Bharkuleswar Temple, Bhumara,
Satna – History
The archaeologist Alexander Cunningham visited the
Bhumara site to confirm local reports of Thari pathar (standing
stone) during his 1873-1874 tour of the Central Indian region. He found the
stone and the important Bhumra inscription which he published, but he missed
the temple that was then mostly covered by forest of shrubs and mango, haritaki
and amalaka trees. John Faithfull Fleet translated the
inscription in 1888, and it mentioned two kings named Hastin and Sarvanatha.
The pillar inscription also described the boundary between their kingdoms and
gave an inscription date per ancient Indian calendar that equals 484 CE.
Decades later, over the
1919-1920 period, the Archaeological Survey of India sent a sketch artist named
Wartekar and a photographer named Joglekar together to revisit the site. They
aimed to check out the local villager claims of many temple ruins on the
plateau and the northern face of the hills. The dense forest limited the extent
of their search, but they found the Bhumara temple. They reported it to be
small single cell structure with a slab roof near an unusual soil mound, and
that the temple's door was "magnificently carved".
The first report indicated that
stones were sticking out of the temple that suggested the temple was originally
much bigger. They also reported that broken pillars and ruins surrounded it. The
Archaeological Survey of India then sent a larger team, excavated the mound and
discovered numerous sculptures. Among these were
a chaitya-window shaped panel with a circular medallion and the
sculpture of Ganesha, jumbled remains of mandapa and temple
parts. The site was next cleaned up, cleared of the forest growth and the
first repairs to the temple was undertaken in early 1920s. During this
cleaning, clearing and repairs, states Banerjee, many more "sculptures and
their fragments, pillar fragments, lintels, jambs with a number of images"
were found.
The Bhumara Shiva temple has
been variously dated. Early estimates in the 1920s placed it either in the
second half of the 5th century or the early 6th century.
With additional analysis of inscriptions and a comparative study of its design
with other Gupta era temples, the temple is generally dated to late fifth
century. According to Heather Elgood, it is a 5th century temple. Frederick
Asher dates it to about 475 CE. Michael Meister and others date it to late 5th
century. George Michell states that the precise dating of the Bhumara
Shiva temple, Nachna Parvati temple and Deogarh Vishnu temple is
uncertain, but they existed by the 6th century.
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