creating antagonism among the Hindus for "all foreigners", and triggering an exodus of scholars of Hindu sciences far away from regions "conquered by us".[48][49] Mahmud launched many plunder campaigns into India, including one that included the sack of Somnath temple.[50]

 
Some of the earliest photos of Somnath temple were taken by Sykes and Nelson in the 19th century. They show Somnath Hindu temple partly converted into an Islamic mosque.[12]

According to Jamal Malik – a South Asian history and Islamic Studies scholar, "the destruction of Somnath temple, a well known place of pilgrimage in Gujarat in 1026, played a major role in creating Mahmud as an "icon of Islam", the sack of this temple became "a crucial topic in Persian stories of Islamic iconoclasm".[51] Many Muslim historians and scholars in and after the 11th century included the destruction of Somnath as a righteous exemplary deed in their publications. It inspired the Persian side with a cultural memory of Somnath's destruction through "epics of conquest", while to the Hindu side, Somnath inspired tales of recovery, rebuilding and "epics of resistance".[51] These tales and chronicles in Persia elevated Mahmud as "the exemplary hero and Islamic warrior for the Muslims", states Malik, while in India Mahmud emerged as the exemplary "arch-enemy".[51]

Powerful legends with intricate detail developed in the Turko-Persian literature regarding Mahmud's raid,.[52] According to historian Cynthia Talbot, a later tradition states that "50,000 devotees lost their lives in trying to stop Mahmud" during his sack of Somnath temple.[53] According to Thapar, the "50,000 killed" is a boastful claim that is "constantly reiterated" in Muslim texts, and becomes a "formulaic" figure of deaths to help highlight "Mahmud’s legitimacy in the eyes of established Islam".[54]

After being exhorted by Bhava Brihaspati, a Pashupata ascetic, Kumarapala (r. 1143–72) rebuilt the Somnath temple in "excellent stone and studded it with jewels," according to an inscription in 1169. He replaced a decaying wooden temple.[55][56][57]

During its 1299 invasion of Gujarat, Alauddin Khalji's army, led by Ulugh Khan, defeated the Vaghela king Karna, and sacked the Somnath temple.[58][59] Legends in the later texts Kanhadade Prabandha (15th century) and Nainsi ri Khyat (17th century) state that the Jalore ruler Kanhadadeva later recovered the Somnath idol and freed the Hindu prisoners, after an attack on the Delhi army near Jalore.[60] However, other sources state that the idol was taken to Delhi, where it was thrown to be trampled under the feet of Muslims.[61] These sources include the contemporary and near-contemporary texts including Amir Khusrau's Khazainul-Futuh, Ziauddin Barani's Tarikh-i-Firuz Shahi and Jinaprabha Suri's Vividha-tirtha-kalpa. It is possible that the story of Kanhadadeva's rescue of the Somnath idol is a fabrication by the later writers. Alternatively, it is possible that the Khalji army was taking multiple idols to Delhi, and Kanhadadeva's army retrieved one of them.[62]

The temple was rebuilt by Mahipala I, the Chudasama king of Saurashtra in 1308 and the lingam was installed by his son Khengara sometime between 1331 and 1351.[63] As late as the 14th century, Gujarati Muslim pilgrims were noted by Amir Khusrow to stop at that temple to pay their respects before departing for the Hajj pilgrimage.[64] In 1395, the temple was destroyed for the third time by Zafar Khan, the last governor of Gujarat under the Delhi Sultanate and later founder of Gujarat Sultanate.[65] In 1451, it was desecrated by Mahmud Begada, the Sultan of Gujarat.[66]

By 1665, the temple, one of many, was ordered to be destroyed by Mughal emperor Aurangzeb.[67][68] However, the order appears not to have been carried out at that time. Aurangzeb ordered its destruction and conversion into a mosque again in 1706; this order does seem to have been carried out, though very little effort seems to have been put into the conversion.[68]

British Raj edit

 
The Gates from the tomb of Mahmud of Ghazni, stored in the Arsenal of Agra Fort.

In 1842, Edward Law, 1st Earl of Ellenborough issued his Proclamation of the Gates, in which he ordered the British army in Afghanistan to return via Ghazni and bring back to India the sandalwood gates from the tomb of Mahmud of Ghazni in Ghazni, Afghanistan. These were believed to have been taken by Mahmud from Somnath. Under Ellenborough's instruction, General William Nott removed the gates in September 1842. A whole sepoy regiment, the 6th Jat Light Infantry, was detailed to carry the gates back to India[69] in triumph. However, on arrival, they were found not to be of Gujarati or Indian design, and not of Sandalwood, but of Deodar wood (native to Ghazni) and therefore not authentic to Somnath.[70][71] They were placed in the arsenal store-room of the Agra Fort where they still lie to the present day.[72][73] There was a debate in the House of Commons in London in 1843 on the question of the gates of the temple and Ellenbourough's role in the affair.[74][75] After much crossfire between the British Government and the opposition, all of the facts as we know them were laid out.

In the 19th century novel The Moonstone by Wilkie Collins, the diamond of the title is presumed to have been stolen from the temple at Somnath and, according to the historian Romila Thapar, reflects the interest aroused in Britain by the gates. Her 2004 book on Somnath examines the evolution of the historiographies about the legendary Gujarat temple.[76]

Reconstruction during 1950–1951 edit

 
K. M. Munshi with archaeologists and engineers of the Government of India, Bombay, and Saurashtra, with the ruins of Somnath Temple in the background, July 1950.

Before independence, Veraval was part of the Junagadh State, whose ruler had acceded to Pakistan in 1947. India contested the accession and annexed the state after holding a referendum. India's Deputy Prime Minister Vallabhbhai Patel came to Junagadh on 12 November 1947 to direct the stabilization of the state by the Indian Army, at which time he ordered the reconstruction of the Somnath temple.[77]

When Patel, K. M. Munshi and other leaders of the Congress went to Mahatma Gandhi with their proposal to reconstruct the Somnath temple, Gandhi blessed the move but suggested that the funds for the construction should be collected from the public, and the temple should not be funded by the state.[78] Accordingly, The Somnath Trust was established to collect funds and oversee the construction of the temple. Munshi headed the Trust. Being the Civil Supplies minister in the Government of India, Munshi was keen to involve the Government of India in the reconstruction effort, but he was overruled by Nehru.[79]

The ruins were pulled down in October 1950. The mosque present at that site was shifted few kilometres away by using construction vehicles.[80] The new structure was built by the traditional Somapuri builders of temples in Gujarat.[79] On 11 May 1951, Rajendra Prasad, the President of India performed the installation ceremony for the temple at the inviation of Munshi.[81][82]

Temple architecture edit

Pre-11th century temple

The floor plan and ruins of a pre-1000 CE temple were unearthed during the archaeological excavations led by B.K. Thapar. Most of the temple is lost, but the remains of the foundation, the lower structure as well as pieces of the temple ruins suggest an "exquisitely carved, rich" temple. According to Dhaky – a scholar of Indian temple architecture, this is the earliest known version of the Somnath temple. It was, what historic Sanskrit vastu sastra texts call the tri-anga sandhara prasada. Its garbhagriha (sanctum) was connected to a mukhamandapa (entrance hall) and gudhamandapa.[83]

The temple opened to the east. The stylobate of this destroyed temple had two parts: the 3 feet high pitha-socle and the vedibandha-podium. The pitha had a tall bhitta, joined to the jadyakumbha, ornamented with what Dhaky calls "crisp and charming foliage pattern". The kumbha of the Vedibandha had a Surasenaka with a niche that contained the figure of Lakulisa – this evidence affirms that the lost temple was a Shiva temple.[83]

The excavations yielded pieces of one at the western end, which suggests that the kumbhas were aligned to the entire wall. Above the kalaga moulding was an antarapatta, states Dhaky, but no information is available to determine its design or ornamentation. The surviving fragment of the kapotapali that was discovered suggests that at "intervals, it was decorated with contra-posed half thakaras, with large, elegant, and carefully shaped gagarakas in suspension graced the lower edge of the kapotapali", states Dhaky.[83] The garbhagriha had a vedibandha, possibly with a two-layered jangha with images on the main face showing the influence of the late Maha-Maru style. Another fragment found had a "beautifully moulded rounded pillarette and a ribbed khuraccadya-awning topped the khattaka".[83]

The mukhachatuski, states Dhaky, likely broke and fell immediately after the destructive hit by Mahmud's troops. These fragments suffered no further erosion or damage one would normally expect, likely because it was left in the foundation pit of the new Somnath temple that was rebuilt quickly after Mahmud left. The "quality of craftsmanship" in these fragments is "indeed high", the carvings of the lost temple were "rich and exquisite", states Dhaky. Further, a few pieces have an inscription fragment in the 10th-century characters – which suggests that this part of the temple or the entire temple was built in the 10th century.[83]

19th-century ruined Somnath temple partly converted into mosque

The efforts of colonial era archaeologists, photographers and surveyors have yielded several reports on the architecture and arts seen at the Somnath temple ruins in the 19th century.[84] The earliest survey reports of Somnath temple and the condition of the Somanatha-Patan-Veraval town in the 19th century were published between 1830 and 1850 by British officers and scholars. Alexander Burnes surveyed the site in 1830, calling Somnath site as "far-famed temple and city". He wrote:[85]

 
Floor plan of the main Somnath temple, Veraval Gujarat

The great temple of Somnath stands on a rising ground on the north-west side of Pattan, inside the walls, and is only separated by them from the sea. It may be scen from a distance of twenty-five miles. It is a massy stone building, evidently of some antiquity. Unlike Hindu temples gencrally, it consists of three domes, the first of which forms the roof of the entrance, the second is the interior of the temple, the third was the sanctum sanctorum, wherein were deposited the riches of Hindi devotion. The two external domes are diminutive: the central one has an elevation of more than thirty feet, tapering to the summit in fourteen steps, and is about forty feet in diameter. It is perfect, but the images which have once adorned both the interior and exterior of the building are mutilated, and the black polished stones which formed its floor have been removed by the citizens for less pious purposes. Two marble slabs, with sentences from the Koran, and inscriptions regarding Mangrol Isa, point out where that Mohammedan worthy rests. They arc on the western side of the city, and the place is still frequented by the devout Moslem. Near it is a cupola, supported on pillars, to mark the grave of the sultan's cashkeeper, with many others; and the whole city is encircled by the remains of mosques, and one vast cemetery, ‘The field of battle, where the “infidels” were conquered, is also pointed out, and the massy walls, excavated ditch, paved streets, and squared-stone buildings of Pattan itself, proclaim its former greatness. At present the city is a perfect ruin, its houses are nearly unoccupied and but for a new and substantial temple, erected to house the god of Somnath by that wonderful woman, Ahalya Bai, the wife of Holkar.

— Alexander Burnes[85]

He states that the site shows how the temple had been changed into a Muslim structure with arch, these sections had been reconstructed with "mutilated pieces of the temple's exterior" and "inverted Hindu images". Such modifications in the dilapidated Somnath temple to make it into a "Mohammedan sanctuary", states Burnes, is "proof of Mohammedan devastation" of this site.[85] Burnes also summarized some of the mythologies he heard, the bitter communal sentiments and accusations, as well as the statements by garrisoned "Arabs of the Junagar [Junagadh] chief" about their victories in this "infidel land".[85]

The survey report of Captain Postans was published in 1846. He states:[86]

Pattan, and all the part of the country wherein it is situated, is now under a Mohamedan ruler, the Nawab of Junagadh, and the city itself offers the most curious specimen of any I have ever seen of its original Hindu character, preserved throughout its walls, gates, and buildings, despite Mohammedan innovations and a studied attempt to obliterate the traces of paganism ; even the very musjids, which are here and there encountered in the town, have been raised by materials from the sacred edifices of the conquered, or, as it is said by the historians of Sindh, “the true believers turned the temples of the idol worshippers into places of prayer.” Old Pattan is to this day a Hindu city in all but its inhabitants—perhaps one of the most interesting historical spots in Western India. [...] Somnath assumed the appearance it now presents, of a temple evidently of pagan original altered by the introduction of a Mohammedan style of architecture in various portions, but leaving its general plan and minor features unmolested. [...] The temple consists of one large hall in an oblong form, from one end of which proceeds a small square chamber, or sanctum. The centre of the hall is occupied by a noble dome over an octagon of eight arches; the remainder of the roof terraced and supported by numerous pillars. There are three éntrances. The sides of the building face to the cardinal points, and the principal entrance appears to be on the eastern side. These doorways ave unusually high and wide, in the Pyramidal or Egyptian form, decreasing towards the top; they add much to the effect of the building. Internally, the whole presents a scene of complete destruction; the pavement is everywhere covered with heaps of stones and rubbish; the facings of the walls, capitals of the pillars, in short, every portion possessing anything approaching to ornament, having been defaced or removed, (if not by Mahmud, by those who subsequently converted this temple into its present semi-Mohammedan appearance). [...] Externally the whole of the buildings are most elaborately carved and ornamented with figures, single and in groups of various dimensions, Many of them appear to have been of some size; but so laboriously was the work of mutilation carried on here, that of the larger figures scarcely a trunk has been left, whilst few even of the most minute remain uninjured. The western side is the most perfect: here the pillars and ornaments are in excellent preservation. The front entrance is ornamented with a portico, and surmounted by two slender minarets ornaments so much in the Mohammedan style, that they, as well as the domes, have evidently been added to the original building.

— Thomas Postans[86]

A more detailed survey report of Somnath temple ruins was published in 1931 by Henry Cousens.[84] Cousens states that the Somnath temple is dear to the Hindu consciousness, its history and lost splendor remembered by them, and no other temple in Western India is "so famous in the annals of Hinduism as the temple of Somanatha at Somanatha-Pattan". The Hindu pilgrims walk to the ruins here and visit it along with their pilgrimage to Dwarka, Gujarat, though it has been reduced to a 19th-century site of gloom, full of "ruins and graves".[87] His survey report states:[84]

The old temple of Somanatha is situated in the town, and stands upon the shore towards its eastern end, being separated from the sea by a heavily built retaining wall which prevents the former from washing away the ground around the foundations of the shrine. Little now remains of the walls of the temple; they have been, in great measure, rebuilt and patched with rubble to convert the building into a mosque. The great dome, indeed the whole roof and the stumpy minars, one of which remains above the front entrance, are portions of the Muhammadan additions. [...] One fact alone shows that the temple was built on a large scale, and that is the presence in its basement of the asvathara or horse-moulding. It was probably about the same size, in plan, as the Rudra Mala at Siddhapur, being, in length, about 140 feet over all. [...] The walls, or, at least, the outer casing of them, having in great part fallen, there is revealed, in several places, the finished masonry and mouldings of the basement of an older temple, which appears not to have been altogether removed when the temple, we now see, was built, portions of this older temple being apparently left in situ to form the heart and core of the later masonry. [...] For several reasons, I have come to the conclusion that the ruined temple, as it now stands, save for the Muhammadan additions, is a remnant of the temple built by Kumarapala, king of Gujarat, about AD 1169.

— Henry Cousens[88]
Present temple

The present temple is a Māru-Gurjara architecture (also called Chaulukya or Solanki style) temple. It has a "Kailash Mahameru Prasad" form, and reflects the skill of the Sompura Salats, one of Gujarat's master masons.[89]

The architect of the new Somnath temple was Prabhashankarbhai Oghadbhai Sompura, who worked on recovering and integrating the old recoverable parts with the new design in the late 1940s and early 1950s. The new Somnath temple is intricately carved, two level temple with pillared mandapa and 212 relief panels.[90]

 
A wide-angle view – a bit distorted – from the southeast side of the present Somnath temple. Nataraja can be seen on the sukhanasi, along with the two-storey design.

The temple's śikhara, or main spire, is 15 metres (49 ft) in height above the sanctum, and it has an 8.2-metre-tall flag pole at the top.[89] According to Ananda Coomaraswamy – an art and architecture historian, the earlier Somnath temple ruin followed the Solanki-style, which is Nagara architecture inspired by the Vesara ideas found in Western regions of India.[91]

Artwork edit

The rebuilt temple as found in the ruined form in the 19th century and the current temple used recovered parts of previous temple with significant artwork. The new temple has added and integrated the new panels with a few old ones, the color of the stone distinguishing the two. The panels and pillars with historic artwork were and are found in the south and southwest side of the Somnath temple.[92]

In general, the reliefs and sculpture is mutilated, to the point that it is difficult for most to "identify the few images that remain" on panels, states Cousens.[92] An original Nataraja (Tandava Shiva), albeit with chopped arms and defaced, can be seen on the south side. A mutilated Nandi is to the right. To the left of this are traces of Shiva-Parvati, with the goddess seated in his lap.[92] Towards the north-east corner, portions of panels in a band similar to Ramayana scenes in historic Hindu temples can be traced. Sections can be seen with "beautiful vertical mouldings, on either side of the main front doorway", states Cousens, and this suggests that the destroyed temple was "exceedingly richly carved". The temple likely had a galaxy of Vedic and Puranic deities, as one of the partially surviving relief shows Surya's iconography – two lotuses in his hand.[92]

The older temple featured an open plan, with great windows that allow light into the mandapa and circumambulation passage. The intricate and detailed artwork inside and on the pillars of Somnath temple were quite similar to those found in the Luna Vasahi temple at Mount Abu.[93]

Tirtha and festivals edit

The Somnath-Prabhasa tirtha has been one of the revered tirtha (pilgrimage) site for the Hindus. It is the famed Prabhasa site found in Brahmi script inscriptions in Maharashtra sites.[94] It is mentioned in the poems of Kalidasa.[35] The new temple is the top pilgrimage site in Gujarat along with Dwarka.[95]

Archaeological studies edit

The Somnath temple site and coastline has been excavated for archaeological evidence by Indian teams. The first major excavation was completed in 1950–51 just before the Somnath temple was reconstructed. It was led by B. K. Thapar, one of the Director General of Archaeological Survey of India, and a report published. This Thapar study yielded direct and substantial evidence of a 10th-century or earlier large temple.[83] B. K. Thapar estimated the older temple to be from the 9th century, while Dhaky states to more likely from the 10th century, i.e. from 960 to 973 CE.[2][3] The Thapar study also found artifacts and ruins with ancient scripts such as Brahmi and later scripts such as proto-Nagari and Nagari, thus confirming the antiquity of Somnath-Patan through at least much of the 1st-millennium.[96][2]

A few Somnath-Patan sites around the Somnath temple was excavated in the 1970s, led by M. K. Dhavalikar and Z. D. Ansari. They dug deeper at several locations, reported evidence of five periods of human settlement. In 1992, M. K. Dhavalikar and Gregory Possehl – an archaeologist known for his Indus Valley studies, reported their analysis of archaeological discoveries from Prabhas-Patan. According to them, the Somnath site shows evidence of ancient human settlement, from pre-2nd millennium BCE period. They date one period to "pre-Harappan phase". However, these discoveries are all ceramics, wares and jewelry (amulet), and they found no ancient "temple parts".[97] According to Charles Herman's critical review, the evidence available so far does not allow any direct inferences about the society and culture in pre-1st millennium BCE era, but there is persuasive evidence that Prabhas-Patan was an early Harappan site with sedentary farming and cattle keeping and it is in the same league of significance as the Dholavira (Kutch) and Rojdi (Sorath-Harappan) archaeological sites. Further, the Prabhas-Patan mounds that have been excavated show evidence of continued post-Harappan settlement (c. 2000– 1800 BCE) along with several other Saurashtra sites. According to Herman, the archaeological excavations in Prabhas-Patan and Saurashtra region have been too few to make systematic conclusions.[98]

Legacy edit

Iran edit

The Somnath temple has inspired different narratives and legacies, for some a symbol of blessed conquest and victories, for some a symbol of fanatical intolerance and persecution. After the 1026 sack of the Somnath temple, states Mehrdad Shokoohy, the "sack of Somnath was not just yet another campaign of a medieval Sultan confined to histories, but a symbol of the revival of Iranian identity boosted by religious zeal, which was to echo in literature and folklore" for nearly one thousand years. The destruction of the Somnath temple – called Sūmanāt in Persian literature, and the killing of the infidels has been portrayed as a celebrated event in numerous versions of history, stories and poems found in Persia written over the centuries. The Persian literature has made mythical ahistorical connections of Somnath to Manat.[99] The destruction of both has been celebrated by the Islamic scholars and elites.[100][101]

India edit

On the Indian side, the Somnath temple has been more than another house of worship. For Hindus, particularly Hindu nationalists, it is a question of their heritage, their sense of sacred time and space, states Peter van der Veer.[81] Its history raises questions of tolerance and spiritual values to expect, and of a symbol of fanaticism and foreign oppression. The Somnath temple has been leveraged to revisit India's history and agitate over its sacred spaces including contested sites such as Ayodhya.[81] Mahmud and Aurangzeb along with the ideology that inspired them are remembered as enemies of the ancient Hindu nation. They are asserted as two historical facts, the former as the first and the latter as the last systematic destroyers of Somnath temple.[81]

The Somnath temple was used as a cultural symbol and the starting point for a Rath yatra (chariot journey), states K.N. Pannikkar, by Lal Krishna Advani to begin his Ayodhya campaign in 1990.[102][103] According to Donald Smith, the reconstruction efforts in the 1950s was not about restoring an ancient architecture, rather the Somnath temple was of religious significance. The rebuilding was a symbol, it was Hindu repudiation of almost a thousand years of Muslim domination, oppression, and reassertion of a safe haven for Hindus in post-partitioned India.[104]

The reconstructed Somnath temple has been the preferred pilgrimage site for Hindus in Gujarat, often combined with a pilgrimage to Dwarka. The site attracts Hindus from all over India, states David Sopher.[95]

Pakistan and West Asia edit

In the modern era textbooks of Pakistan, the sack of Somnath temple is praised and the campaign of Sultan Mahmud of Ghaznavi is glorified as a "champion of Islam". According to Syed Zaidi – a scholar of Islamist Militancy, a school book in Pakistan titled Our World portrays Somnath temple as a "place where all the Hindu rajas used to get together" and think about "fighting the Muslims". Mahmud went to this temple and "blew the idol in pieces" and "this success was a source of happiness for the whole Muslim world".[105] Another textbook for Pakistan's Middle School repeats a similar narrative, teaching its students that the Somnath temple was not really a Hindu temple but a political center. According to Ashok Behuria and Mohammad Shehzad, the Somnath legacy is narrated in this textbook as, "according to most historians Mahmud invaded India seventeen times to crush the power of the Hindu Rajas and Maharajas who were always busy planning conspiracies against him ... After the fall of Punjab, the Hindus assembled at Somnath — which was more of a political centre than a temple — to plan a big war against Mahmud. He took all the Rajas and Maharajas by surprise when he attacked Somnath and crushed the Hindu headquarter of political intrigue. With the destruction of Somnath he broke the backbone of the Hindus in the region and thus had no need to attack India again".[106]

In Islamic State nationalist literature of the modern era, Sultan Mahmud campaign in the 11th century has been glorified as a historic "jihad against non-Muslims", his motive in destroying Somnath temple is described as "not driven by worldly gain [wealth]", but because he wanted to "end the worship of idols".[107]

Afghanistan edit

In 1842, during the First Anglo-Afghan war, the Governor-General of India Lord Ellenborough ordered his troops to bring the wooden gates from the tomb of Mahmud of Ghazni in Ghazni, Afghanistan back to India; it was believed Mahmud had taken them from Somnath Temple. However, there was nor there is any evidence that Somnath temple or its site ever had any wooden gates. Nor is there any evidence that Mahmud or later conquerors ever took any gates from Prabhas-Patan region as a part of the plunder. This order has been called the Proclamation of the Gates.[108] The order, states Thapar, is best seen as an example of how "colonial intervention in India" was viewed in the 1840s.[109]

Gallery edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ In anthropomorphic representations, a crescent of the moon is shown near Shiva's jata-mukuta (hair). This iconography appears in early texts and temples dated to the 6th-century.[20]
  2. ^ In 2007, Fleming dated the Jnanasamhita to the 10th century, while he suggests a 12th-century date in 2009.[24] Others such as Hazra, Rocher suggest late 10th-century.[25]
  3. ^ In addition to the one at Somnath, the other jyotirlingas are Mallikarjuna at Srisailam in Andhra Pradesh, Mahakaleswar at Ujjain in Madhya Pradesh, Omkareshwar in Madhya Pradesh, Kedarnath in Uttrakhand, Bhimashankar at Pune in Maharashtra, Viswanath at Varanasi in Uttar Pradesh, Tryambakeshwar at Nashik in Maharashtra, Vaijyanath Temple in Deoghar District of Jharkhand, Aundha Nagnath at Aundha in Hingoli District in Maharashtra, Ramanathaswamy Temple at Rameshwaram in Tamil Nadu and Grishneshwar at Ellora near Aurangabad, in Maharashtra.[29][30]
  4. ^ The date for the critical edition of the complete Mahabharata is generally accepted to be c. 400 CE.[34]
  5. ^ Kalidas gives a separate list of jyotirlingas, in which Gokarna is included, but Prabhasa is not.[35]
  6. ^ The post-1950 excavations of the Somnath site have unearthed the earliest known version of the Somnath temple. The excavations showed the foundations of a 10th-century temple, notable broken parts and details of a major, well decorated version of a temple. Madhusudan Dhaky believes it to have been the one that was destroyed by Mahmud of Ghazni.[40][41] B.K. Thapar, the archaeologist who did the excavation, stated that there was definitely a temple structure at Somnath-Patan in the 9th century, but none before.[42]

References edit

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  • George Michell (2001). Encyclopaedia of Indian Temple Architecture: Later Phase, C. AD. 1289-1798. South India. Dravidadesa. American Institute of Indian Studies.
  • George Michell (1977). The Hindu Temple: An Introduction to Its Meaning and Forms. Harper & Row. ISBN 978-0-06-435750-0.
  • George Michell (1989). The Penguin Guide to the Monuments of India: Buddhist, Jain, Hindu. Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0-14-008144-2.
  • George Michell (2000). Hindu Art and Architecture. Thames & Hudson. ISBN 978-0-500-20337-8.
  • Benjamin Rowland (1970). The Art and Architecture of India: Buddhist, Hindu, Jain. Penguin Books.
  • Venugopalam, R. (2003), Meditation: Any Time Any Where, Delhi: B. Jain Publishers (P) Ltd., ISBN 81-8056-373-1
  • Rosa Maria Cimino (1977). "Review: The Riddle of the Temple of Somanātha by M. A. Dhaky and H. P. Shastri". East and West. 27 (1/4): 381–382. JSTOR 29756394.
  • Mishra, S.V.; Ray, Himanshu P. (2016). The Archaeology of Sacred Spaces: The temple in western India, 2nd century BCE–8th century CE. Archaeology and Religion in South Asia. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1-317-19374-6.
  • Sankalia, H.D. (1941). The Archaeology of Gujarat (including Kathiawar). Natwarlal.
  • Sankalia, H.D. (1987). Prehistoric and Historic Archaeology of Gujarat. Munshiram Manoharlal. ISBN 978-81-215-0049-4.
  • Nanavati, J. M.; Dhaky, M. A. (1969). "The Maitraka and the Saindhava Temples of Gujarat". Artibus Asiae. Supplementum. 26. Artibus Asiae Publishers: 3–83. doi:10.2307/1522666. JSTOR 1522666.
  • Rao, T.A.G. (1985). Elements of Hindu Iconography. Motilal Banarsidass. ISBN 978-81-208-0878-2.
  • Rocher, L. (1986). The Purāṇas. History of Indian literature. O. Harrassowitz. ISBN 978-3-447-02522-5.
  • Shokoohy, Mehrdad (2012). "The legacy of Islam in Somnath". Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies. 75 (2). Cambridge University Press: 297–335. doi:10.1017/s0041977x12000493.
  • Vivekananda, Swami. "The Paris Congress of the History of Religions". The Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda. Vol. 4.
  • Thapar, Romila (2004). Somanatha: The Many Voices of a History. Penguin Books India – via archive.org.
  • Yagnik, Achyut; Sheth, Suchitra (2005), The Shaping of Modern Gujarat: Plurality, Hindutva, and Beyond, Penguin Books India, p. 39, ISBN 978-0-14-400038-8
  • Dhaky, M. A.; Shastri, H. P., eds. (1974). The Riddle of the Temple at Somanatha. Bharata Manisha.
  • Cousens, Henry (1931), Somnatha and Other Mediaeval Temples in Kathiawad, India: Archaeological Survey of India, Vol XLV, Imperial Press
  • Henry, Cousens (1931), Somnatha and Other Mediaeval Temples in Kathiawad, India: Archaeological Survey of India, Vol XLV, Imperial Press
  • Shastri, J.L.; Tagare, G.V. (2004). The Bhagavata Purana Part 5: Ancient Indian Tradition and Mythology Volume 11. Motilal Banarsidass. ISBN 978-81-208-3878-9.
  • Wink, Andre (2002). Al-Hind, the Making of the Indo-Islamic World: Early Medieval India and the Expansion of Islam 7Th-11th Centuries. Brill. ISBN 978-0-391-04173-8.
  • Wink, André (1991). Al-Hind the Making of the Indo-Islamic World: The Slave Kings and the Islamic Conquest: 11th-13th Centuries. E.J. Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-10236-1.

Further reading edit

  • Somnath: The Shrine Eternal - by K M.Munshi
  • Kavita Singh (2010), "The Temple's Eternal Return: Swaminarayan Akshardham Complex in Delhi", pp. 73–75,Artibus Asiae, Vol 70, no. 1, academia.edu

External links edit

somnath, temple, somanath, redirects, here, other, uses, somanath, disambiguation, somanath, temple, iast, somanātha, patan, hindu, temple, located, prabhas, patan, veraval, gujarat, india, most, sacred, pilgrimage, sites, hindus, first, among, twelve, jyotirl. Somanath redirects here For other uses see Somanath disambiguation The Somanath temple IAST somanatha or Deo Patan is a Hindu temple located in Prabhas Patan Veraval in Gujarat India It is one of the most sacred pilgrimage sites for Hindus and is the first among the twelve jyotirlinga shrines of Shiva 1 It is unclear when the first version of the Somnath temple was built with estimates varying between the early centuries of the 1st millennium and about the 9th century CE 2 3 The temple is not mentioned in the ancient Sanskrit texts of Hinduism while various texts including the Mahabharata and Bhagavata Purana mention a tirtha pilgrimage site at Prabhas Patan on the coastline of Saurashtra where the temple is presently located there is no evidence that a temple existed at the site in ancient times 4 5 6 Somanatha TempleSomanath MandirReligionAffiliationHinduismDistrictGir SomnathDeityShivaGoverning bodyShree Somnath TrustLocationLocationVeraval Somnath StateGujaratCountryIndiaShown within GujaratShow map of GujaratSomnath temple India Show map of IndiaGeographic coordinates20 53 16 9 N 70 24 5 0 E 20 888028 N 70 401389 E 20 888028 70 401389ArchitectureCreatorUnknown by Unknown Many constructions 1169 by Kumarapala 1308 by Mahipal I 1950 by The Somnath Trust Present structure Completed1951Demolished1026 by Mahmud of Ghazni 1299 by Ulugh Khan 1395 by Muzaffar Shah I 1706 by AurangzebWebsitesomnath wbr org The temple was reconstructed several times in the past after repeated destruction by multiple Muslim invaders and rulers notably starting with an attack by Mahmud Ghazni in the 11th century 7 8 9 10 In the late 19th and early 20th centuries historians and archaeologists of the colonial era actively studied the Somnath temple because its ruins showed a historic Hindu temple that was turning into an Islamic mosque 11 12 13 After India s independence those ruins were demolished and the present Somnath temple was reconstructed in the Maru Gurjara style of Hindu temple architecture The contemporary Somnath temple s reconstruction was started under the orders of the first Deputy Prime Minister of India Vallabhbhai Patel after receiving approval for reconstruction from Mahatma Gandhi The reconstruction was completed in May 1951 after Gandhi s death 14 15 Contents 1 Location 2 Nomenclature and significance 3 Scriptural mentions 4 History 4 1 British Raj 4 2 Reconstruction during 1950 1951 5 Temple architecture 5 1 Artwork 6 Tirtha and festivals 7 Archaeological studies 8 Legacy 8 1 Iran 8 2 India 8 3 Pakistan and West Asia 8 4 Afghanistan 9 Gallery 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 12 1 Bibliography 13 Further reading 14 External linksLocation editThe Somnath temple is located along the coastline in Prabhas Patan Veraval Saurashtra region of Gujarat It is about 400 kilometres 249 mi southwest of Ahmedabad 82 kilometres 51 mi south of Junagadh another major archaeological and pilgrimage site in Gujarat It is about 7 kilometres 4 mi southeast of the Veraval railway junction about 130 kilometres 81 mi southeast of the Porbandar airport and about 85 kilometres 53 mi west of the Diu airport 16 The Somnath temple is located close to the ancient trading port of Veraval one of three in Gujarat from where Indian merchants departed to trade goods The 11th century Persian historian Al Biruni states that Somnath has become so famous because it was the harbor for seafaring people and a station for those who went to and fro between Sufala in the country of Zanj east Africa and China Combined with its repute as an eminent pilgrimage site its location was well known to the kingdoms within the Indian subcontinent 17 18 Literature and epigraphical evidence suggest that the medieval era Veraval port was also actively trading with the Middle East and Southeast Asia This brought wealth and fame to the Veraval area as well as the temple 19 The site of Prabhas Patan was occupied during the Indus Valley Civilisation 2000 1200 BCE It was one of very few sites in the Junagadh district to be so occupied After abandonment in 1200 BCE it was reoccupied in 400 BCE and continued into the historical period Prabhas is also close to the other sites similarly occupied Junagadh Dwarka Padri and Bharuch 19 Nomenclature and significance editSomnath means Lord of the Soma or moon note 1 The site is also called Prabhasa place of splendor 21 Somnath temple has been a jyotirlinga site for the Hindus and a holy place of pilgrimage tirtha It is one of five most revered sites on the seacoast of India along with the nearby Dvaraka in Gujarat Puri in Odisha Rameshvaram and Chidambaram in Tamil Nadu 22 Scriptural mentions editMany Hindu texts provide a list of the most sacred Shiva pilgrimage sites along with a guide for visiting the site The best known were the Mahatmya genre of texts Of these Somnatha temple tops the list of jyotirlingas in the Jnanasamhita chapter 13 of the Shiva Purana and the oldest known text with a list of jyotirlingas Other texts include the Varanasi Mahatmya found in Skanda Purana the Shatarudra Samhita and the Kothirudra Samhita 23 note 2 All either directly mention the Somnath temple as the number one of twelve sites or call the top temple as Somesvara in Saurashtra a synonymous term for this site in these texts 26 27 28 note 3 The exact date of these texts is unknown but based on references they make to other texts and ancient poets or scholars these have been generally dated between the 10th and 12th century with some dating it much earlier and others a bit later 24 25 The Somnath temple is not mentioned in ancient Sanskrit texts of Hinduism but the Prabhasa Pattana is mentioned as a tirtha pilgrimage site 4 For example the Mahabharata c 400 CE in its mature form citation needed in Chapters 109 118 and 119 of the Book Three Vana Parva and Sections 10 45 and 10 78 of the Bhagavata Purana state Prabhasa to be a tirtha on the coastline of Saurashtra 31 6 Alf Hiltebeitel a Sanskrit scholar known for his translations and studies on Indic texts including the Mahabharata states that the appropriate context for the legends and mythologies in the Mahabharata are the Vedic mythologies which it borrowed integrated and re adapted for its times and its audience 32 The Brahmana layer of the Vedic literature already mention tirtha related to the Saraswati river However given the river was nowhere to be seen when the Mahabharata was compiled and finalized the Saraswati legend was modified It vanishes into an underground river then emerges as an underground river at holy sites for sangam confluence already popular with the Hindus The Mahabharata then integrates the Saraswati legend of the Vedic lore with the Prabhasa tirtha states Hiltebeitel 32 The critical editions of the Mahabharata in several chapters and books mentions that this Prabhasa is at a coastline near Dvaraka It is described as a sacred site where Arjuna and Balarama go on tirtha a site where Lord Krishna chooses to go and spends his final days then dies 32 Catherine Ludvik a Religious Studies and Sanskrit scholar concurs with Hiltebeitel She states that the Mahabharata mythologies borrow from the Vedic texts but modify them from Brahmin centered sacrificial rituals to tirtha rituals that are available to everyone the intended audience of the great epic 33 More specifically she states that the sacrificial sessions along the Saraswati river found in sections such as of Pancavimsa Brahmana were modified to tirtha sites in the context of the Saraswati river in sections of Vana Parva and Shalya Parva 33 Thus the mythology of Prabhasa in the Mahabharata which it states to be by the sea near Dwaraka This signifies an expanded context of pilgrimage as a Vedic ritual equivalent integrating Prabhasa that must have been already important as a tirtha site when the Vana Parva and Shalya Parva compilation was complete 33 note 4 The 5th century poem Raghuvamsa of Kalidasa mentions Somanatha Prabhasa as a tirtha along with Prayaga Pushkara Gokarna Bathing in one of these tirthas is meant to release one from the cycle of births and deaths 35 note 5 Archaeologically there is no evidence that a temple existed at the site in ancient times 4 36 History editThe site of Somnath has been a pilgrimage site from ancient times on account of being a Triveni Sangam the confluence of three rivers Kapila Hiran and Saraswati Soma the Moon god is believed to have lost his lustre due to a curse and he bathed in the Sarasvati River at this site to regain it The result is said to be the waxing and waning of the moon The name of the town Prabhasa meaning lustre as well as the alternative name Someshvara the lord of the moon or the moon god arise from this tradition 37 nbsp Ruined Somnath temple 1869 The name Someshvara begins to appear starting in the 9th century The Gurjara Pratihara king Nagabhata II r 805 833 recorded that he has visited tirthas in Saurashtra including Someshvara 38 Romila Thapar states that this does not imply the existence of a temple but rather that it was a pilgrimage site tirtha The Chaulukya Solanki king Mularaja possibly built the first temple for Soma moon god at the site sometime before 997 CE even though some historians believe that he may have renovated a smaller earlier temple 39 note 6 nbsp Mahmud of Ghazni the Turkic Muslim ruler of the Ghaznavid Empire raided India as far as Somnath Mathura and Kannauj in Gurjara Pratihara territory 43 In 1026 during the reign of Bhima I the Turkic Muslim ruler Mahmud of Ghazni raided and plundered the Somnath temple breaking its jyotirlinga He took away a booty of 20 million dinars 44 8 According to Romila Thapar relying on a 1038 inscription of a Kadamba king of Goa the condition of Somnath temple in 1026 after Ghazni s is unclear because the inscription is puzzlingly silent about Ghazni s raid or temple s condition This inscription states Thapar could suggest that instead of destruction it may have been a desecration because the temple seems to have been repaired quickly within twelve years and was an active pilgrimage site by 1038 45 The raid of 1026 by Mahmud is confirmed by the 11th century Persian historian Al Biruni who worked in the court of Mahmud who accompanied Mahmud s troops between 1017 and 1030 CE on some occasions and who lived in the northwest Indian subcontinent region over regular intervals though not continuously 46 The invasion of Somnath site in 1026 CE is also confirmed by other Islamic historians such as Gardizi Ibn Zafir and Ibn al Athir However two Persian sources one by adh Dhahabi and other by al Yafi i state it as 1027 CE which is likely incorrect and late by a year according to Khan a scholar known for his studies on Al Biruni and other Persian historians 47 According to Al Biruni The location of the Somnath temple was a little less than three miles west of the mouth of the river Sarasvati The temple was situated on the coast of the Indian ocean so that at the time of flow the idol was bathed by its water Thus that moon was perpetually occupied in bathing the idol and serving it Translated by M S Khan 47 Al Biruni states that Mahmud destroyed the Somnath temple He states Mahmud s motives as raids undertaken with a view to plunder and to satisfy the righteous iconoclasm of a true Muslim he returned to Ghazna laden with costly spoils from the Hindu temples Al Biruni obliquely criticizes these raids for ruining the prosperity of India creating antagonism among the Hindus for all foreigners and triggering an exodus of scholars of Hindu sciences far away from regions conquered by us 48 49 Mahmud launched many plunder campaigns into India including one that included the sack of Somnath temple 50 nbsp Some of the earliest photos of Somnath temple were taken by Sykes and Nelson in the 19th century They show Somnath Hindu temple partly converted into an Islamic mosque 12 According to Jamal Malik a South Asian history and Islamic Studies scholar the destruction of Somnath temple a well known place of pilgrimage in Gujarat in 1026 played a major role in creating Mahmud as an icon of Islam the sack of this temple became a crucial topic in Persian stories of Islamic iconoclasm 51 Many Muslim historians and scholars in and after the 11th century included the destruction of Somnath as a righteous exemplary deed in their publications It inspired the Persian side with a cultural memory of Somnath s destruction through epics of conquest while to the Hindu side Somnath inspired tales of recovery rebuilding and epics of resistance 51 These tales and chronicles in Persia elevated Mahmud as the exemplary hero and Islamic warrior for the Muslims states Malik while in India Mahmud emerged as the exemplary arch enemy 51 Powerful legends with intricate detail developed in the Turko Persian literature regarding Mahmud s raid 52 According to historian Cynthia Talbot a later tradition states that 50 000 devotees lost their lives in trying to stop Mahmud during his sack of Somnath temple 53 According to Thapar the 50 000 killed is a boastful claim that is constantly reiterated in Muslim texts and becomes a formulaic figure of deaths to help highlight Mahmud s legitimacy in the eyes of established Islam 54 After being exhorted by Bhava Brihaspati a Pashupata ascetic Kumarapala r 1143 72 rebuilt the Somnath temple in excellent stone and studded it with jewels according to an inscription in 1169 He replaced a decaying wooden temple 55 56 57 During its 1299 invasion of Gujarat Alauddin Khalji s army led by Ulugh Khan defeated the Vaghela king Karna and sacked the Somnath temple 58 59 Legends in the later texts Kanhadade Prabandha 15th century and Nainsi ri Khyat 17th century state that the Jalore ruler Kanhadadeva later recovered the Somnath idol and freed the Hindu prisoners after an attack on the Delhi army near Jalore 60 However other sources state that the idol was taken to Delhi where it was thrown to be trampled under the feet of Muslims 61 These sources include the contemporary and near contemporary texts including Amir Khusrau s Khazainul Futuh Ziauddin Barani s Tarikh i Firuz Shahi and Jinaprabha Suri s Vividha tirtha kalpa It is possible that the story of Kanhadadeva s rescue of the Somnath idol is a fabrication by the later writers Alternatively it is possible that the Khalji army was taking multiple idols to Delhi and Kanhadadeva s army retrieved one of them 62 The temple was rebuilt by Mahipala I the Chudasama king of Saurashtra in 1308 and the lingam was installed by his son Khengara sometime between 1331 and 1351 63 As late as the 14th century Gujarati Muslim pilgrims were noted by Amir Khusrow to stop at that temple to pay their respects before departing for the Hajj pilgrimage 64 In 1395 the temple was destroyed for the third time by Zafar Khan the last governor of Gujarat under the Delhi Sultanate and later founder of Gujarat Sultanate 65 In 1451 it was desecrated by Mahmud Begada the Sultan of Gujarat 66 By 1665 the temple one of many was ordered to be destroyed by Mughal emperor Aurangzeb 67 68 However the order appears not to have been carried out at that time Aurangzeb ordered its destruction and conversion into a mosque again in 1706 this order does seem to have been carried out though very little effort seems to have been put into the conversion 68 British Raj edit nbsp The Gates from the tomb of Mahmud of Ghazni stored in the Arsenal of Agra Fort In 1842 Edward Law 1st Earl of Ellenborough issued his Proclamation of the Gates in which he ordered the British army in Afghanistan to return via Ghazni and bring back to India the sandalwood gates from the tomb of Mahmud of Ghazni in Ghazni Afghanistan These were believed to have been taken by Mahmud from Somnath Under Ellenborough s instruction General William Nott removed the gates in September 1842 A whole sepoy regiment the 6th Jat Light Infantry was detailed to carry the gates back to India 69 in triumph However on arrival they were found not to be of Gujarati or Indian design and not of Sandalwood but of Deodar wood native to Ghazni and therefore not authentic to Somnath 70 71 They were placed in the arsenal store room of the Agra Fort where they still lie to the present day 72 73 There was a debate in the House of Commons in London in 1843 on the question of the gates of the temple and Ellenbourough s role in the affair 74 75 After much crossfire between the British Government and the opposition all of the facts as we know them were laid out In the 19th century novel The Moonstone by Wilkie Collins the diamond of the title is presumed to have been stolen from the temple at Somnath and according to the historian Romila Thapar reflects the interest aroused in Britain by the gates Her 2004 book on Somnath examines the evolution of the historiographies about the legendary Gujarat temple 76 Reconstruction during 1950 1951 edit nbsp K M Munshi with archaeologists and engineers of the Government of India Bombay and Saurashtra with the ruins of Somnath Temple in the background July 1950 Before independence Veraval was part of the Junagadh State whose ruler had acceded to Pakistan in 1947 India contested the accession and annexed the state after holding a referendum India s Deputy Prime Minister Vallabhbhai Patel came to Junagadh on 12 November 1947 to direct the stabilization of the state by the Indian Army at which time he ordered the reconstruction of the Somnath temple 77 When Patel K M Munshi and other leaders of the Congress went to Mahatma Gandhi with their proposal to reconstruct the Somnath temple Gandhi blessed the move but suggested that the funds for the construction should be collected from the public and the temple should not be funded by the state 78 Accordingly The Somnath Trust was established to collect funds and oversee the construction of the temple Munshi headed the Trust Being the Civil Supplies minister in the Government of India Munshi was keen to involve the Government of India in the reconstruction effort but he was overruled by Nehru 79 The ruins were pulled down in October 1950 The mosque present at that site was shifted few kilometres away by using construction vehicles 80 The new structure was built by the traditional Somapuri builders of temples in Gujarat 79 On 11 May 1951 Rajendra Prasad the President of India performed the installation ceremony for the temple at the inviation of Munshi 81 82 Temple architecture editPre 11th century temple The floor plan and ruins of a pre 1000 CE temple were unearthed during the archaeological excavations led by B K Thapar Most of the temple is lost but the remains of the foundation the lower structure as well as pieces of the temple ruins suggest an exquisitely carved rich temple According to Dhaky a scholar of Indian temple architecture this is the earliest known version of the Somnath temple It was what historic Sanskrit vastu sastra texts call the tri anga sandhara prasada Its garbhagriha sanctum was connected to a mukhamandapa entrance hall and gudhamandapa 83 The temple opened to the east The stylobate of this destroyed temple had two parts the 3 feet high pitha socle and the vedibandha podium The pitha had a tall bhitta joined to the jadyakumbha ornamented with what Dhaky calls crisp and charming foliage pattern The kumbha of the Vedibandha had a Surasenaka with a niche that contained the figure of Lakulisa this evidence affirms that the lost temple was a Shiva temple 83 The excavations yielded pieces of one at the western end which suggests that the kumbhas were aligned to the entire wall Above the kalaga moulding was an antarapatta states Dhaky but no information is available to determine its design or ornamentation The surviving fragment of the kapotapali that was discovered suggests that at intervals it was decorated with contra posed half thakaras with large elegant and carefully shaped gagarakas in suspension graced the lower edge of the kapotapali states Dhaky 83 The garbhagriha had a vedibandha possibly with a two layered jangha with images on the main face showing the influence of the late Maha Maru style Another fragment found had a beautifully moulded rounded pillarette and a ribbed khuraccadya awning topped the khattaka 83 The mukhachatuski states Dhaky likely broke and fell immediately after the destructive hit by Mahmud s troops These fragments suffered no further erosion or damage one would normally expect likely because it was left in the foundation pit of the new Somnath temple that was rebuilt quickly after Mahmud left The quality of craftsmanship in these fragments is indeed high the carvings of the lost temple were rich and exquisite states Dhaky Further a few pieces have an inscription fragment in the 10th century characters which suggests that this part of the temple or the entire temple was built in the 10th century 83 19th century ruined Somnath temple partly converted into mosque The efforts of colonial era archaeologists photographers and surveyors have yielded several reports on the architecture and arts seen at the Somnath temple ruins in the 19th century 84 The earliest survey reports of Somnath temple and the condition of the Somanatha Patan Veraval town in the 19th century were published between 1830 and 1850 by British officers and scholars Alexander Burnes surveyed the site in 1830 calling Somnath site as far famed temple and city He wrote 85 nbsp Floor plan of the main Somnath temple Veraval Gujarat The great temple of Somnath stands on a rising ground on the north west side of Pattan inside the walls and is only separated by them from the sea It may be scen from a distance of twenty five miles It is a massy stone building evidently of some antiquity Unlike Hindu temples gencrally it consists of three domes the first of which forms the roof of the entrance the second is the interior of the temple the third was the sanctum sanctorum wherein were deposited the riches of Hindi devotion The two external domes are diminutive the central one has an elevation of more than thirty feet tapering to the summit in fourteen steps and is about forty feet in diameter It is perfect but the images which have once adorned both the interior and exterior of the building are mutilated and the black polished stones which formed its floor have been removed by the citizens for less pious purposes Two marble slabs with sentences from the Koran and inscriptions regarding Mangrol Isa point out where that Mohammedan worthy rests They arc on the western side of the city and the place is still frequented by the devout Moslem Near it is a cupola supported on pillars to mark the grave of the sultan s cashkeeper with many others and the whole city is encircled by the remains of mosques and one vast cemetery The field of battle where the infidels were conquered is also pointed out and the massy walls excavated ditch paved streets and squared stone buildings of Pattan itself proclaim its former greatness At present the city is a perfect ruin its houses are nearly unoccupied and but for a new and substantial temple erected to house the god of Somnath by that wonderful woman Ahalya Bai the wife of Holkar Alexander Burnes 85 He states that the site shows how the temple had been changed into a Muslim structure with arch these sections had been reconstructed with mutilated pieces of the temple s exterior and inverted Hindu images Such modifications in the dilapidated Somnath temple to make it into a Mohammedan sanctuary states Burnes is proof of Mohammedan devastation of this site 85 Burnes also summarized some of the mythologies he heard the bitter communal sentiments and accusations as well as the statements by garrisoned Arabs of the Junagar Junagadh chief about their victories in this infidel land 85 The survey report of Captain Postans was published in 1846 He states 86 Pattan and all the part of the country wherein it is situated is now under a Mohamedan ruler the Nawab of Junagadh and the city itself offers the most curious specimen of any I have ever seen of its original Hindu character preserved throughout its walls gates and buildings despite Mohammedan innovations and a studied attempt to obliterate the traces of paganism even the very musjids which are here and there encountered in the town have been raised by materials from the sacred edifices of the conquered or as it is said by the historians of Sindh the true believers turned the temples of the idol worshippers into places of prayer Old Pattan is to this day a Hindu city in all but its inhabitants perhaps one of the most interesting historical spots in Western India Somnath assumed the appearance it now presents of a temple evidently of pagan original altered by the introduction of a Mohammedan style of architecture in various portions but leaving its general plan and minor features unmolested The temple consists of one large hall in an oblong form from one end of which proceeds a small square chamber or sanctum The centre of the hall is occupied by a noble dome over an octagon of eight arches the remainder of the roof terraced and supported by numerous pillars There are three entrances The sides of the building face to the cardinal points and the principal entrance appears to be on the eastern side These doorways ave unusually high and wide in the Pyramidal or Egyptian form decreasing towards the top they add much to the effect of the building Internally the whole presents a scene of complete destruction the pavement is everywhere covered with heaps of stones and rubbish the facings of the walls capitals of the pillars in short every portion possessing anything approaching to ornament having been defaced or removed if not by Mahmud by those who subsequently converted this temple into its present semi Mohammedan appearance Externally the whole of the buildings are most elaborately carved and ornamented with figures single and in groups of various dimensions Many of them appear to have been of some size but so laboriously was the work of mutilation carried on here that of the larger figures scarcely a trunk has been left whilst few even of the most minute remain uninjured The western side is the most perfect here the pillars and ornaments are in excellent preservation The front entrance is ornamented with a portico and surmounted by two slender minarets ornaments so much in the Mohammedan style that they as well as the domes have evidently been added to the original building Thomas Postans 86 A more detailed survey report of Somnath temple ruins was published in 1931 by Henry Cousens 84 Cousens states that the Somnath temple is dear to the Hindu consciousness its history and lost splendor remembered by them and no other temple in Western India is so famous in the annals of Hinduism as the temple of Somanatha at Somanatha Pattan The Hindu pilgrims walk to the ruins here and visit it along with their pilgrimage to Dwarka Gujarat though it has been reduced to a 19th century site of gloom full of ruins and graves 87 His survey report states 84 The old temple of Somanatha is situated in the town and stands upon the shore towards its eastern end being separated from the sea by a heavily built retaining wall which prevents the former from washing away the ground around the foundations of the shrine Little now remains of the walls of the temple they have been in great measure rebuilt and patched with rubble to convert the building into a mosque The great dome indeed the whole roof and the stumpy minars one of which remains above the front entrance are portions of the Muhammadan additions One fact alone shows that the temple was built on a large scale and that is the presence in its basement of the asvathara or horse moulding It was probably about the same size in plan as the Rudra Mala at Siddhapur being in length about 140 feet over all The walls or at least the outer casing of them having in great part fallen there is revealed in several places the finished masonry and mouldings of the basement of an older temple which appears not to have been altogether removed when the temple we now see was built portions of this older temple being apparently left in situ to form the heart and core of the later masonry For several reasons I have come to the conclusion that the ruined temple as it now stands save for the Muhammadan additions is a remnant of the temple built by Kumarapala king of Gujarat about AD 1169 Henry Cousens 88 Present temple The present temple is a Maru Gurjara architecture also called Chaulukya or Solanki style temple It has a Kailash Mahameru Prasad form and reflects the skill of the Sompura Salats one of Gujarat s master masons 89 The architect of the new Somnath temple was Prabhashankarbhai Oghadbhai Sompura who worked on recovering and integrating the old recoverable parts with the new design in the late 1940s and early 1950s The new Somnath temple is intricately carved two level temple with pillared mandapa and 212 relief panels 90 nbsp A wide angle view a bit distorted from the southeast side of the present Somnath temple Nataraja can be seen on the sukhanasi along with the two storey design The temple s sikhara or main spire is 15 metres 49 ft in height above the sanctum and it has an 8 2 metre tall flag pole at the top 89 According to Ananda Coomaraswamy an art and architecture historian the earlier Somnath temple ruin followed the Solanki style which is Nagara architecture inspired by the Vesara ideas found in Western regions of India 91 Artwork edit The rebuilt temple as found in the ruined form in the 19th century and the current temple used recovered parts of previous temple with significant artwork The new temple has added and integrated the new panels with a few old ones the color of the stone distinguishing the two The panels and pillars with historic artwork were and are found in the south and southwest side of the Somnath temple 92 In general the reliefs and sculpture is mutilated to the point that it is difficult for most to identify the few images that remain on panels states Cousens 92 An original Nataraja Tandava Shiva albeit with chopped arms and defaced can be seen on the south side A mutilated Nandi is to the right To the left of this are traces of Shiva Parvati with the goddess seated in his lap 92 Towards the north east corner portions of panels in a band similar to Ramayana scenes in historic Hindu temples can be traced Sections can be seen with beautiful vertical mouldings on either side of the main front doorway states Cousens and this suggests that the destroyed temple was exceedingly richly carved The temple likely had a galaxy of Vedic and Puranic deities as one of the partially surviving relief shows Surya s iconography two lotuses in his hand 92 The older temple featured an open plan with great windows that allow light into the mandapa and circumambulation passage The intricate and detailed artwork inside and on the pillars of Somnath temple were quite similar to those found in the Luna Vasahi temple at Mount Abu 93 Tirtha and festivals editThe Somnath Prabhasa tirtha has been one of the revered tirtha pilgrimage site for the Hindus It is the famed Prabhasa site found in Brahmi script inscriptions in Maharashtra sites 94 It is mentioned in the poems of Kalidasa 35 The new temple is the top pilgrimage site in Gujarat along with Dwarka 95 Archaeological studies editThe Somnath temple site and coastline has been excavated for archaeological evidence by Indian teams The first major excavation was completed in 1950 51 just before the Somnath temple was reconstructed It was led by B K Thapar one of the Director General of Archaeological Survey of India and a report published This Thapar study yielded direct and substantial evidence of a 10th century or earlier large temple 83 B K Thapar estimated the older temple to be from the 9th century while Dhaky states to more likely from the 10th century i e from 960 to 973 CE 2 3 The Thapar study also found artifacts and ruins with ancient scripts such as Brahmi and later scripts such as proto Nagari and Nagari thus confirming the antiquity of Somnath Patan through at least much of the 1st millennium 96 2 A few Somnath Patan sites around the Somnath temple was excavated in the 1970s led by M K Dhavalikar and Z D Ansari They dug deeper at several locations reported evidence of five periods of human settlement In 1992 M K Dhavalikar and Gregory Possehl an archaeologist known for his Indus Valley studies reported their analysis of archaeological discoveries from Prabhas Patan According to them the Somnath site shows evidence of ancient human settlement from pre 2nd millennium BCE period They date one period to pre Harappan phase However these discoveries are all ceramics wares and jewelry amulet and they found no ancient temple parts 97 According to Charles Herman s critical review the evidence available so far does not allow any direct inferences about the society and culture in pre 1st millennium BCE era but there is persuasive evidence that Prabhas Patan was an early Harappan site with sedentary farming and cattle keeping and it is in the same league of significance as the Dholavira Kutch and Rojdi Sorath Harappan archaeological sites Further the Prabhas Patan mounds that have been excavated show evidence of continued post Harappan settlement c 2000 1800 BCE along with several other Saurashtra sites According to Herman the archaeological excavations in Prabhas Patan and Saurashtra region have been too few to make systematic conclusions 98 Legacy editIran edit The Somnath temple has inspired different narratives and legacies for some a symbol of blessed conquest and victories for some a symbol of fanatical intolerance and persecution After the 1026 sack of the Somnath temple states Mehrdad Shokoohy the sack of Somnath was not just yet another campaign of a medieval Sultan confined to histories but a symbol of the revival of Iranian identity boosted by religious zeal which was to echo in literature and folklore for nearly one thousand years The destruction of the Somnath temple called Sumanat in Persian literature and the killing of the infidels has been portrayed as a celebrated event in numerous versions of history stories and poems found in Persia written over the centuries The Persian literature has made mythical ahistorical connections of Somnath to Manat 99 The destruction of both has been celebrated by the Islamic scholars and elites 100 101 India edit On the Indian side the Somnath temple has been more than another house of worship For Hindus particularly Hindu nationalists it is a question of their heritage their sense of sacred time and space states Peter van der Veer 81 Its history raises questions of tolerance and spiritual values to expect and of a symbol of fanaticism and foreign oppression The Somnath temple has been leveraged to revisit India s history and agitate over its sacred spaces including contested sites such as Ayodhya 81 Mahmud and Aurangzeb along with the ideology that inspired them are remembered as enemies of the ancient Hindu nation They are asserted as two historical facts the former as the first and the latter as the last systematic destroyers of Somnath temple 81 The Somnath temple was used as a cultural symbol and the starting point for a Rath yatra chariot journey states K N Pannikkar by Lal Krishna Advani to begin his Ayodhya campaign in 1990 102 103 According to Donald Smith the reconstruction efforts in the 1950s was not about restoring an ancient architecture rather the Somnath temple was of religious significance The rebuilding was a symbol it was Hindu repudiation of almost a thousand years of Muslim domination oppression and reassertion of a safe haven for Hindus in post partitioned India 104 The reconstructed Somnath temple has been the preferred pilgrimage site for Hindus in Gujarat often combined with a pilgrimage to Dwarka The site attracts Hindus from all over India states David Sopher 95 Pakistan and West Asia edit In the modern era textbooks of Pakistan the sack of Somnath temple is praised and the campaign of Sultan Mahmud of Ghaznavi is glorified as a champion of Islam According to Syed Zaidi a scholar of Islamist Militancy a school book in Pakistan titled Our World portrays Somnath temple as a place where all the Hindu rajas used to get together and think about fighting the Muslims Mahmud went to this temple and blew the idol in pieces and this success was a source of happiness for the whole Muslim world 105 Another textbook for Pakistan s Middle School repeats a similar narrative teaching its students that the Somnath temple was not really a Hindu temple but a political center According to Ashok Behuria and Mohammad Shehzad the Somnath legacy is narrated in this textbook as according to most historians Mahmud invaded India seventeen times to crush the power of the Hindu Rajas and Maharajas who were always busy planning conspiracies against him After the fall of Punjab the Hindus assembled at Somnath which was more of a political centre than a temple to plan a big war against Mahmud He took all the Rajas and Maharajas by surprise when he attacked Somnath and crushed the Hindu headquarter of political intrigue With the destruction of Somnath he broke the backbone of the Hindus in the region and thus had no need to attack India again 106 In Islamic State nationalist literature of the modern era Sultan Mahmud campaign in the 11th century has been glorified as a historic jihad against non Muslims his motive in destroying Somnath temple is described as not driven by worldly gain wealth but because he wanted to end the worship of idols 107 Afghanistan edit In 1842 during the First Anglo Afghan war the Governor General of India Lord Ellenborough ordered his troops to bring the wooden gates from the tomb of Mahmud of Ghazni in Ghazni Afghanistan back to India it was believed Mahmud had taken them from Somnath Temple However there was nor there is any evidence that Somnath temple or its site ever had any wooden gates Nor is there any evidence that Mahmud or later conquerors ever took any gates from Prabhas Patan region as a part of the plunder This order has been called the Proclamation of the Gates 108 The order states Thapar is best seen as an example of how colonial intervention in India was viewed in the 1840s 109 Gallery edit nbsp Somnath converted into mosque partly correct partly embellished sketch 1850 CE nbsp Somnath Temple in 1957 nbsp Somnath Temple in 2012 nbsp Brahma Shiva Vishnu above mukhamandapa nbsp Somnath Temple at dawnSee also editBhalka Conversion of non Islamic places of worship into mosques Kashi Vishwanath Temple DwarkaNotes edit In anthropomorphic representations a crescent of the moon is shown near Shiva s jata mukuta hair This iconography appears in early texts and temples dated to the 6th century 20 In 2007 Fleming dated the Jnanasamhita to the 10th century while he suggests a 12th century date in 2009 24 Others such as Hazra Rocher suggest late 10th century 25 In addition to the one at Somnath the other jyotirlingas are Mallikarjuna at Srisailam in Andhra Pradesh Mahakaleswar at Ujjain in Madhya Pradesh Omkareshwar in Madhya Pradesh Kedarnath in Uttrakhand Bhimashankar at Pune in Maharashtra Viswanath at Varanasi in Uttar Pradesh Tryambakeshwar at Nashik in Maharashtra Vaijyanath Temple in Deoghar District of Jharkhand Aundha Nagnath at Aundha in Hingoli District in Maharashtra Ramanathaswamy Temple at Rameshwaram in Tamil Nadu and Grishneshwar at Ellora near Aurangabad in Maharashtra 29 30 The date for the critical edition of the complete Mahabharata is generally accepted to be c 400 CE 34 Kalidas gives a separate list of jyotirlingas in which Gokarna is included but Prabhasa is not 35 The post 1950 excavations of the Somnath site have unearthed the earliest known version of the Somnath temple The excavations showed the foundations of a 10th century temple notable broken parts and details of a major well decorated version of a temple Madhusudan Dhaky believes it to have been the one that was destroyed by Mahmud of Ghazni 40 41 B K Thapar the archaeologist who did the excavation stated that there was definitely a temple structure at Somnath Patan in the 9th century but none before 42 References edit Somnath darshan Official website of Somnath Temple Archived from the original on 28 August 2017 Retrieved 19 December 2016 a b c Dhaky amp Shastri 1974 a b Rosa Maria Cimino 1977 a b c Thapar 2005 p 18 19 Chapter 2 Mishra amp Ray 2016 p 22 In the case of Somanatha one has to rely solely on literary evidence as even though excavations reveal an early settlement at the site there is no evidence for the early existence of a temple at the site In the Mahabharata Prabhas Patan has been described as a sacred tirtha located on the coast of the sea Vana Parva Ch 109 a b Shastri amp Tagare 2004 pp 1934 2113 Yagnik amp Sheth 2005 pp 39 40 47 50 a b Thapar 2005 pp 36 37 Catherine B Asher Cynthia Talbot 2006 India before Europe Sterling Publishers p 42 ISBN 9781139915618 Thapar 2004 pp 68 69 Cousens 1931 pp 15 18 a b The Somanatha temple at Prabhas Patan D H Sykes and Henry Counsens British Library Archives 2021 Shakshi 2012 pp 304 306 with Figure 4 sfn error no target CITEREFShakshi2012 help Gopal Ram 1994 Hindu culture during and after Muslim rule survival and subsequent challenges M D Publications Pvt Ltd p 148 ISBN 81 85880 26 3 Jaffrelot Christophe 1996 The Hindu nationalist movement and Indian politics 1925 to the 1990s C Hurst amp Co Publishers p 84 ISBN 1 85065 170 1 Shree Somnath Jyotirlinga Temple Tourism Corporation of Gujarat Limited a State Government company Government of Gujarat 2021 Chakravarti 2020 pp Chapter 11 Mishra amp Ray 2016 pp 234 241 a b Mishra amp Ray 2016 pp 14 184 187 234 241 Rao 1985 pp 26 30 Plates VII amp VIII Eck 1999 p 291 Eck Diana L 1981 India s Tirthas Crossings in Sacred Geography History of Religions 20 4 335 context 323 344 doi 10 1086 462878 JSTOR 1062459 S2CID 161997590 Fleming 2009 pp 54 74 75 a b Fleming 2009 p 68 footnote 19 a b Rocher 1986 pp 222 227 Dhaky amp Shastri 1974 p 32 with footnotes Thapar 2004 p 24 Eck 1999 p 291 Quote Among them is Somesvara or Somnath the Moon s Lord located on the seacoast in the western peninsula of Gujarat Venugopalam 2003 pp 92 95 Chaturvedi 2006 pp 58 72 Mishra amp Ray 2016 pp 22 23 a b c Hiltebeitel 2001 pp 139 141 144 151 152 with footnotes a b c Ludvik 2007 pp 100 103 with footnotes Wendy Doniger 2015 Mahabharata Hindu literature Encyclopaedia Britannica a b c Eck Diana L 2012 India A Sacred Geography Harmony pp 82 83 ISBN 978 0 385 53191 7 Mishra amp Ray 2016 p 22 In the case of Somanatha one has to rely solely on literary evidence as even though excavations reveal an early settlement at the site there is no evidence for the early existence of a temple at the site In the Mahabharata Prabhas Patan has been described as a sacred tirtha located on the coast of the sea Vana Parva Ch 109 Thapar 2005 pp 18 23 24 Dhaky amp Shastri 1974 p 32 cited in Thapar 2005 p 23 Thapar 2005 pp 23 24 Dhaky 1998 pp 285 287 Dhaky amp Shastri 1974 pp 1 7 Rosa Maria Cimino 1977 pp 381 382 Chandra Satish 2004 Medieval India From Sultanat to the Mughals Delhi Sultanat 1206 1526 Part One Har Anand Publications pp 19 20 ISBN 978 81 241 1064 5 Yagnik amp Sheth 2005 pp 39 40 Thapar 2005 p 75 Khan 1976 pp 90 91 with footnotes a b Khan 1976 pp 95 96 with footnotes Deming D 2014 Science and Technology in World History Volume 2 Early Christianity the Rise of Islam and the Middle Ages McFarland Publishers p 100 ISBN 978 0 7864 5642 0 Khan 1976 pp 105 with footnote 82 Stuurman S 2017 The Invention of Humanity Equality and Cultural Difference in World History Harvard University Press pp 156 157 ISBN 978 0 674 97751 8 Quote Between 1000 and 1025 the king Mahmud mounted no less than seventeen campaigns into India one of which the sack of the great Shiva temple of Somnath in Gujarat yielded a booty of 6500 kilos of gold not to mention the slaves arms richly ornamented robes precious jewels tapestries and war elephants brought to Ghazna by Mahmud s victorious army Al Biruni accompanied his master Mahmud on several of these campaigns a b c Malik Jamal 2008 Islam in South Asia A Short History Brill Academic pp 88 90 ISBN 978 90 04 16859 6 Thapar 2005 Chapter 3 Cynthia Talbot 2007 p 20 Quote At that time he sacked the Somanatha temple built about fifty years earlier by the western Indian king of Gujarat see Map 2 1 This coastal area was a prosperous and wealthy one thanks to vigorous maritime trading activities According to a later tradition 50 000 devotees lost their lives in trying to stop Mahmud from not only taking the temple s considerable wealth but also destroying the form of the Hindu god Shiva housed within it Subsequent kings of the Gujarat region constructed a much grander and elaborate temple in place of the one that Mahmud had destroyed sfn error no target CITEREFCynthia Talbot2007 help Thapar 2005 p 51 But Mahmud s legitimacy in the eyes of established Islam also derived from the constant reiteration that he was a Sunni who attacked the heretics the Ismai ilis and Shi as in India and Persia The boast is always that their mosques were closed or destroyed and that invariably 50 000 of them were killed The figure becomes formulaic a part of the rhetoric for killing irrespective of whether they were Hindu kafirs or Muslim heretics G Buhler Vajeshaṅkar G Ozha 1889 The Somnathpattan Prasasti of Bhava Bṛihaspati Wiener Zeitschrift fur die Kunde des Morgenlandes 3 Wiener Zeitschrift Fur Die Kunde Des Morgenlandes 3 2 JSTOR 23854140 Thapar 2005 p 79 Yagnik amp Sheth 2005 p 40 Yagnik amp Sheth 2005 p 47 Eaton 2000 Temple desecration in pre modern India Frontline p 73 item 16 of the Table Archived by Columbia University Ashok Kumar Srivastava 1979 The Chahamanas of Jalor Sahitya Sansar Prakashan pp 39 40 OCLC 12737199 Kishori Saran Lal 1950 History of the Khaljis 1290 1320 Allahabad The Indian Press p 85 OCLC 685167335 Dasharatha Sharma 1959 Early Chauhan Dynasties S Chand Motilal Banarsidass p 162 ISBN 9780842606189 OCLC 3624414 Temples of India Prabhat Prakashan 1968 Retrieved 1 November 2014 Flood Finbarr Barry 2009 Objects of Translation Material Culture and Medieval Hindu Muslim Encounter Princeton University Press p 43 ISBN 9780691125947 Yagnik amp Sheth 2005 p 49 Yagnik amp Sheth 2005 p 50 Satish Chandra Medieval India From Sultanat to the Mughals Har Anand 2009 278 a b Thapar 2004 pp 68 69 Battle of Kabul 1842 britishbattles com Retrieved 16 October 2017 Mosque and Tomb of the Emperor Sultan Mahmood of Ghuznee British Library Archived from the original on 11 January 2012 Retrieved 1 November 2014 Havell Ernest Binfield 2003 A Handbook to Agra and the Taj Asian Educational Services pp 62 63 ISBN 8120617118 Retrieved 16 October 2017 John Clark Marshman 1867 The History of India from the Earliest Period to the Close of Lord Dalhousie s Administration Longmans Green pp 230 231 George Smith 1878 The Life of John Wilson D D F R S For Fifty Years Philanthropist and Scholar in the East John Murray pp 304 310 The United Kingdom House of Commons Debate 9 March 1943 on The Somnath Prabhas Patan Proclamation Junagadh 1948 584 602 620 630 32 656 674 The Gates of Somnath by Thomas Babington Macaulay a speech in the House of Commons March 9 1843 Columbia University in the City of New York Retrieved 5 August 2016 Thapar 2004 p 170 Hindustan Times 15 Nov 1947 Marie Cruz Gabriel Rediscovery of India A silence in the city and other stories Published by Orient Blackswan 1996 ISBN 81 250 0828 4 ISBN 978 81 250 0828 6 a b Thapar 2004 pp 197 198 Mir Jaffar Barkriwala The Glorious Destruction of Hindoo Temples in Kathiawar and their replacement Ul Akbari Publications Bharuch 1902 a b c d Van der Veer Peter 1992 Ayodhya and Somnath Eternal Shrines Contested Histores Social Research 59 1 85 87 95 96 with footnotes JSTOR 40970685 Thapar 2004 p 199 a b c d e f Dhaky 1998 pp 285 287 with Plates 648 661 in Part 3 2 for photographs a b c Cousens 1931 pp 11 28 a b c d Burnes Alexander 1839 Account of the Remains of the Celebrated Temple at Pattan Somnath Sacked by Mahmud of Ghizni AD 1024 The Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland 5 1 Cambridge University Press 104 107 doi 10 1017 S0035869X00015173 JSTOR 25181974 S2CID 163352567 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain a b Postans Captain 1846 A Few Observations on the Temple of Somnath Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland 8 172 175 doi 10 1017 S0035869X00142789 JSTOR 25207608 S2CID 163925101 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Cousens 1931 pp 11 13 Cousens 1931 pp 13 14 a b Shree Somnath Trust Jay Somnath Somnath org Archived from the original on 30 October 2011 Retrieved 1 November 2014 Scriver P Srivastava A 2015 India Modern Architectures in History pp 314 315 ISBN 978 1 78023 468 7 A Coomaraswamy 1927 History of Indian and Indonesian Art Museum of Fine Arts Edward Goldston p 111 a b c d Cousens 1931 p 16 Cousens 1931 p 17 E Senart 1903 The Inscriptions in the Cave at Karle Epigraphia Indica Vol 7 1902 03 pp 57 58 for more on Nahapana pp 58 61 a b Sopher David E 1968 Pilgrim Circulation in Gujarat Geographical Review 58 3 American Geographical Society Wiley 407 412 doi 10 2307 212564 JSTOR 212564 B R Thapar 1951 Excavation work in the precincts of the Somnath Temple Deputation of Shri B K Thapar for the work 1950 National Archives of India Abhilekh Government of India pp 1 102 M K Dhavalikar and Gregory L Possehl 1992 The pre Harappan period at Prabhas Patan and the Pre Harappan Phase in Gujarat Man and Environment Volume XVII Issue 1 pp 70 78 Herman Charles Frank 1996 Harappan Gujarat The Archaeology Chronology Connection Paleorient 22 2 89 90 99 100 context 77 112 doi 10 3406 paleo 1996 4637 JSTOR 41492666 Homerin Th Emil 1983 Sa di s Somnatiyah Iranian Studies 16 1 2 31 50 doi 10 1080 00210868308701604 ISSN 0021 0862 JSTOR 4310402 Shokoohy 2012 pp 298 299 Aliakbar Dehkhoda 1994 Loghatname Encyclopedic Dictionary Editors Mohammad Mo in And Ja far Shahidi Entry Sumanat Persian Language OCLC 15716628 Panikkar K N 1993 Religious Symbols and Political Mobilization The Agitation for a Mandir at Ayodhya Social Scientist 21 7 8 63 78 doi 10 2307 3520346 JSTOR 3520346 Ellen Christensen 2003 C E Toffolo M C Young eds Emancipating Cultural Pluralism State University of New York Press pp 164 172 173 ISBN 978 0 7914 5598 2 Smith Donald E 2015 India as a Secular State Princeton University Press p 386 ISBN 978 1 4008 7778 2 Zaidi Syed Manzar Abbas 2011 Polarisation of social studies textbooks in Pakistan The Curriculum Journal 22 1 Wiley 50 51 doi 10 1080 09585176 2011 550770 S2CID 143484786 Behuria Ashok K Shehzad Mohammad 2013 Partition of History in Textbooks in Pakistan Implications of Selective Memory and Forgetting Strategic Analysis 37 3 364 footnote 29 context 353 365 doi 10 1080 09700161 2013 782664 S2CID 143730050 Aggarwal Neil 2018 Representations of Mahmud of Ghazni in the Islamic State s texts Contemporary South Asia 26 1 90 with image on p 89 context 86 96 doi 10 1080 09584935 2018 1430747 S2CID 149964716 Balaji Sadasivan 2011 The Dancing Girl ISEAS Publishing Singapore pp 118 125 ISBN 9789814311687 Thapar 2004 pp Chapter 7 Bibliography edit Vinayak Bharne Krupali Krusche 2014 Rediscovering the Hindu Temple The Sacred Architecture and Urbanism of India Cambridge Scholars Publishing ISBN 978 1 4438 6734 4 T Richard Blurton 1993 Hindu Art Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 39189 5 Chakravarti R 2020 Trade and Traders in Early Indian Society Manohar ISBN 978 1 000 17012 2 Chaturvedi B K 2006 Shiv Purana First ed New Delhi Diamond Pocket Books P Ltd ISBN 81 7182 721 7 Thomas E Donaldson 1985 Hindu Temple Art of Orissa Brill ISBN 978 90 04 07173 5 James Fergusson Richard Phene Spiers 1910 History of Indian and Eastern Architecture John Murray James Fergusson 1967 History of Indian and Eastern Architecture Volume 2 Munshiram Manoharlal James Fergusson 1876 History of Indian and Eastern Architecture Volume 3 J Murray Fleming Benjamin J 2009 Mapping Sacred Geography in Medieval India The Case of the Twelve Jyotirlingas International Journal of Hindu Studies 13 1 Springer 51 81 doi 10 1007 s11407 009 9069 0 JSTOR 40343806 S2CID 145421231 Eck Diana L 1999 Banaras city of light First ed New York Columbia University Press ISBN 0 231 11447 8 Gwynne Paul 2009 World Religions in Practice A Comparative Introduction Oxford Blackwell Publication ISBN 978 1 4051 6702 4 Hardin Elizabeth U 1998 God the Father Kali The Black Goddess of Dakshineswar Motilal Banarsidass pp 156 157 ISBN 978 81 208 1450 9 James C Harle 1994 The Art and Architecture of the Indian Subcontinent Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 06217 5 Susan L Huntington John C Huntington 2014 The Art of Ancient India Buddhist Hindu Jain Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 3617 4 Adam Hardy 2007 The Temple Architecture of India Wiley ISBN 978 0 470 02827 8 Adam Hardy 1995 Indian Temple Architecture Form and Transformation the Karṇaṭa Draviḍa Tradition 7th to 13th Centuries Abhinav Publications ISBN 978 81 7017 312 0 Khan M S 1976 al Biruni and the Political History of India Oriens 25 86 115 doi 10 2307 1580658 JSTOR 1580658 Stella Kramrisch 1996 The Hindu Temple Volume 1 Motilal Banarsidass Stella Kramrisch 1976 The Hindu Temple Volume 2 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 0224 7 Lochtefeld James G 2002 The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hinduism A M Rosen Publishing Group p 122 ISBN 0 8239 3179 X Hiltebeitel Alf 2001 Rethinking the Mahabharata A Reader s Guide to the Education of the Dharma King University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 34054 8 Ludvik Catherine 2007 Sarasvati Riverine Goddess of Knowledge From the Manuscript carrying Viṇa player to the Weapon wielding Defender of the Dharma Brill s Indological Library Brill Academic ISBN 978 90 04 15814 6 Michael W Meister Madhusudan Dhaky 1983 Encyclopaedia of Indian Temple Architecture Volume 1 Part 1 South India Text amp Plates American Institute of Indian Studies ISBN 9780691040530 M A Dhaky Michael W Meister 1983 Encyclopaedia of Indian Temple Architecture Volume 1 Part 2 South India Text amp Plates University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 978 0 8122 7992 4 Madhusudan A Dhaky Michael Meister 1996 Encyclopaedia of Indian Temple Architecture Volume 1 Part 3 South India Text amp Plates American Institute of Indian Studies ISBN 978 81 86526 00 2 Michael W Meister Madhusudan A Dhaky 1983 Encyclopaedia of Indian Temple Architecture Volume 1 Part 4 South India Text amp Plates American Institute of Indian Studies ISBN 978 81 7304 436 6 Michael W Meister Madhusudan A Dhaky Krishna Deva 1983 Encyclopaedia of Indian Temple Architecture Volume 2 Part 1 North India Text amp Plates American Institute of Indian Studies ISBN 9780691040530 Michael W Meister Madhusudan A Dhaky Encyclopaedia of Indian Temple Architecture Volume 2 Part 2 North India Text amp Plates University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 978 0 691 04094 3 Dhaky Madhusudan A 1998 Encyclopaedia of Indian Temple Architecture Volume 2 Part 3 North India Text amp Plates American Institute of Indian Studies ISBN 978 81 7304 225 6 George Michell 2001 Encyclopaedia of Indian Temple Architecture Later Phase C AD 1289 1798 South India Dravidadesa American Institute of Indian Studies George Michell 1977 The Hindu Temple An Introduction to Its Meaning and Forms Harper amp Row ISBN 978 0 06 435750 0 George Michell 1989 The Penguin Guide to the Monuments of India Buddhist Jain Hindu Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 008144 2 George Michell 2000 Hindu Art and Architecture Thames amp Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 20337 8 Benjamin Rowland 1970 The Art and Architecture of India Buddhist Hindu Jain Penguin Books Venugopalam R 2003 Meditation Any Time Any Where Delhi B Jain Publishers P Ltd ISBN 81 8056 373 1 Rosa Maria Cimino 1977 Review The Riddle of the Temple of Somanatha by M A Dhaky and H P Shastri East and West 27 1 4 381 382 JSTOR 29756394 Mishra S V Ray Himanshu P 2016 The Archaeology of Sacred Spaces The temple in western India 2nd century BCE 8th century CE Archaeology and Religion in South Asia Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1 317 19374 6 Sankalia H D 1941 The Archaeology of Gujarat including Kathiawar Natwarlal Sankalia H D 1987 Prehistoric and Historic Archaeology of Gujarat Munshiram Manoharlal ISBN 978 81 215 0049 4 Nanavati J M Dhaky M A 1969 The Maitraka and the Saindhava Temples of Gujarat Artibus Asiae Supplementum 26 Artibus Asiae Publishers 3 83 doi 10 2307 1522666 JSTOR 1522666 Rao T A G 1985 Elements of Hindu Iconography Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 0878 2 Rocher L 1986 The Puraṇas History of Indian literature O Harrassowitz ISBN 978 3 447 02522 5 Shokoohy Mehrdad 2012 The legacy of Islam in Somnath Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 75 2 Cambridge University Press 297 335 doi 10 1017 s0041977x12000493 Vivekananda Swami The Paris Congress of the History of Religions The Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda Vol 4 Thapar Romila 2004 Somanatha The Many Voices of a History Penguin Books India via archive org Thapar Romila 2005 Somanatha The Many Voices of a History Verso ISBN 1 84467 020 1 via archive org Yagnik Achyut Sheth Suchitra 2005 The Shaping of Modern Gujarat Plurality Hindutva and Beyond Penguin Books India p 39 ISBN 978 0 14 400038 8 Dhaky M A Shastri H P eds 1974 The Riddle of the Temple at Somanatha Bharata Manisha Cousens Henry 1931 Somnatha and Other Mediaeval Temples in Kathiawad India Archaeological Survey of India Vol XLV Imperial Press Henry Cousens 1931 Somnatha and Other Mediaeval Temples in Kathiawad India Archaeological Survey of India Vol XLV Imperial Press Shastri J L Tagare G V 2004 The Bhagavata Purana Part 5 Ancient Indian Tradition and Mythology Volume 11 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 3878 9 Wink Andre 2002 Al Hind the Making of the Indo Islamic World Early Medieval India and the Expansion of Islam 7Th 11th Centuries Brill ISBN 978 0 391 04173 8 Wink Andre 1991 Al Hind the Making of the Indo Islamic World The Slave Kings and the Islamic Conquest 11th 13th Centuries E J Brill ISBN 978 90 04 10236 1 Further reading editSomnath The Shrine Eternal by K M Munshi Kavita Singh 2010 The Temple s Eternal Return Swaminarayan Akshardham Complex in Delhi pp 73 75 Artibus Asiae Vol 70 no 1 academia eduExternal links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Somnath temple nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Somnath Temple Somnath Temple Official Website Archived 7 May 2020 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Somnath temple amp oldid 1218436886, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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