Baijnath

One
of the most remarkable monuments of the Bias valley
is the temple of Baijnath. The village of that name
is situated 23 miles east of Nagarkot, as the crow flies,
close to the Mandi border and on the main road which leads
from the Punjab plains through Kangra, Kulu, Lahul, and Ladakh
to Central Asia.
Baijnath is in reality the
appellation of the chief temple dedicated to SivaVaidyanatha ("Lord of Physicians") which has know the Village
itself. The original name of the village was Kiragrama.The
Baijnath temple is orientated due west. It consists of a puri
or adytum, 8 feet square inside and 18 feet outside, surmounted
by a spire of the usual conical shape, and cf a mandapa or
front hall, 20 feet square inside, covered with a low pyramid
shaped roof.
Both the south and north
wall of the mandapa are adorned with a graceful balcony window.
The four corners are strengthened by means of massive buttress-like
projections in the shape of half-engaged - miniature sikhara
temples, each containing two niches in which image slabs are
placed. Smaller niches in slightly projecting chapels are
found between the corner projections and the entrance and
balcony windows.

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