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  2. Shakta pithas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shakta_pithas

    The Shakta pithas, Shakti pithas or Sati pithas (Sanskrit: शाक्त पीठ, Śakta Pīṭha, seats of Shakti [1]) are significant shrines and pilgrimage destinations in Shaktism, the mother goddess denomination in Hinduism. The shrines are dedicated to various forms of Adi Shakti.

  3. Kalighat Kali Temple - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kalighat_Kali_Temple

    The temple is one of the 51 Shakti Pithas in India. [2] According to the Devi Bhagavata Purana, Kalika Purana and Shakti Peetha Stotram, the toes of the right foot of Goddess Sati fell here, after Lord Vishnu's Sudarshan Chakra splintered her body into many parts to calm down Mahadev's rage during his cosmic dance. [3]

  4. Jyotirlinga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jyotirlinga

    It is a place where Shakti Peetha and jyotirlingam are together. 4 Omkareshwar: Madhya Pradesh: Khandwa: Omkareshwar is in Madhya Pradesh on an island in the Narmada River and home to a jyotirlinga shrine and the Mamaleshwar temple. 5 Baidyanath: Jharkhand: Deoghar: Baidyanath Temple also known as Baba Baidyanath Dham, is a Hindu temple ...

  5. Three and a half Shakti Peethas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Three_and_a_half_Shakti_Peethas

    The temple is also known popularly as one of the "three and half Shakti Peethas" of Maharashtra. The temple is also one among the 51 Shakti Peethas located on the Indian subcontinent and is a location where one of Sati's (first wife of Lord Shiva) limbs, her right arm is reported to have fallen. Its half shaktipeeth among three and half ...

  6. Sharada Peeth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sharada_Peeth

    It played a key role in the development and popularisation of the Sharada script in North India, causing the script to be named after it, and Kashmir to acquire the moniker "Sharada Desh", meaning "country of Sharada". As one of the Maha Shakti Peethas, Hindus believe that it represents the spiritual location of the goddess Sati's

  7. Attahas, Katwa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Attahas,_Katwa

    The temple is located in Labhpur in Birbhum district. The temple is situated at 1.2 km north-east from Labpur railway station. There is another Attahas in Ketugram, Katwa. But as Ketugram has one Shakti peeth Bahula, so it can not have two Shakti peethas side by side.

  8. Nandikeshwari Temple - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nandikeshwari_Temple

    It is believed that the necklace of Sati's corpse fell here to form the Shakti Peetha when the Sudarshan Chakra of Lord Vishnu mutilated the corpse of Sati from the arms of Lord Shiva to reduce his rage. Shiva carrying the corpse of Sati. The present temple was built in 1913, the Bengali year of 1320. [2]

  9. Saptashrungi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saptashrungi

    Thus Vishnu cut her into 51 pieces (108 pieces are also mentioned in many Puranic texts [6]) as Shiva traveled around the world and these fifty one body parts of Sati fell at different locations in the subcontinent, and all these places came to be known as Shakthi Peethas (abode of goddess Shakthi or Durga). Her right arm fell on the ...