Everything about Ayodhya totally explained
» This article is about the Indian city; see Ayutthaya for the Thai city, province and ancient kingdom.
Ayodhya (
Hindi: अयोध्या,
IAST Ayodhyā) is an ancient city of
India, the old capital of
Awadh, in the
Faizabad district of
Uttar Pradesh. Ayodhya is described as the birth place of
Hindu god
Shri Ram. This Hindu holy city is described as early as in the
Hindu Epics. During the time of
Gautama Buddha the city was called
Ayojjhā (
Pali). Under the
British Raj the city and the administrative area around it was called
Oudh. It is on the right bank of the river
Sarayu, 555 km east of
New Delhi. The word
ayodhya is
Sanskrit for "not to be warred against". Some
Puranas like the
Brahmanda Purana (4/40/91) consider Ayodhya as one of the six holiest cities in Hinduism.
In the first few centuries of the
Common Era it was caled Śāketa. Śāketa, or 沙奇 (
Pinyin: Shāqí) was conquered by the great
Kushan /
Yuezhi Emperor
Kanishka c.
127 CE, who made it the administrative centre of his eastern territories. The name occurs again in
Faxian as 沙祗 (
Pinyin: Shāzhī) in the early fifth century. It isn't clear when the name changed, but by the time of the visit of the Chinese pilgrim monk,
Xuanzang, c.
636 CE, it was known as Ayodhya.
Legacy and Importance
Ayodhya was one of the most ancient, largest and most magnificent of Indian cities. According to the
Hindu mythology, it's said to have covered an area of 250 km² (96 square miles), and was the capital of the
Hindu kingdom of
Kosala (Kaushal), the court of the great king
Dasaratha, the 63rd monarch of the Solar line. The opening chapters of the
Ramayana recount the magnificence of the city, the glories of the monarch and the virtues, wealth and loyalty of his people.
Dasaratha was the father of
Rama, the Seventh
Avatar of the
Vishnu. Many Hindus believe the birthplace of Rama to be in Ayodhya at the place called
Ram Janmabhoomi, the site of the demolished
Babri Mosque.
Ayodhya is also the birth place of five Tirthankars, including the first
Tirthankar of
Jainism, Shri Rishabh Dev. He is known as the father of Jain religion. The city is also important in the history and heritage of
Buddhism in India, with several Buddhist temples, monuments and centers of learning having been established here during the age of the
Mauryan Empire and the
Gupta Dynasty. Ayodhya reached its glorious peak as known to history during the reign of the Guptas over India.
Bhagwan
Swaminarayan, founder of the Swaminarayan Sect of Hinduism lived here during his childhood years. It was from Ayodhya that Bhagwan Swaminarayan started his seven year journey across India as Neelkanth.
Tulsidas is said to have begun the writing of his famous Ramayana poem Shri
Ramacharitamanas in Ayodhya in
1574 CE. Several Tamil Alwar mention the city of Ayodhya. Ayodhya is also said to be the birthplace of
Bhahubali, Brahmi, Sundari, King
Dasaratha, Acharya
Padaliptasurisvarji, King
Harishchandra, Shri
Rama,
Achalbhrata, and the ninth
Gandhara of Mahavir Swami.
The
Atharva Veda called Ayodhya "a city built by gods and being as prosperous as paradise itself".
Ayodhya was the victim of pillage and sacking during the Ghaznavid raids and Ghorid invasions. Some Hindu temples were allegedly looted or destroyed. Some believe that the Babri Mosque was constructed on the remains of a temple, but this claim remains very controversial. With Muslim rulers established around the city under Mohammed of Ghor, it lost its strategic and economic importance to
Lucknow and
Kanpur.
Ayodhya today is a small, rustic city with ancient Hindu architecture predominating, and with some Mughal influence. Its population is mostly Hindu with a minority of Muslims, Jains and Buddhists. However, its history and heritage hold an unequivocal importance for Hindus.
The
Thai kingdom and city of
Ayutthaya were named for Ayodhya, reflecting the common Southeast Asian practice of adopting place names from Hindu kingdoms.
According to an 11th century Korean chronicle the Samguk Yusa, the wife of King Suro of the ancient Korean kingdom of Geumgwan Gaya was a princess who travelled by boat from a faraway land called Ayuta to Korea in 48 CE. It is commonly thought that Ayodha is the foreign land referred to in the Korean chronicles, but some scholars believe that the foreign land may have been Ayutthaya of Thailand. The Koreans know the princess as Heo Hwang-ok, who was the first queen of Geumgwan Gaya and is considered an ancestor by several Korean lineages.
Geography
Ayodhya is located at . It has an average elevation of 93
metres (305
feet).Ayodhya is situated on the bank of the river Sarayu in
Uttar Pradesh(northern India).
Demographics
As of 2001 India
census, Ayodhya had a population of 49,593. Males constitute 59% of the population and females 41%. Ayodhya has an average literacy rate of 65%, higher than the national average of 59.5%; with 66% of the males and 34% of females literate. 12% of the population is under 6 years of age.
Ayodhya Debate
Ayodhya is also the centre of the Ayodhya Debate concerning the
Ram Janmabhoomi temple and the
Babri Mosque. Babar, the
Muslim invader from
Afghanistan converted the birth place of
lord Rama to a mosque called
Babri Mosque. With an efforts to revive self-respect for
Hindus, the zeolets destroyed the disputed structure in
1992. Birth place of
Lord Rama existed prior to the mosque's construction. The title suit on the disputed site is currently pending in the Lucknow Bench of Allahabad High Court and its judgment is expected shortly.
Terrorist Attack
On
5 July 2005,
five terrorists attacked the site of the makeshift Ramlalla temple, in Ayodhya. All five were shot down in the ensuing gunfight with the security forces guarding the area, and one civilian died in the bomb blast triggered by the terrorists to breach the cordon wall. The claim of police that the militants came from Pakistan has been contested by human rights activists.
Further Information
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