The historical name of the temple is Sakhada Bhagawati and the surrounding area is known as Sakhada.[7] The name 'Sakhada' is an abbreviation of the last affix of 'Shakra'. The name is derived from the King's nickname, Shakrasimhadeva who is also known as Shaktisimhadeva.[8] In modern times, the temple is known as Chinnamasta because the goddess's head was missing.[6]
After he was dethroned from his supremacy, he came to the present day Saptari district to live the rest of his life in Vaanaprastha (forest life) after handing over the kingdom to his younger son Harisimhadeva. Over time, the village was full of jungle. He cleared the dense jungle with his men to build a temple and establish his goddess deity in his name as Sakhreswari. The king's fort was nearby the temple, locally known as Gadhi Gaachhi.[17]
The temple is locally known as Sakhra Bhagawati or Sakhreswari Bhagawati. Since the severed head of the goddess Bhagwati idol is there, it is known as Chinnamasta Bhagawati.[18]
Invasion
The Tughlaq dynasty ruled the Delhi sultanate and most of Northern India from 1320 to 1413 CE. In 1324 CE, the founder of the dynasty and Sultan of Delhi, Ghiyasuddin Tughlaq turned his attention towards Bengal.[19] They invaded Bengal and on his way back to Delhi, the ruler came to know about Simraungadh.[20] The Tughlaq armies cross through present-day Saptari to reach Simraungadh, which caused damage to this temple and idol of goddess Bhagawati.[21]
Gallery
The temple seen from the north gate.
North entrance gate.
Chinnamasta temple dharmashala.
References
^Mecīdekhi mahākālī [Mechi to Mahakali] (in Nepali). Śrī 5 ko Sarakāra Sañcāra Mantrālaya, Sūcanā Vibhāga. 1975. p. 821.
^CPN Sinha (1974). "A Critical Evaluation of sources for identification of Gangeyadeva of Tirabhukti". Proceedings of the Indian History Congress. 35: 39–42. JSTOR44138754.
^Thapa, Netra Bahadur (1981). A Short History of Nepal(PDF). Ratna Pustak Bhandar. pp. 38–39. Archived from the original(PDF) on 2019-03-04. Retrieved 2022-10-15.