Kulpak
Author:Laxman Burdak, IFS (R) |
Kulpak (कुलपाक), also Kolanupaka, is a village in Aler City, Yadadri district, Telangana, India.[1][2] There is a 2,000 year old Jain temple at the village.
Origin
Variants
- Kulapaka (कुलपाक) (AS, p.209)
- Kolanupaka
- Kulpakji
History
Kulpakji also Kolanupaka Temple is a 2,000 year old [3][4] Jain temple at the village of Kolanupaka in Aler City, Yadadri district, Telangana, India.[5][6] The temple houses three idols: one each of Lord Rishabhanatha, Lord Neminatha, and Lord Mahavira. The image of Lord Rishabhanatha, carved of a green stone has been historically famous as "Manikyaswami".[7] The temple is about 80 km from Hyderabad on the Hyderabad-Warangal Highway NH 163.
Kolanupaka Temple temple is more than 2,000 years old. A number of Jain antiquities have been discovered in Kulpakji. A grant mentioning a gift to a basadi during the rile of Sanfkaragana (9th century) has been found at Akunur.[8] Kolanupaka flourished as a Jain center during the kakatiyas period[9] Over 20 Jain inscriptions have been found at Kulpak.[10] Inscriptions suggest that the Kulpak was a major center of Kranur Gana of Mula Sangh. A manastambha with an inscription of 1125 AD has been found. A 12th-century inscription found in the temple mentions Meghachadra Siddhantadeva who entered sallekhana. The Jain activity declined after 1276 AD. Jain activity was re-established in 1711 AD when the temple of Manikyaswani was renovated and a boundary wall was erected.
In Vividha Tirtha Kalpa (14th century) of Jinaprabhasuri the sections Kulyapak Rishabhadeva Stuti and Kollapakamanikyadeva Tirthakalpa.[11] He mentions that according to legends, the Manikyasami image was originally worshipped by Mandodari, the wife of Ravana. It was brought here by the ruler Sankar of Kalyana.
According to some legends the main temple is said to have been built by Bharat Chakravarti. Jainism was prevalent in Andhra Pradesh before the 4th century, and Kolanupaka was one of the prominent centres of Jainism from early times.[12] The temple,was recently renovated[13] by employing more than 150 artisans from Rajasthan and Gujarat.[14]
कुलपाक
विजयेन्द्र कुमार माथुर[15] ने लेख किया है ... कुलपाक (AS, p.209) नलगोंडा ज़िला, आन्ध्र प्रदेश (वर्तमान तेलंगाना) में स्थित ऐतिहासिक स्थान है। यह स्थान भोनगिरी से 20 मील (लगभग 32 कि.मी.) की दूरी पर सिद्दी पेट सड़क पर स्थित है। इस ऐतिहासिक स्थान के प्राचीन मंदिर के निकट उत्खनन द्वारा अनेक सुंदर मूर्तियाँ प्राप्त हुईं हैं, जिनमें नौ तीर्थंकरों की मूर्तियाँ भी हैं। यहाँ से प्राप्त मूर्तियों में संगमरमर की बनी महाविष्णु की मूर्ति, मूर्तिकला का उत्कृष्ट उदाहरण है। कुलपाक जैन धर्म के लोगों का तीर्थ स्थान है। यहाँ जैन कलचुरी नरेश शंकरगण ने बारह ग्रामों का दान दिया था। इसका समय सातवीं शती ई. में माना गया है।
External links
References
- ↑ The Hindu : Andhra Pradesh / Hyderabad News : Kolanupaka temple to be re-opened
- ↑ The Hindu : Andhra Pradesh / Hyderabad News : School toppers feted
- ↑ District Profile". Telangana government.
- ↑ "Places of interest - Jain Temple at Kolanpak or Kolanupaka". Warangal Police.
- ↑ The Hindu : Andhra Pradesh / Hyderabad News : Kolanupaka temple to be re-opened
- ↑ The Hindu : Andhra Pradesh / Hyderabad News : School toppers feted
- ↑ Chatterjee, Saurabh (14 May 2017). "Legacy of the Rashtrakutas". Telangana Today.
- ↑ Jain Monuments of Andhra, G. Jawaharlal, Sharda Publishing House, Delhi, 2002, (Chap. 5, Kulpak -A Jain Tirth Kshetra, p. 94-100
- ↑ Spirituality sculpted ARUNA CHANDARAJU, The Hindu, 23 January 2014 http://www.thehindu.com/features/friday-review/history-and-culture/spirituality-sculpted/article5610052.ece
- ↑ Jain Monuments of Andhra, G. Jawaharlal, Sharda Publishing House, Delhi, 2002, (Chap. 5, Kulpak -A Jain Tirth Kshetra, p. 94-100
- ↑ Vividha Tirtha Kalpa of Jinaprabhasuri, Editor: Jinavijaya, Simghi Jain Granthmala, 1934, p. 97, 101
- ↑ BSL Hanumantha Rao, The Jain Relics of Kolanupak, Arhat vacana, October 1992, pp. 7–11
- ↑ History of Oswals, Jain Chanchalmal Lodha, Panchshil Publications, 2005 p. 228
- ↑ Kulpakji Jain Temple, 10 September 2012, http://www.herenow4u.net/index.php?id=88652
- ↑ Aitihasik Sthanavali by Vijayendra Kumar Mathur, p.209