Sacred to Jagannath

Jagannath Puri

जगन्नाथ मन्दिर, पुरी

East — home of the famous Rath Yatra chariot festival.

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Notice

Beware fake booking websites; no 'online puja' donations

SJTA warns that fraudulent websites impersonate the temple for room bookings — use only the official shreejagannatha.in and stayatpurijagannatha.in. SJTA also states it never accepts any donation or offering from devotees for 'Online Puja'.

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Notice

valid until 31 Jul 2026

Rath Yatra 2026 — massive crowds (mid-July)

The annual Ratha Yatra chariot festival is scheduled for 16 July 2026, with Bahuda Yatra on 24 July, Suna Besha on 25 July and Niladri Bije on 27 July. The festival draws enormous crowds to Puri; expect heavy congestion, traffic diversions and tight security. Plan travel and accommodation well in advance.

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Introduction

he Jagannath Temple is a Hindu temple dedicated to Jagannath, a form of Vishnu. It is located in Puri, Odisha, on the eastern coast of India. As per temple records, King Indradyumna of Avanti built the main temple. The present temple complex was rebuilt from the eleventh century onwards on the site of the earlier shrines, excluding the main Jagannath temple, and was begun by Anantavarman Chodaganga, the first ruler of the Eastern Ganga dynasty. Many of the temple rituals are based on Shabari Tantras which are evolved from tribal beliefs respectively. The local legends link the idols with Nilamadhaba deva worshipped by tribala and the daitapatis (servitors) claim to be descendants of the tribes. The temple is one of the 108 Abhimana Kshethram of the Sri Vaishnavite tradition. The temple is renowned for its annual Ratha Yatra, chariot festival, which honours the three deities - Jagannath, Balabhadra and Subhadra. During the festival, the three principal deities are pulled on large and elaborately decorated raths, or temple cars. The worship is performed by the Bhil Sabar tribal priests, as well as priests of other communities in the temple. Unlike the stone or metal icons found in most Hindu temples, the image of Jagannath is carved from margosa wood and is ceremoniously replaced every 12 or 19 years with an identical replica, with an elaborate month long ceremony called nabakalebar. The temple is one of the Char Dham pilgrimage sites. The temple is sacred and holy to all Hindus, and especially in those of the Vaishnava traditions. Many great Vaishnava saints, such as Chaitanya Mahaprabhu, Ramanujacharya, Madhvacharya, Nimbarkacharya, Vallabhacharya and Ramananda were closely associated with the temple. Ramanuja established the Emar Matha in the south-eastern corner of the temple, and Adi Shankaracharya established the Govardhan Math, which is the seat of one of the four Shankaracharyas. It is also of particular significance to the followers of Gaudiya Vaishnavism, whose founder, Chaitanya Mahaprabhu, was attracted to the deity, Jagannath, and lived in Puri for many years.

History

Literary and epigraphic evidence indicates that the site of present-day Puri (also known in early sources as Purusottama Kshetra or Nilachala) had religious significance prior to the construction of the current Jagannath temple by Anantavarman Chodaganga Deva in the 12th century CE. The Skanda Purana's Utkal Khanda has a dedicated section to Puri called the "Purushottama Kshetra Mahatmya", while the Narada Purana and Matsya Purana also refer to Purusottama Kshetra as a sacred location dedicated to Vishnu. The Prabodha Chandrodaya Nataka (c. 11th century CE) of Krishna Mishra also mentions a devayatana (temple or shrine) of Purusottama, indicating an established shrine before the Ganga period. Traditional accounts also record the visit of Adi Shankaracharya to Puri in the 8th-9th century CE, during which he established the Govardhana Matha, further supporting the presence of an active pilgrimage centre before the 12th century architectural phase.

The earliest major reconstruction of the Jagannath Temple complex at Puri is attributed to Anantavarman Chodaganga of the Eastern Ganga dynasty, who ruled c. 1078-1150 CE and established the foundational structure of the present temple around the early 12th century. This is supported by the Kendupatna copper-plate inscription of his descendant, Narasimhadeva II, and inscriptions from Rajendra Chola's maternal side. Anantavarman was originally a Shaivite, and became a Vaishnavite sometime after he conquered the Utkala region, in which the temple is located, in 1112 CE. A 1134–1135 CE inscription records his donation to the temple. Therefore, the temple construction must have started sometime after 1112 CE. Anantavarman's successor Anangabhima III (r. c.

About the deity — Jagannath

Jagannath is a Hindu deity worshipped as part of a triad along with his brother, Balabhadra, and his sister, Subhadra.

Read more about [Jagannath](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jagannath).

Religious significance

According to historical traditions, Jagannath is believed to have originated as a tribal deity venerated by the Bhil and Sabar communities as a form of Narayana. Another legend identifies him as Nilamadhava, a blue-stone image of Narayana that was worshipped by these tribal groups. He was brought to Nilagiri, the blue mountain, or Nilachala, and installed there as Jagannath, in company with Balabhadra and Subhadra. Worship of wooden images at the Jagannath temple is claimed to have a distant connection with the Vanvasi, or forest dwellers, who traditionally worship wooden poles. The Daitapatis, who are responsible for performing certain temple rituals, are claimed to be descendants of the hill tribes of Odisha and are also believed to be closely related to Jagannath. The cultural history of Shrikshetra, regarded as the cultural capital of Odisha, is traced to the traditions of Hindu tribes. The three deities came to be regarded as the symbols of Samyak Darshan, Samyak Jnana, and Samyak Charita, together known as Ratnatraya, the triple gems of the Jain culture, whose assimilation is believed to lead to omniscience and moksha (salvation).

Many renowned acharyas, including Madhvacharya, are believed to have visited this kshetra. Adi Shankaracharya established the Govardhan Math here. Guru Nanak had visited this place with his disciples Bala and Mardana.

Festivals

Numerous festivals are held in the temple complex each year, attracting millions of people. Some of the principal festivals celebrated include Anavasara, Ratha Yatra, Niladri Bije, Gupta Gundicha, Nabakalebara, and Pana Sankranti (or Vishuva Sankranti).

Every year, the principal deities -Jagannath, Balabhadra, Subhadra and Sudarshan- retire to a secluded chamber called Anavasara Ghar after the holy Snana Yatra on Jyeshtha Purnima, where they remain for the following dark fortnight, or Krishna Paksha. According to tradition, the deities are believed to fall ill after undergoing the ceremonial bathing ritual, and they are tended for fifteen days by the special servitors known as Daitapatis. During this period, cooked food is not offered to the deities. Hence, devotees are not permitted to view the deities, and instead offer worship at the nearby temple of Alarnath at Brahmagiri, where a four-armed Vishnu is revered as a manifestation of Jagannath. Devotees received their first glimpse of the deities on the day before Ratha Yatra, an occasion known as Navayouvana.

The Jagannath triad is usually worshipped in the sanctum sanctorum of the Puri temple.

How to reach

Located in: Puri, Odisha.

Tags

char_dhamjagannathpuriodisharath-yatrakalinga-architecturevaishnavismchar-dham

Festivals celebrated here

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No festivals linked here yet.

When our editors confirm the festivals that gather pilgrims at this shrine, they will appear in this folio with their next dates.

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As soon as our editors find a piece worth reading — a renovation, a festival report, a court ruling, a historic recovery — it lands here, with full attribution.

Plan your visit

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Before you go

  • Entry restricted to those of Hindu faith

    As at many Odisha shrines, only people of the Hindu faith are permitted inside the Jagannath temple; non-Hindus and foreigners are not allowed entry into the main temple. Non-Hindu visitors typically view the temple from the Raghunandan Library rooftop opposite.

  • Anasara — main-deity darshan suspended before Rath Yatra

    After the Snana Yatra (bathing festival) the deities undergo 'Anasara' and are kept away from public view for roughly two weeks until Rath Yatra; public darshan of the main idols inside the temple is suspended during this period. Pilgrims planning a June visit should check the year's ritual calendar.

Sources & attribution

This article's initial draft was assembled from the open-source data above. Reviewed editorially before publication.

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