Echoing 13th century heritage and divinity

Welcome to Shri Andheshwar Mahadev Sankul, an eternal temple where devotion, legend, and legacy live on.

Echoing 13th century heritage and divinity

Welcome to Shri Andheshwar Mahadev Sankul, an eternal temple where devotion, legend, and legacy live on.

Hours

Open Daily: 6:00 AM – 9:00 PM

A swayambhu shrine of Lord Shiva that transformed a blind herdsman’s faith into a temple of timeless devotion.

About the TEMPLE
More than 800 years ago, in the heart of a dense forest, a blind herdsman discovered a self-manifested Shivalinga through a divine encounter. His heartfelt prayers were answered, his vision restored and in return, he built a shrine where Lord Shiva had revealed Himself. That sacred presence came to be known as Andheshwar Mahadev - the Lord who grants both inner and outer vision.
Today, the temple stands as a bridge between folklore, scripture, and community, gracefully evolving across centuries while preserving its eternal soul.
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About Us

Purpose

Development Stages

Installations
Explore the Temple Installations

    Divine Healer and Ravana’s Foiled Devotion

      The Abode of Tridev and the Source of the Sacred Godavari

        Divine Symbol of Power & Balance

          A Tribute to Vision, Legacy & Eternity

            Devotion Resonates Through Sound

              The Eternal Shrine of Light and Devotion

              Echoes of the Nagara Tradition

              Rooted in Nagara tradition, the temple’s original design reflects cosmic symbolism and spiritual engineering.
The original 12th-century shrine, as verified by The Heritage Trust, stood on 84 intricately carved pillars echoing the grand architectural grammar of North India’s Nagara style. Each element in the layout is both spiritual and symbolic:

              Soaring Shikharas

              The temple’s curvilinear towers emulate cosmic ascent guiding every devotee’s gaze from earth to sky, matter to spirit.

              Kalasha Finials

              Atop each shikhara sits a kalasha (sacred pot), representing divine energy and the abundance that flows from spiritual elevation.

              Concentric Mandapas

              Symmetrically arranged halls invite devotees to come together, meditate, and immerse in rituals with collective energy.

              Elevated Plinths & Carved Lintels

              Built on raised platforms, the temple’s ornate base and doorframes mirroring those found in Khajuraho and Lakshmana Temple, express grounded elegance and intricate craftsmanship.

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