Kedarnath Mandir (,
Kēdārnāth Maṃdir) is one of the holiest
Hindu temples dedicated to
Lord Shiva and is located atop the Garhwal
Himalayan range near the
Mandakini river in
Kedarnath,
Uttarakhand in
India. Due to extreme weather conditions, the temple is open only between the end of April to Kartik Purnima (the autumn full moon). During the winters, the murtis (idols) from Kedarnath temple are brought to
Ukhimath and worshipped there for six months. In this region Lord
Shiva is worshipped as Kedarnath, the 'Lord of Kedar Khand', the historical name of the region. This temple is a
Paadal Petra Sthalam (the 275
Holy Abodes of Shiva on the continent), praised by the Tamil
Nayanars saints in the 6th-9th century CE.
The temple is not directly accessible by road and has to be reached by a 14 km uphill trek from
Gaurikund . The temple is believed to have been built by
Adi Sankaracharya and is one of the twelve
Jyotirlingas, the holiest Hindu shrines of Shiva. The older temple existed from the times of
Mahabharata, when the
Pandavas are supposed to have pleased Shiva by doing penance in
Kedarnath. The temple is also one of the four major sites in India's
Chota Char Dham pilgrimage of Northern Himalayas.
Temple and significance
The actual temple is an impressive stone edifice of unknown date. During the war between the Kauravas and Pandavas, the kith and kin of the Pandavas were killed; in order to absolve themselves of this sin, the Pandavas...
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