Category:Bilhari, Katni district
village with numerous 8th to 10th-century monuments in Madhya Pradesh | |||||
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Location | Madhya Pradesh, India | ||||
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Bilhari – also referred to as Pushpavati, sometimes Vilvavapi in historic texts – was a major Hindu and Jain temples, Shiva monastery, fort and palace site in pre-13th century central India. It is now a village about 14 kilometers southwest of Katni, Madhya Pradesh. According to Krishna Deva – a historian and scholar of Indian temple architecture, the surviving parts of original Bilhari temples are from the 8th century, the large Shiva monastery and its temple were built by queen Nohala between 900–950 CE as evidenced by inscriptions found here, and all other temple remains range between the 8th and 11th-century. This was once a very large ruins site, and many panels from the lost temples and damaged monastery were retrieved and used in construction of village houses and buildings during the colonial era.
Bilhari was destroyed in Sultanate invasions of this region. It has been one of the source of numerous post-Gupta through Kalchuri era Hindu and Jain artwork. Its historic fame is from the legend of Madhavanala and Kamakandala – a love story found in Hindu texts, also in Jain and Muslim versions. The story is the subject of several Mughal era paintings.
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Media in category "Bilhari, Katni district"
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An 18th century Bundela architecture temple in Bilhari, Madhya Pradesh.jpg 3,024 × 4,032; 7.45 MB
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Bilhari historic sites map, Katni district, Madhya Pradesh.jpg 1,706 × 2,446; 251 KB