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The Vaitarani (Sanskrit: वैतरणी, romanized: Vaitaraṇī), also called the Vaitarana, is a river in Indian religions. Described in the Garuda Purana and various other Hindu religious texts , the Vaitarani lies between the Earth and the infernal Naraka , the realm of Yama , the Hindu god of death .
The Baitarani (also spelled Vaitarani) is one of six major rivers of Odisha, India. Venerated in popular epics and legends , the Baitarani River is a source of water for agricultural irrigation . The coastal plain of Odisha has the name of "Hexadeltaic region" or the "Gift of Six Rivers".
The Vaitarna River (IAST: Vaitarṇā, pronunciation: [ʋəit̪əɾɳaː]) is a river in Nashik and Palghar district of Maharashtra. The Tansa is its left bank tributary and the Pinjal, Dehraja, and Surya are its right bank tributaries.
The temple complex is located at an elevation of 15 feet (4.6 m), on an island created by two branches of the Vaitarani River, about 1 kilometre (0.62 mi) from Jajpur bus station. The island is opposite to the Dasaswamedha ghat, which is also a famous pilgrimage centre. The temple faces the threat of floods from the river that surrounds the island.
8.39 km 2 (3.24 sq mi) Vaitarna Dam , also called Modaksagar Dam , is a Gravity dams on Vaitarna river which supplies water to Palghar , Mumbai , but located in Palghar & Nashik district in the state of Maharashtra in India .
The Sanzu-no-Kawa (三途の川, "Sanzu River", literally the "Three-World River" in reference to Buddhist ideas about realms of existence) is a mythological river in Japanese Buddhist tradition similar to the Chinese concept of Huang Quan (Yellow Springs), Indian concept of the Vaitarani and Greek concept of the Styx. [1]
The Triveni Sangam, the intersection of the Yamuna River and the Ganges River. In Hindu tradition, Triveni Sangam is the confluence (Sanskrit: sangama) of three rivers that is a sacred place, with a bath here said to flush away all of one's sins and free one from the cycle of rebirth.
Rudranath Temple (Sanskrit: रुद्रनाथ) is a Hindu temple dedicated to God Shiva, located in the Garhwal Himalayan mountains in Uttarakhand, India.Located at 3,600 metres (11,800 ft) above sea level, [1] [2] this natural rock temple is situated within a dense forest of rhododendron dwarfs and Alpine pastures. [3]