#DhariDeviTemple located on the banks of the #AlaknandaRiver between Srinagar and Rudraprayag in the #Garhwal Region of #Uttarakhand, India. The temple is home to the upper half of the idol of the goddess Dhari, while the lower half of the idol is located in Kalimath, where she is worshipped as a manifestation of the #GoddessKali.
#Tungnath is one of the highest Shiva temples in the world and is the highest of the five #PanchKedar temples located in the mountain range of Tunganath in #Rudraprayag district, in the Indian state of #Uttarakhand. The Tunganath (literal meaning: Lord of the peaks) mountains form the #MandakiniRiver and #AlaknandaRiver valleys. It is located at an altitude of 3,680 m (12,073 ft), and just below the peak of #Chandrashila. and is the third (#TritiyaKedar) in the pecking order of the #PanchKedars. It has a rich legend linked to the Pandavas, heroes of the Mahabharata epic.
#Devprayag is one of the #PanchPrayag (five confluences) of #AlaknandaRiver where Alaknanda, Saraswati River (an underground river in Hinduism) and #BhagirathiRivers meet and take the name #Ganga.
#DevPrayag - The Confluence of the Gods.
The Birthplace of the #Ganga , The Holy Confluence of the Mighty #AlaknandaRiver and the Beautiful Aqua Green #BhagirathiRiver.
The Birthplace of the #Ganga , The Holy Confluence of the Mighty #AlaknandaRiver and the Beautiful Aqua Green #BhagirathiRiver.
#Devprayag - #Ganga's birthplace - Confluence of #Alaknanda & #Bhagirathi
Devprayag is a town in #Uttarakhand, India, and is one of the Panch Prayag (five confluences) of #AlaknandaRiver.
DevaprayaΜga" means "Godly Confluence" in Sanskrit. As per Hindu scriptures, Devaprayaga is the sacred event of merging two heavenly rivers, Alakananda and Bhagirathi, to form the holy Ganga.
Devprayag is a town in #Uttarakhand, India, and is one of the Panch Prayag (five confluences) of #AlaknandaRiver.
DevaprayaΜga" means "Godly Confluence" in Sanskrit. As per Hindu scriptures, Devaprayaga is the sacred event of merging two heavenly rivers, Alakananda and Bhagirathi, to form the holy Ganga.