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Glossary Kashi Vishwanath Temple
Kashi Vishwanath Temple, Varanasi

Varanasi,
also known as Benaras and Kashi, is a major city in the north Indian
state of Uttar Pradesh. Situated on the banks of the holy river Ganga,
the city has great religious significance for the Hindus. Varanasi
is home to Kashi Vishwanath Temple, which is dedicated to Lord Shiva.
It enshrines one of the twelve Jyotirlingams of Shiva. It is said
that this temple was rebuilt several times. The latest structure standing
here dates back to the 18th century. Thousands of Pilgrims converge
here to perform an abhishekam to the sacred Jyotirlingam, with water
from the Ganga.
Beside its religious significance, the temple is also an architectural
marvel. The magnificent edifice offers a breathtaking view to the
onlooker. It is said that once Lord Shiva came in the dream of Rani
Ahalya Bai Holkar of Indore. She, being a devotee of Lord Shiva,
got the current temple built in 1777.
Vishwanath Khanda, also referred to as the Old City is located
at the heart of Varanasi, between Dashashwamedha Ghat and Godaulia
to the south and west and Manikarnika Ghat on the river to the north.
The whole area rewards exploration, with numerous shrines and lingams
tucked into every corner, and is buzzing with the activity of pilgrims,
pandas and stalls selling offerings to the devotees.
Approached through a maze of narrow alleys and the Vishwanath Gali
(or Lane), the temple complex of Vishwanath or Visheshwara, the
"Lord of All", is popularly known as the Golden Temple,
due to the massive gold plating on its shikhara (spire). Inside
the compound, which is hidden behind a wall, and entered through
an unassuming doorway, is one of India's most important shivalingams,
made of smooth black stone and seated in a solid silver plinth.
The shrines of the wrathful protectors Mahakala and Dandapani, and
the lingam of Avimukteshvara are also situated within the temple
complex.
Pilgrims offer their sankalpa or statement of intent here, before
commencing the Panchatirthi Yatra. Slightly north, across the main
road, the thirteenth-century Razia's Mosque stands atop the ruins
of a still earlier Vishwanatha temple.
Varanasi is said to be the point at which the first jyotirlinga,
the fiery pillar of light by which Shiva manifested his supremacy
over other gods, broke through the earth’s crust and flared
towards the heavens. More than the Ghats and even the Ganga, the
Shivalinga installed in the temple remain the devotional focus of
Varanasi.