DescriptionRidhanath Riddheshwar mandir, Handia Madhya Pradesh 003.jpg
English: Handia, also spelled Handiya, is a town on the southern bank of Narmada across from Nemawar – one of the major historic Hindu pilgrimage center. Handia became one of the pilgrim tax-related administrative center for the Malwa Sultanate and later the Mughals. In late 17th-century, it became a part of the Maratha empire who eliminated religious taxes on the Hindus, restored and built new temples on both sides of the Narmada.
The Riddhanath temple – also referred to as Ridhanath or Riddheshwar mandir – was a 12th-century Shiva temple in ruins that was rebuilt from surviving temple parts by the Marathas in the 18th-century. Thus, it has a blend of the old pillars and sections in a Maratha-architecture building. It combines a square plan, old pillars with new. The decorations and designs include some arches and domes.
The extant temple has a mandapa, antarala and garbhagriya. A Nandi sits facing the sanctum near the mandapa entrance. The sanctum has a Shiva linga. Pillars are decorated with yogi carvings. Some original temple ruins and stone artwork are in the temple compound.
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