- Grishneshwar
Grishneshwar, also known as Ghushmeshwar, is a famous
Hindu temple dedicated toLord Shiva and is one of the twelveJyotirlingas , the sacred abodes of Shiva. The temple is located eleven km fromDaulatabad , near Aurangabad inMaharashtra India . The temple is located near the famousEllora Caves .The Grishneswar temple was re-constructed by
Maloji Raje Bhosale ofVerul , (grandfather ofChhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj ) in the 16th century and later byAhilyabai Holkar in 18th century, who also re-constructed theKashi Vishwanath temple atBenares , and theVishnu Paada temple at Gaya.External links
* [http://www.jyotirlinga.com Virtual Lord Shiva Darshan and pilgrimage with videos and images]
* [http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showflat.php?Cat=&Board=EarthTravel&Number=211858&Searchpage=1&Main=211858&Words=jyotirlinga&topic=&Search=true#Post211858 Grishneshwar Jyotirling - Google Earth Community]Grishneshwar is an ancient pilgrimage site revered as the abode of one of the 12 Jyotirlingas of Shiva. It is located at a distance of 11 km from Daulatabad near Aurangabad in Maharashtra. Daulatabad was once known as Devagiri. Located nearby are the popular tourist attractions Ellora - featuring ancient rock cut monuments from the 1st millennium CE, and Ajanta known for its exquisite cave paintings again from the 1st millennium CE.
The Grishneswar temple was constructed by Ahilyabhai Holkar who also re-constructed the Kasi Viswanatha temple at Benares and the Vishnu Paada temple at Gaya. Grishneshwar is also known as Ghushmeshwar.
Legend has it that a devout woman Kusuma offered worship to Shiva regularly by immersing a Shivalingam in a tank, as a part of her daily ritual worship. Her husband's first wife, envious of her piety and standing in society murdered Kusuma's son in cold blood. An aggrieved Ksuma continued her ritual worship, and when she immersed the Shivalingam again in the tank, her son was miraculously restored to life. Shiva is said to have appeared in front of her and the villagers, and then on is believed to have been worshipped in the form of a Jyotirlinga Ghusmeshwar.
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.