Tigawa Temples – History
The site is located on a plateau
near the Kaimur range of hills, with belts of rocks, where ancient Indians used
the local geology to build numerous small dams to harvest rainwater into water
reservoirs that locals call jhils. These reservoirs extend from Bahuriband
to the north of Tigawa. The local tradition is that there was in the distant
past a large city in that location, which would explain the numerous mounds
found in their region and when excavated, these mounds have yielded broken
pottery and bricks.
Alexander Cunningham speculated in
1879 that the Bahuriband (also Bahulaband, about 4 kilometers (2.5 mi)
south of Tigawa) may have been the city that Ptolemy transliterated as
Tholabana. The name Tigawa (Tigowa, Tigoan, Tigwan) may be derived from
"Tri-gawa" or "three villages", referring to the
neighboring villages of Amgowa and Deori. Local tradition believes that it once
had a fort and it was part of a major town named Jhanjhangarh, a suburb of
ancient Bahuriband.
Alexander Cunningham visited
Tigawa in 1873 and reported the antiquities of the town. He mentions a
rectangular mound of 250 feet long and 120 feet wide which was entirely covered
with large blocks of cut-stones. These stones were parts of ruins of various
temples, all fallen ace but one which was in good state of preservation. He was
told that the mound was utterly destroyed by a railway contractor who collected
all the squared stones in a heap together to be used in railway construction.
It is mentioned that two hundred carts were used to bring this heap to the foot
of hill. The local villagers submitted a petition to the British official in
Jabalpur, to stop the desecration. This rapacious and destructive activity was
stopped by an order from the Deputy Commissioner of Jabalpur, but damage was
done till that time.
Cunningham estimated that the
temple would have been about 19.5 feet square. One stone temple that was too
big for the railway project remained untouched, which locals call the Kankali
Devi Temple and further scholarship identified it to be one of the oldest Hindu
temples of the Gupta era. An upset Alexander Cunningham wrote, "to
the railway contractor the finest temple is only a heap of ready squared
stones", and "the temple of Jerusalem, a ready quarry is to him, and
it is nothing more".
The Tigawa is generally dated to
the early 5th century, though some scholars have dated it to other
periods. After comparing it to the hundreds of Buddhist, Hindu and Jain
monuments he had seen during his tours, Cunningham argued based on stylistic
grounds, iconography, and architecture, that the original Tigawa temple
undoubtedly belongs to the Gupta period, and cannot, therefore, be later than
the fifth century A.D.; but it is more probably as old as the third
century".
He counted basements of at least
thirty-six temples on this mound. The temples were in varying sizes from 4 feet
square to 15 feet square. The temples of modest size, 4 to 6 feet square, were
covered on three sides and open on east. Temples of medium size, 7 to 10 feet
square, were covered on all sides with a doorway on the eastern sides, whereas
the large temples, from 10 to 15 feet square, were having an additional portico
in front. All these temple, which ruins are only left, were having a shikhara
with amalaka on top. No Buddhist or Jaina antiquity was found by Cunningham.
In 1957, Mate narrowed the
estimate for the Tigawa temple to fourth or fifth century, along with those for
Udayagiri and Sanchi. Percy Brown, in 1959, estimated that the Udayagiri
is older, adding that the Sanchi and Tigawa temples were probably completed
between 400 and 450 CE. Later scholarship has largely placed the Tigawa
temple in the early 5th century, or 400-425 CE range.
It may assumed that the
religious activity witnessed a tremendous growth at Tigawa after the
construction of the first temple, which is the same one which is standing at
present as well. That earliest temple is dated to the Gupta period; hence all
the other temples would have been built after this one only. It may be also
assumed that after the disintegration of the Gupta empire, rulers of small
kingdoms were forced to focus over a small region for all their activities and
Tigawa was one such center. It would be hard to say in which time all these
additional shrines were constructed however as the region was under influence
of the Kalchuris for a long period, these activities may be assigned to them.
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