Mangala Temple
Mangala temple | |
---|---|
Geography | |
Country | India |
State | Orissa |
Location | Bhubaneswar |
Culture | |
Primary deity | Maa Durga |
Architecture | |
Architectural styles | Kalingan style (Kalinga architecture) |
History and governance | |
Date built | 19th century A.D. |
Mangala Temple was constructed in the 19th century CE and is located in Village Patia in Bhubaneswar, the capital of Odisha. The enshrined deity is the four-armed Mangala. The deity holds a conch in her upper right hand and a wheel in her lower left hand. The upper left hand of the deity assumes the varadamudra, while her lower right hand assumes the abhayamudra. The deity stands on a pedestal. The temple is located in the Harijan sahi (a residential ward restricted to Harijans) of Patia, whose residents maintain it.
Physical description
Surrounding
The temple is surrounded by a concrete hall to the east and residential buildings to the west, north and south side.
Architectural features
The temple stands on a low and square platform, measuring 2.90 square metres and bearing a height of 0.43 meters. On plan, the temple has a square vimana in the dimension. On elevation, the vimana is a pidha deula having a bada, gandi and mastic that measures 4.56 metres (15.0 ft) in height. With the three-fold division of bada, the temple has a triangabada measuring 1.61 metres (5.3 ft) in height (pabhaga- 0.41 meters, jangha - 1.00 meters, baranda-0.20 meters.) The gandi measures 1.50 metres (4.9 ft) in height. The traditional components of the mastaka, such as the beki, amalaka and kalasa, measures 1.45 meters in height.
Building techniques
It is built with laterite by Ashlar masonry, cement plaster and white wash construction techniques in the Kalingan style.