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The special feature and symbol of integration is when every year the famous Bengaluru Kharaga festival is held. Participants in the Karaga who bear the deity on their head without touching by hand and moving around come to this Dargah before the event, receive dhuparati and then they leave for the circumnavigation of the city.
The temple displays architectural features of buildings from the Western Ganga dynasty, the Pallava dynasty and the Vijayanagara Empire.The temple may be more than 800 years old, the first buildings having been in existence before the current city of Bangalore was founded in 1530 by Kempe Gowda I, when he built a mud fort here. [2]
Bangalore with recorded number of 40 churches (thus also called the city of churches), represents diverse Christian communities, such as the Roman Catholic Church, Protestants of the Church of South India (which includes Anglican, Wesleyan and other older denominations), Kerala based Syrian denominations and newer evangelical groups with links ...
Ervadi dargah, the tomb of Sultan Syed Ibrahim Shaheed Badusha Syed Riyaz Ahmad Naqshbandi's Shrine in Fatehpur. Sultan Syed Ibrahim Shaheed Badusha Dargah, Erwadi, Ramanathapuram district; Thiruparankundram Dargah (Sultan Sikandar Badushah Shaheed shrine), Thiruparankundram, Madurai district
The Lal Bagh, famous for its flower shows was commissioned in 1760. Bangalore palace. Lal Bagh is a botanical garden, commissioned by the Hyder Ali in 1760. The 240-acre (0.97 km 2) park is home to over 1000 species of flora and a Glass House. The park is known for its annual flower show.
South Kanara Upload Photo: N-KA-B189 Stambha in Front of the Kotakeri Jaina Basti Bappanad: South Kanara Upload Photo: N-KA-B190 Sultan Battery Boloor: South Kanara Upload Photo: N-KA-B191 Mangaladevi Temple Mangalore: South Kanara Upload Photo: N-KA-B192 Jamalabad Fort: Nada & Laila: South Kanara Upload Photo: N-KA-B193 Channigaraya Temple ...
The worship of the Pandavas, which is the background to the worship of Karaga, is most popular in South India. Karaga has been celebrated for hundreds of years in many villages in Tamil Nadu, Karnataka Andhra Pradesh. However, the Karaga Utsava as a traditional religious spectacle is found only in Bangalore.
The term dargah is common in the Persian-influenced Islamic world, notably in Iran, Turkey and South Asia. [5] In South Africa, the term is used to describe shrines in the Durban area where there is a strong Indian presence, while the term keramat is more commonly used in Cape Town, where there is a strong Cape Malay culture. [6]