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Kantaji Temple

Kantajew Temple
Kantaji Temple Dinajpur Bangladesh (12).JPG
Kantajew Temple is located in Bangladesh
Kantajew Temple
Location in Bangladesh
Geography
Coordinates 25°47′26″N 88°40′00″E / 25.79056°N 88.66667°E / 25.79056; 88.66667Coordinates: 25°47′26″N 88°40′00″E / 25.79056°N 88.66667°E / 25.79056; 88.66667
Country Bangladesh
State Rangpur Division
District Dinajpur
Location near the Hajee Mohammed Danesh Science and Technology university far about 12 kilometre
Culture
Primary deity Kantaji (Krishna)
Important festivals Rash mela
Architecture
Architectural styles Nava-ratna
History and governance
Date built 1722 CE
Creator Raja Ramnath

Kantanagar Temple, commonly known as Kantaji Temple or Kantajew Temple (Bengali: কান্তজীউ মন্দির) at Kantanagar, is a late-medieval Hindu temple in Dinajpur, Bangladesh. The Kantajew Temple is one of the most magnificent religious edifices belonging to the 18th century. The temple belongs to the popular Hindu Kanta or Krishna and this is most popular with the Radha-Krishna cult (assemble of memorable love) in Bengal. This beautiful temple is dedicated to Krishna and his wife Rukmini. Built by Maharaja Pran Nath, its construction started in 1704 CE and ended in the reign of his son Raja Ramnath 1722 CE, during the reign of his son Maharaja Ramnath. It boasts one of the greatest examples on terracotta architecture in Bangladesh and once had nine spires, but all were destroyed in an earthquake that took place in 1897.

The temple was built in a navaratna (nine-spired) style before the destruction caused by the earthquake of 1897. The characteristic features of the erections are the four centered and wide multi-cusped arches, the plastered surface of the walls having immense rectangular and square panelings, prominence of the central archway and the central mihirab by making the slightly larger and setting in a projected fronton in the outside directions, the use of ornamental turrets on the either side of the fronons, the semi-octagonal mirirab apertures,the archway opening under half-domes, the Persian muquarnas work in stucco inside the half-domes over the entrance arches and mihirab niches,the bulbous outline of the domes with constructed necks, domes on octagonal drums with lotus and kalasa finials as the crowning elements, the round pendentives to make up the phase of transition for the domes and the multi-faced corner towers rising high above the horizontal merloned parapets.

Terracotta designs on columns near the entrance

Terracotta designs outside the temple

Description of the temple

Comparison

Temple front


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Wikipedia

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