Brief
History
:
The temple is built in the North Inidan style of architecture,
with high spires The soft stone of which it was constructed
has lent its pliable surface to a rare degree of detailed
work, of which the frieze figures on the upper portion
is the most striking with the stone roof of the temple
being intricately carved also. Encircling the shrine
are verandahs with columns which are carved in circles,
polygons and squares. The temple also houses the shrines
of Panchamuga Ganesha, and Annapoorani which are considered
very auspicious by the devotees
Omkareshwar, the sacred island, shaped like the holiest
of all Hindu symbols, ‘Om’, has drawn hundreds
of generations of pilgrims. Here, at the confluence
of the rivers Narmada and Kaveri, the devout have gathered
to kneel before the Jyotirlinga at the temple of Shri
Omkar Mandhata. Mahmud of Ghazni had invaded and severely
damaged the temples at Omkareshwar in the 11th century.
Peshwa Baji Rao II had to build a new one as the earlier
ones were mutilated beyond repair.