Sanisvara Siva Temple
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| Sanisvara Siva Temple | |
|---|---|
| Religion | |
| Affiliation | Hinduism |
| Deity | lord Shiva |
| Location | |
| Location | Bhubaneswar |
| State | Orissa |
| Country | India |
| Geographic coordinates | 20°15′11″N 85°50′36″E / 20.25306°N 85.84333°E |
| Architecture | |
| Type | Kalingan Style (Kalinga Architecture) |
| Completed | 14-15th century CE |
Sanisvara Siva Temple is a Mandir situated at Gosagaresvara Precinct southern of Paradaresvara Siva Temple, Orissa, India. The temple is facing towards the east, the enshrined deity is a circular Yoni Pitha at the center of a 1.00 square meter sanctum.
According to the local legend, during Ganga's rule around the 14th-15th Century CE, Lord Siva once killed a calf inadvertently. In order to cleanse the sin of killing the calf, he had to take a bath in the Gosagaresvara pond and worship the lord Gosagaresvara. Thus, the tradition began up to the present. People keep the practice of taking ritual baths in the temple tank and worshiping Gosagaresvara to cleanse the sin of killing a cow.
This temple is once used as a worshiping shrine. But at present, people consider it as a public living temple and classified as Pidha Deul typology.