Bhuvad

Bhuvad or Bhuwad is a village in Anjar Taluka of Kutch district of Gujarat, India.

History

Bhuvad has a much ruined temple of Bhuvadeshvar Mahadev, whose hall, mandap, measuring 3134 feet by 3914 inside, is supported by 64 pillars and 4 pilasters, 18 on the screen wall and 12 round the dome. The pillars are square to about one-third their height, then octagonal, and lastly round. The shrine has been large, fully 23 feet square, domed on 12 pilasters, 18 inches by 12, with four-armed figures on the brackets. The brackets of the hall columns are plain, but above the bracket a plinth, nine or ten inches deep, is carved with a raised geometrical pattern, The fronts of the brackets are carved. The walls of the temple are of stone throughout. Over the shrine door is a Devi, probably Bhavani. On the pilasters to the right of the shrine is an inscription dated 1289-90 (Samvat 1346); of which all that is now legible are the names of Vanaram and a few other Thakors, probably his ancestors. Bhuvad, who gave its name to the village, is said to have been a Chavda chief, killed either by the Kathis or by Lakha Phulani Jadeja about 1320: His headless body is said to have fought its way to Bhuvad, where is a shrine with a red-painted headless figure. Near his shrine are tall tombstones, said to have been raised over warriors who fell in the battle in which Bhuvad was slain.[1][2]

Demographics

The village, apart from Yadav (Ahir) families of Chawdas and Rathods also has a significant proportion of the population belonging to the Rabari and Patidar communities.[3] The Leva Patidar of village Bhuvad have adopted the Bhudia / Bhudya surname after their ancestral village Bhuvad.[3][4] The Padharia community of Kutch also have a Kuldevi temple at the village.

References

  1. Gazetteer of the Bombay Presidency: Cutch, Palanpur, and Mahi Kantha. Printed at the Government Central Press. 1880. p. 219. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  2. James Burgess (1876). Report on the Antiquities of Kutch & Kathiawar: Being the Result of the Second Season's Operations of the Archaeological Survey of Western India, 1874-1875. London: India Museum. pp. 209–210. Archived from the original on 2015. Retrieved 27 August 2016.
  3. 1 2 "The Leva Patel Community of Bhuj Kutch". Retrieved 8 September 2012.
  4. "Meghji Gohia Bhudia of Bhuvad Kutch". Retrieved 8 September 2012.

Coordinates: 23°01′08″N 69°54′07″E / 23.019°N 69.902°E / 23.019; 69.902

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