Durgadi Fort
Durgadi Fort | |
---|---|
दुर्गाडी किल्ला | |
General information | |
Type | Fort |
Address | Dudh Naka, Kalyan West, Kalyan, Maharashtra 421301 |
Town or city | Kalyan, Maharashtra |
Country | India |
Coordinates | 19°14′43″N 73°07′07″E / 19.2454°N 73.1186°E |
Construction stopped | 1694 AD |
Durgadi Fort is a fort located in Kalyan, near Mumbai in Maharashtra, India.
The fort has a Hindu temple and a masjid at the top, which has religious significance for both Hindus and Muslims. It has witnessed riots in the past and is considered communally sensitive. A team of State Reserve Police Force personnel is deployed for security.[1]
History
[edit]The fort's construction started during Shah Jahan's reign and was completed in Aurangzeb's reign in 1694 AD. Durgadi Fort is built on a hill beside the Kalyan creek. The fort came under Marathas when Shivaji captured Kalyan and Bhiwandi from Adilshah in 1654. Shivaji built the fort close to the creek and used it as a dock to build boats and ships. During British Raj, stones from the fort wall were used to construct the Kalyan and Thane piers.[2]
Under the rule of Marathas, a new gate about 150 feet to the south of the Ganesh Gate was opened near the mansion of Maratha General Ramji Mahadev Biwalkar. In the citadel of the fort, Marathas built a small temple of Hindu goddess Durga and named the fort Durgadi in honor of the goddess, a name it still bears. The original idol of the goddess Durga was stolen in 1876.
Shivaji used the fort as dock and began the work of the first Navy of Hindavi Swarajya and he hired 340 Portuguese artisans to build the naval docks. Later, the fort was repaired by Ramji Mahadev Biwalkar.[3]
In 1682, Moghul Sardar Hasan Ali Khan captured the fort, later recaptured by Sambhaji, the second Chhatrapati of the Maratha Empire. However, the Moghuls took it over again in 1689. It later came under Peshwas. In 1728, the Portuguese attacked the fort but were repelled by Shankarji Keshav Phadke, a Peshwa commander.[4]
The Kalyan Dombivli Municipal Corporation has built a new gate and made a garden around the fort.[citation needed]
Durgadi Temple
[edit]It is believed that Shivaji himself built Durgadi Temple, dedicated to the Hindu goddess Durga on Durgadi fort. The Shiv Sena chief Bal Thackeray had started the Navaratri celebrations at the temple, which still continues. On the occasion of the Navratri, the temple is visited by devotees from Mumbai, Thane, Raigad and Palghar districts.
In 2018, the temple was visited by about 7 lakh devotees during the Navratri festival.[5]
1967 Communal tension
[edit]In 1967, a communal tension arose in Kalyan over the temple on Durgadi Fort, on which both Hindu and Muslim community had their claims. While local Hindus believed the shrine atop the fort was that of Hindu goddess Durga, the Muslims claimed it to be a mosque and began performing namaaz near the temple. When Shiv Sena supremo Bal Thackeray got to know about the matter, he declared that Shiv Sena would unfurl the saffron flag atop the Durgadi Fort on 8 September 1967. Then the Navratri festival came, and Chief Minister Vasantrao Phulsing Naik announced a ban on the puja at the Durgadi temple. Still, despite the ban, Shiv Sena workers and Theckeray defied the ban and performed the Puja and religious ceremony at the shrine.[6][7]
Photogallery
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Durgadi Fort
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Durgadi Mata Temple on the fort
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A mosque on the fort
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Durgadi Fort
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Durgadi Fort
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Durgadi Mata Temple on the fort
References
[edit]- ^ Tandel, Faisal (5 February 2016). "Cop finds SRPF napping on duty, steals entire platoon's guns". Mid Day.
- ^ "Exploring the forts of Thane". Hindustan Times. 19 May 2018.
- ^ "Durgadi Fort". IndiaAirport.com.
- ^ "Durgadi Fort".
- ^ "Preparations for Navratri festival at the historic Durgadi fort of Kalyan". Mahanagar. 27 September 2019.
- ^ Johari, Aarefa (13 October 2015). "Back to the '60s: The Shiv Sena's tradition of violence is as old as the party itself". Scroll.in.
- ^ Purandare, Vaibhav (2013). Bal Thackeray & The Rise of the Shiv Sena. Roli Books Private Limited. p. 71. ISBN 978-81-7436-991-8.