Sri Ram Janaki Vivah Mandap | Janakpur | Nepal | श्री राम जानकी विवाह मंडप | जनकपुर | नेपाल
Parikrama of Sri Ram Janaki Vivah Mandap | Janakpur Dham | Nepal | श्री राम जानकी विवाह मंडप परिक्रमा | जनकपुर धाम | नेपाल
This is situated just besides Sri Ram Janaki Mandir. This is where Marriage of Lord Ram-Sita took place.
Janaki Temple : The Birth Place of Sita | Janakpur, Nepal
This year I went to my home town Sarlahi to celebrate Dashain Festival and visit my family and at the same time, I took a family trip to Janakpur to visit Janaki Templ. It was an hour drive from my home to the birth place of Sita (Seeta). Sita is the wife of Lord Ram, Sita is an avatar of Sri Laxmi, the hindu goddess. Sita is also known as Janaki. According to Ramayan, hindu epic, Sita was found in furrow by King Janak and King Janak raised her as his daughter. Later, Ram and Sita got married in Janakpur. Anyway, Janakpur is historically and culturally rich. You should visit this place once in a life time. Its an amazing place.
#Janakitemple #Janakpur #Nepaltour
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Ram Sita vivah mandap - Marriage Hall of Rama Sita
In the southwest corner of Janaki Mandir is the Vivah Mandap, which has been built at the site where the marriage of Ram and Sita is said to have been taken place.
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Janaki tour Nepal 2020, Ram sita wedding place, KInd Janak, Mithila tour, visit Janakpur 2020, Nepal
One of the most famous religious and pious places is Janakpurdham which is located in middle of Asia continent; eastern part of Nepal and out of 14 zones in Nepal one is Janakpur and it consist Dhanusha District where it is located. Pilgrims, who take flight from Kathmandu to Janakpur, would reach Janakpur airport in about 35 minutes flight. There are other means of transportation to reach Janakpur beside flight, pilgrims can reach Janakpur easily by road from any place of Nepal, and they can take tourist or local night buses as well. Janakpur is almost 375 KM far from Kathmandu and there are plenty of good hotel and lodge for room and board.
As per present political division, Janakpur is a part of Dhanusha district; ancient Janakpur city was capital of grater Mithila Kingdom. Then capital Janakpur, now one important pilgrimage site is significant from historical, religious, and cultural aspect. The legend and religious significant of Janakpur is the result of beloved King Janak’s who turned this state into a welfare state. King Janak’s daughter Janaki or Sita’s ideal character, dutifulness, chastity, struggling, faith, and belongingness has highlighted this pious land. Also, Kind Janak was Righteousness, dutifulness, and his celestial knowledge and self knowledge. He was not only king, but also a great sage, so he is called sage–king as well. Hence this historic and culturally rich city has named after him.
This is Janaki temple. From architectural aspect, this temple is made on Mugal style and it also has got some fusion of Hindu architecture style as well. This grand artistic temple has been center of attraction for local, regional Hindu Pilgrims as well as foreign tourist all over the year. Inside this enormous temple there are countless artistic rooms, worship rooms, Mandap, store rooms. This temple is stretch almost 4860 sq. feet on the plain land. It is 50 feet high as well.
According to Holy Scripture and religious text, there was a Shiva Dhanus (Bow) in King Janak Palace. It was so heavy that nobody can hold it or move it anywhere. One day, seven years old Sita, easily moved this bow to new place from its previous place. King Janak was so much surprised that his small daughter Sita performed impossible act. Then he realized that Sita was not an ordinary girl, hence he announced that whoever could hold this bow would marry his daughter. As per his command, many princes came to Janakpur to marry Sita by fulfilling the demand, they tried but all failed. So, Kind Janak worried by such incidents.
Then one day, Ram, son to Kind Dasharath of Aayodha, came to Janakpur and he came to uphold the bow, nobody anticipated that he could do it. But he proceeded to bow out of audience’s expectation, first he greeted the bow, and held it to uphold it suddenly the Shiva bow broke into 3 pieces, one piece disappeared into sky. Another disappeared into land and one piece broke away to Dhanusha and remains there; People believe it to be still there.
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Sri Ram Janaki Mandir | Janakpur Dham | Nepal | श्री राम जानकी मंदिर | जनकपुर धाम | नेपाल |
Inside view of Sri Ram Janaki Mandir | Janakpur Dham | Nepal |
श्री राम जानकी मंदिर | जनकपुर धाम | नेपाल |
Janaki Mandir (Nepali: जानकी मन्दिर) is a Hindu temple in Janakpur in the Mithila region of Nepal, dedicated to the Hindu goddess Sita.[1] It is the primary temple of Maithali native indigenous to Nepal.[citation needed] It is an example of Hindu-Rajput Nepali architecture. It is often considered the most important model of Rajput architecture in Nepal. Fully built in bright white and constructed in an area of 4,860 sq. feet in a mixed style of Islamic and Rajput domes, the temple is 50 meters high. It is a three-storied structure made entirely of stone and marble. All its 60 rooms are decorated with the flag of Nepal, colored glass, engravings and paintings, with beautiful lattice windows and turrets. According to legends and epics, King Janak ruled this area (called Videha) during the Ramayana period. His daughter Janaki (Sita), during her swyambar, had chosen Lord Rama as her husband, and become queen of Ayodhya. Their marriage ceremony had occurred in the nearby temple.
The temple is popularly known as the Nau Lakha Mandir (meaning nine lakhs). The cost for the construction of the temple was about the same amount of money: rupees nine lakhs or nine hundred thousand, hence the name. Queen Vrisha Bhanu of Tikamgarh, India built the temple in 1910 AD.
In 1657, a golden statue of the Goddess Sita was found at the very spot, and Sita is said to have lived there. The legend said it that it was built on the holy site where Sannyasi Shurkishordas had found the images of Goddess Sita. In fact, Shurkishordas was the founder of modern Janakpur and the great saint and poet who preached about the Sita Upasana (also called Sita Upanishad) philosophy. Legend has claimed it that King Janak(Seeradhwaj) performed the worship of Shiva-Dhanus on this site.
Every year, thousands of pilgrims from Nepal, India, Sri Lanka and other countries visit Ram Janaki Temple to worship Lord Ram and Sita. During the festivals of Ram Nawami, Vivaha Panchami, Dashain and Tihar, there is a presence of even more worshipers.
Marwa janki &ram vivah janakpur Nepal
Marriage Hall Of Sita Rama Vivah Mantap Janakpur
#Sita Ram Wedding Ceremony Vlog-5 Temple janakpur Mandir (Bibaha Panchami)
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Janakpurdham - The week-long traditional wedding festival, Sita Ram Wedding Ceremony (Bibaha Panchami) is to be held in Janakpurdham in Dhanusha district from 18th of upcoming November.
On the occasion Bibaha Panchami, the Mithila community in Janakpur observe the symbolic wedding ceremony where Princess Sita ties the nuptial knot with Prince Ram as per the reference to the Goswami Tulsidas's Ramayan.
The legend has it that Ayodhya Prince Ram wins over Princess Sita by lifting the Shiva Dhanusha (bow) following which their engagement and marriage ceremony take places in the Treta Yug (or the age of mankind) in Hinduism.
A group of wedding party members from Ayodhya in India, the birth place of Lord Rama, travel to Janakpur, the birth place of Sita, to attend the marriage.
According to Janaki Temple Joint Mahanta Ram Roshan Das, the week-long procession includes various fairs re-enacting the marriage ceremony of Ram and Sita in various phases, bow lifting, engagement, courtship and marriage among others.
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Walking in Janakpur Nepal. Ram Sita (Janaki) Bibah Mandapa.
Newari style temple and beautiful flower garden in Janakpur, Nepal. Janakpur is named after the legendary King Janak, Janakpur was the capital of the ancient Indian Kingdom Mithila. Janakpur is a piligrimage site for Hindus. This newer Nepali pagoda style temple honors the wedding of Sita and Rama.
Janakpur Nepal. Ram Sita Mandap view.
Vivah Mandap, Janaki Temple, Janakpur, Dhanusha district, Nepal
Janakpur Dham/ Ram Janaki Mandir-A Visit
Janakpur is the capital of Dhanusa District in Nepal. The city is also known as Janakpurdham, which was founded in the early 18th century and was the capital of Ancient Mithila ruled by the Videha dynasty. Today, Janakpur is a
famous religious and cultural destination.
The city is located about 123 km (76 mi) south-east of Kathmandu.
Janaki Mandir is a Hindu temple of Janakpur in Mithila region of Nepal, dedicated to the Hindu goddess Sita. It is the primary temple of Maithali native indigenous to Nepal. It is an example of Hindu-Rajput Nepali architecture. It is often considered the most important model of Rajput architecture in Nepal.
Ram Janaki Bibaha Mandap//राम सीता विवाह मण्डप जनकपुर //अयोध्या मिथिला // Sita Ram // सीताराम
This is the video of Bibaha Mandap ko Janakpur Dham Nepal, Ram was came to Mithila, Janakpur to marry Sita. Janakpur is the famous place, holy place for hindus and others as well. Ramayan a religious Book was written by Balmiki on the basis of true stroy of Sir and Ram. Ras was from Ayodhya India to marry Nepali Sita, she was the daughter of Janak.
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Sita is the central female character and one of the central figures in the Hindu epic, Ramayana and its other versions. She is described as the daughter of the earth goddess, Bhūmi and the adopted daughter of King Janaka of Videha and his wife, Queen Sunaina. She has a younger sister, Urmila, and the female cousins Mandavi and Shrutakirti.[6][7] Sita is known for her dedication, self-sacrifice, courage and purity.
Sita, in her youth, chooses Rama, the prince of Ayodhya as her husband in a swayamvara -- bride choosing the best from a crowd of suitors after a contest, where Rama proves his heroism and valor and martial power and defeats the other seekers for Seeta's hand in marriage. After the swayamvara, she accompanies her husband to his kingdom, but later chooses to accompany her husband, along with her brother-in-law Lakshmana, in his exile. While in exile, the trio settles in the Dandaka forest from where she is abducted by Ravana, the Rakshasa king of Lanka. She is imprisoned in Ashoka Vatika in Lanka until she is rescued by Rama, who slays her captor. After the war, in some versions of the epic, Rama asks Sita to undergo Agni Pariksha (an ordeal of fire) by which she proves her purity before she is accepted by Rama, which for the first time makes his brother Lakshmana get angry at him.
In some versions of the epic, the fire-god Agni creates Maya Sita, who takes Sita's place and is abducted by Ravana and suffers his captivity, while the real Sita hides in the fire. During the Agni Pariksha, Maya Sita and the real Sita exchange places again. While some texts say that Maya Sita is destroyed in the flames of Agni Pariksha, others narrate how she is blessed and reborn as the epic heroine Draupadi or the goddess Padmavati. Some scriptures also mention her previous birth being Vedavati, a woman Ravana tries to molest.[citation needed] After proving her purity, Rama and Sita return to Ayodhya, where they are crowned as king and queen. After a few months, Sita becomes pregnant, to which a washerman makes insensitive comments on Sita to his wife, which Rama in disguise hears. Rama then sends Sita away on exile. Lakshmana is the one who leaves Sita in the forests near sage Valmiki's ashram. Years later, Sita returns to the womb of her mother, the Earth, for release from a cruel world as a testimony of her purity after she reunites her two sons Kusha and Lava with their father Rama.
Camara : Shreedhar Neupane
Interview : Govinda Khadka
Place : Bibahamandap Ram Janaki Mandir Bibahamandap Janakpur Mithila Nepal
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Janaki Mandir ( Ram - Sita Marriage Palace ) || Janakpur || Nepal
Ram Sita Vivah (Janki mandir,Janakpur, Nepal)
Janakpur, Nepal
Janakpur (Nepali pronunciation: [dʒəŋɑkpʊr] Nepali: जनकपुर) is the headquarters of Dhanusa District in Nepal.The city is a centre for religious and cultural tourism.It has been declared as the temporary capital for Province no. 2 until Province Assembly votes for a permanent capital.
This city is also known as Janakpurdham, which was founded in the early 18th century. According to oral tradition, an earlier city existed in the area, also known as Janakpurdham, which was the capital of the Videha dynasty that ruled Mithila region in the ancient times.
The city is located about 123 km (76 mi) south-east of Kathmandu.As of 2015, the city had a population of 173,924 making it the largest Sub-Metropolitan city of Nepal.[6] Janakpur is currently the third largest city in the Terai (after Biratnagar and Birgunj) and the seventh largest in Nepal.
The Nepal Railways used to operate between Janakpur and India.
Accounts of ascetics, pandits and bards indicate that Janakpurdham was founded in the early 18th century. The earliest description of Janakpurdham as a pilgrimage site dates to 1805. Earlier archaeological evidence of the presence of an ancient city has not been found. King Janaka's palace is thought to have been located in ancient Janakpur as it is thought to be capital of the Kingdom of the Videhas. According to the Hindu Epic Ramayana, he found a baby girl in a furrow, named her Sita and raised her as his daughter. When she was older, he offered her in marriage to anyone who was able to lift the bow of Shiva, left near Janakpur a thousand years earlier. Many royal suitors tried, but only Rama, prince of Ayodhya, could lift the bow. According to an old song, this bow was found northeast of Janakpur.
Until the 1950s, Janakpur was a cluster of rural hamlets inhabited by farmers, artisans, priests and clerks who worked for the monasteries that controlled the land. After independence in India, Janakpur expanded to a commercial centre and became the capital of the Dhanusa District in the 1960s.
As Asmit and Sita are major figures in Hinduism, Janakpur is an important pilgrimage site for Hindus all over the world.
bibah mandap repot@janakpur
janakpurkhabar , shri ram janki vivah ko awasar ma mata sita ko dola rangbhumi ..
janakpurkhabar , shri ram janki vivah ko awasar ma mata sita ko dola rangbhumi sthan traf sawaari hudai ......
Dhanurdham Nepal
Dhanurdham, a place near Janakpur in Nepal there is a fossilized rock formation, which the local people believe to be the remains of the bow of Mahadev broken by Rama. Due to this, Ram could marry Sita, adopted daughter of Raja Janak.