Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Sita Ki Rasoi, situated in Ayodhya district in Uttar Pradesh, India. [ 112 ] Janaki Mandir of Janakpur , Nepal is a center of pilgrimage where the wedding of Sri Rama and Sita took place and is re-enacted yearly as Vivaha Panchami .
Sita Eliya Sita Temple is located 8 km (5.0 mi) southeast of the main town of Nuwara Eliya, along the Peradeniya-Badulla-Chenkaladi Highway. Approximately 1.7 km (1.1 mi) southeast of the temple lies Hakgala Botanical Garden, believed to be the garden created by Ravana for Sita according to the Ramayana.
Cave known as Sita-ki-rasoi containing an inscription in characters of the 9th century AD Mankuar: Allahabad Upload Photo: N-UP-L12 Extensive mound called Hatgauha Dih Shiupur: Allahabad Upload Photo: N-UP-L13 Garhwa fort Sheorajpur: Allahabad Garhwa fort: N-UP-L14 Large mound called Surya Bhita Singraur: Allahabad Upload Photo: N-UP-L15
Idols of Rama and Sita in Kanak Bhawan, Ayodhya. The temple was designed as a huge palace. The architecture of this temple resembles the palaces of Rajasthan and Bundelkhand. The history basically goes back to Treta Yuga when it was given by Rama's step-mother Kaikeyi to his wife Sita as a gift over marriage. Over the time, it became ...
Kumāradāsa is the author of a Sanskrit Mahākāvya called the Jānakī-haraṇa or Jānakī's abduction. Jānakī is another name of Sita, wife of Rama.Sita was abducted by Ravana when she along with the Rama, exiled from his kingdom, and Lakshmana was living in a forest which incident is taken from Ramayana ('Rama's Journey'), the great Hindu epic written by Valmiki.
Janaki Mandir (Nepali: जानकी मन्दिर) is a Hindu temple in Janakpurdham, Nepal, dedicated to the Hindu goddess Sita.It is an example of Koiri Hindu architecture.
This statue of Mother Sita will be the tallest in the world. Vishwa Hindu Parishad President Alok Kumar has promised all possible cooperation in the construction of the grand temple. Similarly 'Shreebhagwati Sita Tirtha Kshetra Samiti' was formed under the Ramayan Research Council. The committee will oversee its construction work.
In the last book of the Ramayana, Sita undergoes the agnipravesham to offer evidence of her virginity to her husband, Rama, and the people of Ayodhya, after suspicions are cast upon her virtue due to her abduction by Ravana. [6] [7] [8] She invokes Agni, the god of fire, who rescues her, thereby testifying to her fidelity to Rama. [9]