Mundeshwari Temple, Kaura,
Kaimur – History
Mundeshwari Temple is an ancient
temple dedicated to the worship of Lord
Shiva and Shakti and is considered one of the oldest
Hindu temples in India. It is also considered as the oldest functional Hindu
temple of India. The
information plaque erected by the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI)
at the site indicates the dating of the temple to 625 CE. Hindu inscriptions
dated 625 CE were found in the temple. The temple is a protected monument
under ASI since 1915.
British
Archeologist Buchanan was one of the first to notice and document the
ancient ruins on the hills; but as he mentions, he could not conveniently see
the ruins probably because of the height of the hill. His account is therefore
based on the sketches or drawings of the painter sent by him for the purpose.
Neither Alexander Cunningham nor any of his assistants surveyed or explored the
ruins. Another colonial explorer Bloch’s reports for the years 1902 to
1904 adds some more information.
There
was an inscription on a stone slab at the temple, which had broken into two
pieces, one of which was found in1892, and the other in 1903 by Bloch
in the course of clearance of the debris. Both the pieces are now in
the Indian Museum, Kolkata. It was edited by R D Banerji in 1907 and by N
Majumdar in 1920. The inscription refers to King Udayasena and to the
date 30 of an unspecified era. It records erection of a matha of the
god Viniteshwara and an endowment to provide for the offerings from
the store room of Sri Mandaleshwara Swami Pada of the temple of Sri Narayana.
The
reference to Sri Narayana was not satisfactorily explained either by RD Banerji
or by N Majumdar. According to Bloch, the inscription refers to the erection of
a temple of Narayana close to the temple of Viniteshwara, thus suggesting
evidence of another temple on the hill; but of the existence of such a
Vaishnava temple, there seems to be no indication at present, since the
carvings among the ruins are primarily, if not exclusively Shaivite in
character. The donor of the record is taken to be Bhagudalana by Banerji;
while Majumdar takes him as Gomibhatta, the dandanayaka.
The
reading of the inscription as well as the dating, are still open to question.
The inscription as well as the ruins, are generally believed to belong to the
fourth century. Prof Banerji took the year 30 to refer to the Harsha era
commencing from 606 AD, and assigned the epigraph to 636 AD, which was also
included as the date in the original Gazetteers of Shahabad in 1906 and 1924.
Dr. Banerji’s view was however not shared by others.
Mr N G
Mazumdar studied the palaeographic peculiarities of the inscription and
referred to the year 30 to the Gupta era 318-19 AD, and held the date of the
inscription to 348-49 AD. Dr D R Bhandarkar also considered the
inscription to be much earlier than the fourth century AD. According
to some scholars, the inscription which has a reference to Udayasena, is
associated with a satrap of Pataliputra in “shak samvat” year 30 whom the
Kushanas had made the ruler. Shak Samvat year 30 when juxtaposed with the
Christian calendar coincides with 108 AD by that account. Further,
the script also corresponds to the Shaka times, and prior to the Gupta age.
Buchanan
also knew of an inscription on a loose stone at some distance from the temple
referring to the name Mundeshwara; but it is not clear whether he is referring
to the same inscription as referred by Bloch. This is a point which is to be
verified by the drawing of his inscription taken by Buchanan. Dr. K C Panigrahi
appears to have correctly related the three names in the inscriptions, namely
Narayana, Vinitesvara and Mandalesvara. According to the commonly accepted
story, which was also mentioned by Buchanan and Martin, Munda, the brother of
Chanda, had established the Goddess Mundeshvari.
The
real history of the shrine was apparently forgotten, and the people came fondly
to believe that the Goddess was established by Munda. According to Panigrahi,
this temple had seen “three periods of religious history viz. (i) When it
was a Vaishnava temple of the God Narayana, (ii) When it was converted
into a Shaiva temple of Viniteshwara, a name of Lord Shiva and (iii) When
it was last converted into the temple dedicated to the Goddess Mundeshwari,
perhaps under the Chero kings, who were Saktas.
The
earliest sanctuary was of the 4th or 5th century AD, the
existing ruins representing mostly the second period of its history, belong to
the 7th century AD. Along the road to the temple is a large oval
shaped boulder, about 10 feet in diameter, the upper surface of which is
smoothed and carved with a 6-armed Yaksha figure, in relief, flying away to the
left, with a large elephant in two of his hands raised overhead.” To the left
of the Yaksha, he says, are traces of a small female figure seated on a stool,
and below him a fox or a jackal. Below the figure are a few letters
of inscription in Gupta characters. The figure appears to be much older
than the Mundeshwari temple.
Short
records in Gupta characters containing only names of pilgrims are also reported
to exist on the hill. Munda was a Chero king. Francis Buchanan and Martin were
wrong in thinking that he had established the image of the Goddess Mundeshvari. The
aboriginal tribes in this part of the country are more prone to worship the
female deities and there can be no wonder that Shaktism flourished with the
Chero kings and the deity of Mundeshvari, representing Shakti, came to be
worshipped as the principal deity of the temple, where she was a minor image at
one time.
The
history of the temples in India shows that very few images installed in the
central position have been subordinated to other deities fixed in the niches. Interestingly,
a few years back noted BHU historian I S Roy found a Ceylonese seal while
walking on a field adjacent to the hill near Mundeshwari temple. The
pyramid-shaped stone seal with inscriptions in Brahmi script along with
photograph also find mention in one of Roy’s articles in a Numismatic Society
of India journal published in 2004. Maharaja Dutthagamani (101-77 BC),
a powerful independent king of Ceylon (Sri Lanka), had constructed a great
stupa and a large assembly of priests attended its consecration ceremony in the
Mundeshwari hills.
According
to experts, the seal acted as passport for Ceylonese pilgrims and ensured safe
passage during their long journey through various kingdoms to Buddhist
pilgrimage centres in India. Experts believe that earlier routes to Buddhist
centres at Kushinagar in Uttar Pradesh and Kapilvastu in Nepal were via
Mundeshwari temple in Bihar’s Kaimur district. The discovery of a royal seal of
the Sri Lankan ruler Maharaja Dutthagamani (101-77 BC) at the site in 2003 has
taken back the history of the region by several centuries.
In the
year 2003, a man called Jahanvi Shekhar Rai discovered a seal near the shrine
which he sent to the Sampoornanand Sanskrit university at Varanasi for deciphering.
The linguistic experts there concluded that the seal belonged to “Maharaja Dutthagamani”,
who according to “Mahavansh Granthawali” in Buddhist literature, belonged to Anuradhapura
dynasty and ruled Ceylon between 104-77 BC. P C
Roy Choudhury mentions “It is also remarkable that this temple appears to have
been left unmolested when Muslim rule under Sher Shah was set up in this area.
The neighboring
Chayanpur fort was one of the citadels of Sher Shah and the Muslim pockets in
the neighbouring villages suggest that a much larger Muslim population had
lived in the area when Muslim rule was predominant. The ravages to Mundeshvari
are not man-made but due to the passage of time. The temple may already have
been in a ruined state owing to disrepair over time, and thus may have escaped
the attention of invaders, and thus survived. Interestingly, the present
caretaker of the temple is Muslim, yet another example of the religious harmony
at the grassroots level in India.
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