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Madanmohan Temple |
We
were on to Bankura the clay-horse town. It was an interesting journey through
the crowds and chaos of Bardhaman and the urban scene of Durgapur. I have never
had the occasion to see as many millions of cycle rickshaws as in Bardhaman.
They clogged the roads. Worse they were crowding around th entry and exit of
the Railway Station. Bardhaman is supposed to be reckoned as the heritage city
of West Bengal and, they say, there is much to see but I got upset by the
unruly cycle rickshaws.
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Jorbangla temple |
So we headed further north towards Bankura.
Bankura
is just like any mofussil town - dusty and disorganized. Shops are here, there
and everywhere. The most visible thing that is on sale is the famed Bankura
horse – of terracotta as well of wood – of various dimensions. Some were
carefully worked on, some even had semi-precious stones affixed at strategic
places to make them look more beautiful. I had two huge terracotta horses of about
6 f
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Rasmanch |
t. height in my office so I was not really interested. My wife did buy some
for gifting away.
We
then moved into Bishnupur which is known for its terracotta temples. We have
been almost all over India where we had seen temples made of granite, sandstone,
marble or slate but we had never come across terracotta temples. Bishnupur has
them in quite good numbers. Some of them eve have living deities.
Bishnupur
is a municipality in the Bamkura Distt. Ironically there was a
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Another of those terracotta temples |
time, of course,
long back when Bankura used to be within the administrative jurisdiction of
Bishnupur. But the times have changed and Bankura got developed leaving
Bishnupur behind. The history of Bishnupur stretches back to the Gupta period
but for our purposes its recent history is more relevant. For almost a thousand
years Bishnupur was the capital of Mallabhum ruled by Mallas of which Bankura
was a part. The
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details of a panel on a temple |
Malla rulers were Vaishnavites and they built here the
exquisite terracotta buildings including temples. These have now become objects
of tourists’ interest.
Although
the place required many more days we could spend only two days as we had to get
back to Kolkata. To that extent our experience was poorer.
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