Krishna Janmasthan Temple Complex, Mathura – History
According to Hindu traditions, Krishna was born to Devaki and Vasudeva in a prison cell where they were confined by his
maternal uncle Kansa, a king of Mathura, due to prophecy of his death by the child of
Devaki. According to tradition, a temple dedicated to Krishna was built
the birthplace by his great grandson Vajranabh. The present site known as Krishna Janmasthan (birthplace
of Krishna) was known as Katra (market place) Keshavdeva. The archeological
excavations of the site had revealed pottery and terracotta from 6th
century BC. It also produced some Jain sculptures as well as a large Buddhist complex including Yasha Vihara, a monastery,
belonging to Gupta period (c. 400).
In 1018, Mahmud
of Ghazni attacked and plundered Mahaban. Ghazni's scribe, though not accompanying him on the
expedition, Al Utbi describes in his Tarikh-i-Yamini neighboring holy
town which is identified as Mathura. He wrote, "In the centre of the city
there was a huge and magnificent temple, which the people believed wasn’t built
by men but by the angels. Any description of the temple, either in words or in
pictures, would fall short and fail to convey its beauty." Mahmud of
Ghazni wrote, "if any one wished to construct a building equal to it, he
would not be able to do so without spending a hundred million dinars, and the
work would occupy two hundred years, even though the most able and experienced
workmen were employed."
He ordered to burn all the temples and demolish them. He
plundered gold and silver idols and carried away a load of hundred
camels. A stone inscription in Sanskrit found from the site mentions that
in Vikrama Samvat 1207 (1150) a person named Jajja who may have been
a vassal of Gahadavala king
built a Vishnu temple which was 'brilliantly white and touching the
clouds'. Vaishnava saints Chaitanya Mahaprabhu and Vallabha
Acharya visited Mathura in early 16th
century.
Abdullah, in the reign of Mughal
emperor Jahangir, mentions in Tarikh-i-Daudi the destruction
of Mathura and its temples by Delhi
Sultan Sikander
Lodi in 16th century. Lodi had prohibited
Hindus from bathing in the river and shaving of heads on the banks as
well. In the reign of Jahangir, in 1618, Raja
Veer Singh Deva Bundela of Orchha had built a temple at the cost of thirty-three
lakhs. A French traveler Tavernier visited Mathura in 1650 and had described the
octagonal temple built in red sand stone.
Italian traveller Niccolao
Manucci who worked in Mughal court
has also described the temple. Mughal prince Dara
Shikoh had patronized the temple and
donated a railing to the temple. The railing was removed by Mathura
governor Abdun Nabi Khan on the order of Mughal emperor Aurangzeb and he built Jama mosque on the ruins of the Hindu
temples. During the Jat rebellion in Mathura, Abdul Nabi Khan was killed in
1669. Aurangzeb attacked Mathura and destroyed that Keshavdeva temple in 1670
and built Shahi Eidgah in its place.
Mathura fell under British control in 1803. The East India Company auctioned the
land of Katra and it was purchased by Raja Patnimal, a wealthy
banker of Banaras. Raja Patnimal wanted to build the temple but could not
do so. His descendants inherited the land of Katra. His descendant Raj Krishna
Das was challenged, for the ownership of 13.37 acres of land on which the
shrine and the Eidgah is situated, in two civil suits by the Muslims of Mathura
but the Allahabad High Court ruled in favour of Raj Krishna Das in both suits
in 1935. Kailashnath Katju and Madanmohan Chaturvedi had helped in
lawsuits.
Politician and educationist Madan Mohan Malviya acquired the land from Raj Krishna Das on 7
February 1944 at the cost of Rs. 13,000 with financial help of
Industrialist Jugal Kishore Birla. Following death of Malviya, Jugal Kishore Birla formed
a trust named Shri Krishna Janma Bhoomi Trust, later registered as the Shri
Krishna Janmasthan Seva Sansthan, on 21 February 1951 and acquired the land. Jugal
Kishore Birla entrusted the construction of the new temple with another
industrialist and philanthropist Jaidayal
Dalmia.
The construction of the temple complex was started in
October 1953 with leveling of lands and completed in February 1982. His eldest
son Vishnu Hari Dalmia succeeded him and served on the Trust until his
death. His grandson Anurag Dalmia is Joint Managing Trustee on the
Trust. In 1968, the Trust and the Shahi Eidgah committee reached an
agreement which granted the temple land to the Trust and the management of the
Eidgah to the Eidgah committee as well no legal claim of the Trust on the
Eidgah.
Following the demolition of the Babri Mosque in 1992, Manohar Lal Sharma, a resident of Vrindavan, has filed a petition in the Mathura District Court
challenging the 1968 agreement as well as a petition to quash the Places of
Religious Worship Act of 1991 which preserves the status quo as on 15 August
1947 for all places of worship. Ganesh Vasudev Mavalankar was the first chairman of the Trust. He was
succeeded by M. A. Ayyangar, followed by Akhandananda
Saraswathi and Ramdev Maharaj.
Nrityagopaldas is the present chairman.
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