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Map of Kolhapur district of Maharashtra: Date: 2 March 2021: Source: ... image/svg+xml. File history. Click on a date/time to view the file as it appeared at that time.
File:Kolhapur State Map, 1912.jpg. ... Original file (2,867 × 2,293 pixels, file size: 1.04 MB, MIME type: image/jpeg) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons.
Kolhapur is known as 'Dakshin Kashi' or Kashi of the South because of its spiritual history and the antiquity of its shrine Mahalaxmi, better known as Ambabai. [6] The region is known for the production of the famous handcrafted and braided leather slippers called Kolhapuri chappal, which received the Geographical Indication designation in 2019 ...
Map of Maharashtra constituency 276-Kolhapur North: Date: 30 June 2023: Source: Derivative of File:Wahlkreise zur Vidhan Sabha von Maharashtra.svg: Author: Own work based on User:Furfur: Permission (Reusing this file)
Shri Mahalakshmi Temple, Kolhapur. The temple of the goddess Mahalakshmi was built by Karnadeva in 634 CE Chalukya reign. [2] Mounted on a stone platform, the murti of the crowned goddess is made of gemstone and weighs about 40 kilograms. The image of Mahalakshmi carved in black stone is 3 feet in height.
Kolhapur is famous for Tambda Pandhra rassa, a dish made of either chicken or mutton. [284] Rice and seafood are the staple foods of the coastal Konkani people. Among seafood, the most popular is a fish variety called the Bombay duck (also known as bombil in Marathi).
The Kolhapur State was a Maratha princely state of India, under the Deccan Division of the Bombay Presidency, and later the Deccan States Agency. [1] It was considered the most important of the Maratha principalities [ citation needed ] with the others being Baroda State , Gwalior State and Indore State .
Panhala fort (also known as Panhalgad and Panhalla (literally "the home of serpents")), is located in Panhala, 20 kilometres northwest of Kolhapur in Maharashtra, India.It is strategically located looking over a pass in the Sahyadri mountain range which was a major trade route from Bijapur in the interior of Maharashtra to the coastal areas. [1]