The sacred fire at Baku – Sandeep Balakrishna

 Jvalaji Temple Baku

The Jvalaji Temple was built in 1745 near Baku. It quickly became a vener­ated site of pilgrimage. Hindus and Sikhs from India undertook tirtha yatra to Azerbaijan at great cost and risk. – Sandeep Balakrishna

When Will Durant wrote “most of us spend too much time on the last twenty-four hours and too little on the last six thousand years,” he was restating a truth about the importance of keeping history afresh in memory.

This 6,000-year time travel takes us back to an India which had evolved a flourishing maritime culture and had left its im­print overseas. David Frawley in his Gods, Sages and Kings, and Michel Danino in his The Lost River: On the Trail of the Sarasvati show that the ancient Vedic civilisation was a maritime civilisa­tion. Likewise, pioneering historian S. Srikanta Sastri (1904-74) marshalled a wealth of evidence that testified to the seafaring element in the Vedic zeitgeist.

This maritime contact of India with the rest of the world was a continuous and positive force for transnational economic and cultural exchange. It remained unabated till the waves of Islamic invasions disrupted it. It is also, sadly, an understudied area of Indian history, which had been spearheaded in the late 19th century and continued till about 1950. No­table works in the field include Radha Kumud Mukherjee’s Indian Shipping: A History of Seaborne Trade and Maritime Activity of the Indians from the Earliest Times, R.C. Majumdar’s Classical Accounts of India, Ancient Indian Colonies in the Far East, India and South-East Asia and Moti Chandra’s Trade and Trade Routes in An­cient India. These apart, V. Raghavan and Vasudeva Sharan Agarwala’s scholarly anthologies explore the influence of India’s artistic, musical and theatrical traditions in foreign lands.

Three random examples can illus­trate this.

Pliny the Elder (24 CE-79 CE) was mortified at how copiously the Mala­bar black pepper was draining the Roman exchequer; he branded India as the “sink of precious metals” that Rome supplied as ex­change to buy pepper.

In the second century CE, a Greek artist had engraved an image of Bharat Mata on a silver dish discovered at Lampsacus (now Lapseki in Turkey) during an archaeological dig in 1847.

The Balinese dramatic art form known as Wayang Beber, performed by the artist known as Dalang, is a song narrative in which he unfolds sheets cloth embossed with miniatures of scenes from the Ramayana and the Mahabharata and narrates each story depicted therein.

Among all foreign lands, Brihad Bharata—known as Southeast Asia—shows the densest imprint of Hindu culture and traditions. In R.C. Majumdar’s words: “The Indian colonies in the Far East must ever remain as the high-water mark of maritime and colonial en­terprise of the ancient Indians. … Political conquest … was rapidly followed by a complete cultural conquest. The local people readily assimilated the new civilisation and adopted the religion, art, social manners and customs, literature, laws … of the conquerors. … A new India was established in that far-off region. … We find new towns and countries called Ayodhya, Kaushambi, Srikshetra, Dvaravati, Mathura. … So long as the Hindu dynasties were in power the civilisa­tion flourished. … The descendants of men who founded that empire abandoned sea-voyage as something unholy and thus an impass­able barrier was created between the Hindus and their brethren of the Far East.”

Moti Chandra’s Trade and Trade Routes in Ancient India is perhaps the most thorough treatise on the prow­ess of Hindu maritime and cultural proselytisation that carried the best of Hindu culture to Southeast Asia, Rus­sia, Turkey, Greece and Rome. In his foreword to this work, V.S. Agarwala opens an evocative world before us: “In the travellers besides the merchant community were included monks, pil­grims, pedlars, horse traders, acrobats and actors, students and tourists. … In­dian travellers by land and sea routes, were also the carriers of Indian story lit­erature. Seamen often related miracu­lous stories of Yakshas, Nagas, demons and spirits and aquatic animals connected with the seas. These stories diverted the people during their travels; such stories were adopted by literature as motifs as well.…”

Indeed, every great Hindu empire in the classical and post-classical period was also a formidable naval power—from the Maurya to the Gupta and the Rashtrakuta, the Chola and the Vijayanagara empires.

With the establishment of Muslim power in India, this spread of Hindu culture abroad received an almost irrecoverable blow. However, the entrepreneurial spirit of Hindus refused to remain caged. While sultans wielded despotic and bigoted political power, they depended on Hindu business classes to keep their finances well-oiled. In turn, these classes found creative ways to preserve their Dharma and traditions both in India and abroad.

In the 16th century, groups of Sindhi Bhatiyas migrated to the Persian Gulf and settled in Muscat; they were later followed by Kutchi Banias. For the next two centuries, they acquired unchal­lengeable financial clout and became confidants of the successive sultans of Oman. They even had a decisive say in deposing one sultan and installing another. They built temples, celebrated all major Hindu festivals and sent prasad to the sultan himself. It was not a coincidence that Narendra Modi visited the  in Muscat in 2018. It had been built by a Sindhi Bhatia sometime in the 19th century.

Javalaji (Agni) Temple near Baku.

A similar but lesser-known cultural stamp left by migrant Hindu businessmen is found in Baku, Azerbaijan. This is the Jvalaji Temple built in 1745. Today, it is simply known as the Ateshgah of Baku.

Brisk trade had existed between India and the region for at least three centuries prior to the Russo-Persian war of 1722. A sizeable community of Hindu and Sikh businessmen—mer­chants, traders and bankers—had settled in Bokhara, Samarkand and Azerbaijan. However, the Russian invasion didn’t hamper commerce in a significant way.

After the Jvalaji Temple was built, it quickly became a vener­ated site of pilgrimage. Hindus and Sikhs from various parts of India undertook tirtha yatra at great risk. European travellers of the era testify as to how “… These poor devotees … come on a pil­grimage from their own country. … They mark their foreheads with saffron, and have a great veneration for a red cow. … [I] met two Hindoo Fakirs who announced themselves as on a pilgrimage to this Baku Jawala Ji. … Where a Hindoo is found so deeply tinc­tured with the enthusiasm of religion, that though his nerves be constitutionally of a tender texture and his frame relaxed by age, he will journey through hostile regions from the Ganges to the Volga, to offer up prayer at the shrine of his God.…”

As its name clarifies, the Jvalaji Temple is a shrine dedicated to Agni. Seven sacred fires used to burn from seven holes within the enclosure of the temple. This was the original garbhagriha. In the Vedic pantheon, Agni is conceived as having seven “tongues” (sapta jihva) or flames.

Sanskrit Engraving Javalaji Temple, Baku. First line invokes Lord Ganesha.

The temple complex houses 17 inscriptions of which 14 are in Sanskrit (both Nagari and Devanagari), two in Gurumukhi and one in Farsi. The very first inscription contains an invocation of Ganesha, beginning with “Sri Ganesaya Namah.” Then it de­scribes the glory of the Jvalaji deity, narrating its miraculous pow­ers. Another inscription is an elaborate stuti, or praise of Shiva.

Sanscrit inscription invoking Lord Shiva in the Jvalaji Temple, Baku.

In his History of Dharmasastra, P.V. Kane cites a sloka found in another inscription and gives an informed exposition on the Hindu rituals performed there. This is the gist of the sloka: “In yajnas, vows, pilgrimages, the feeding of Brahmanas at sacred places, giving sacred offerings to ancestors, in the hands of a men­dicant, wealth finds its righteousness.”

Such verses are abundantly found in thousands of inscriptions within India. But the fact that they were also discovered in Baku reaffirms the truth that Hindus create a new India wherever they go.

These verses also give us a hint as to why Hindus from India journeyed all the way to visit the Jvalaji Temple. It was believed to have a deep connection with the Jwal­amukhi Temple in Kangra, a shakti peetha in Himachal Pradesh. Devotees regarded the Kangra deity as the chhota (smaller) Jva­laji and the one in Baku, as the bada (greater) Jvalaji. In A Second Journey through Persia, the British secretary to the embassy in Persia, James Morier, records his 1818 encounter with a sadhu in Karadagh, in East Azerbaijan: “… We met an Indian entirely alone, on foot, with no other weapon than a stick, who was on his road to Benares returning from his pilgrimage to Baku. He was walking with surprising alacrity, and saluted us with great good-humour, like one satisfied with himself for having done a good action. I believe that these religious feats are quite peculiar to the Indian character; or there is a great difference between the mind of one who undertakes a voyage to Mecca with a caravan, in the company of others, and of him who undismayed by solitude and distance, and unencouraged by example, perseveres in his object to the last.”

By the end of the 19th century, Arabia and Central Asia had become bloody theatres of war. As a result, most of the Hindu population in Baku fled. Its place was taken by Zoroastrians who mistook the Jvalaji Temple as a shrine of their venerated fire god and renamed it as Ateshgah. The term is a Persian compound word, a corruption of the Sanskrit words, atharvan (atesh: fire) and gruha (gah: house).

In 1925, the Zoroastrian priest Jivanji Jamshedji Modi travelled extensively in Iran, Azerbaijan and Russia and recorded his expe­riences in My Travels Outside Bombay: Iran, Azerbaijan, Baku. This is what he writes about the Jvalaji Temple: “… Any Parsee … after examining this [temple] with its inscriptions, architecture, etc., would conclude that this is not a Parsee Atash Kadeh but is a Hindu temple whose Brahmins … used to worship fire.”

When Jamshedji Modi visited Baku, it had long ceased to be a living temple or a Zoroastrian shrine. In 2007, the Azerbaijani president by decree designated the temple complex as a pro­tected reserve named as the Ateshgah Temple State Historical Architectural Reserve. – Open Magazine, 23 October 2025

› Sandeep Balakrishna is an author, editor, columnist, public intellectual and an independent researcher. He is the founder and chief editor of The Dharma Dispatch.

Pilgrims at the Jvalaji Temple (ca. 1860).

Hindu temples existed before the 5th century CE – Monidipa Bose Dey

Sonkh Temple Artefact (Mathura, 1st century CE).

A narrative that keeps appearing in the media is the claim that there were no Hindu temples before the  5th century CE. This claim is false, a myth, and the propaganda is aimed at postulating that most pre-Gupta temple structural ruins were Buddhist in nature – Monidipa Bose Dey

A favourite narrative of the Left scholars that keeps appearing regularly in media is the claim that “there were no Hindu temples before the 5th century CE.” This claim is nothing but a myth, and the propaganda is primarily aimed at postulating that most pre-Gupta temple structural ruins were Buddhist in nature, and Hinduism, Hindu gods/murtis, and Hindu temples are a later development, with the concept of Hinduism and Hindu gods starting from around the Kushana period (1st century). This fake narrative has been force-fed to Indians through constant repetitions of the claim in academia, school and college textbooks, and the publishing of articles on this topic in various journals and media platforms written by so-called scholars.

Unfortunately, many gullible Indians growing up with this constant brainwashing believe this fake claim, thinking Hindus did not have any temples as such before the Gupta period. Recently, in an article, a slightly modified claim was made that large Hindu temples did not exist before the 5th century CE. From “no Hindu temples before 5th century CE” to “no large Hindu temples before 5th century CE,” the shift in narrative is noteworthy.

The standards of civilisation are often measured, among other things, by the then available scientific planning, longevity of structures built, aesthetic appeal, and successful completion of buildings that range from religious to military to residential structures. Seeing the antiquity and the advanced nature of Indian civilisation, it is not surprising to find Indian writers from ancient times quite taken up with the subject of architecture, and this obsession is evident in all forms of literature ranging from the Vedas to the Epics, Puranas, Buddhist texts, Jain texts, Agamic literature, and various historical and even political treatises. With such a vast spectrum of knowledge compiled in books, and India being a country that has always been deeply religious, it is completely illogical to think ancient Indian civilisation would have no Hindu temples.

This article will take a look at the various evidences that clearly show Hindu temples existed in ancient times and did not start from the 5th century CE, as Marxist scholars have always claimed.

Evidence from texts

Texts from ancient India help us to understand the nature of the worship of gods in India and the temples built for them. In the Astadhyayi (around the 4th century BCE), Panini gives names of Vedic deities, such as Agni, Indra, Varuna, Bhava, Sarva, Rudra, Mrda, Aryama, Tvasta, Súrya, Sóma, Indrani, Varunani, Agnayi, Usha, Prthivi, who were worshipped. Bhakti or theistic form of devotion was present in Panini’s time, which is clear by his reference to devotion to Vasudeva and Arjuna, while names like Varunadatta and Aryamadatta indicate sons were named after gods like Varuna and Aryama, to show devotion.

Panini also mentioned the use of images for worship (arcas), which indicate the existence of shrines where these arcas were worshipped.

Patanjali’s Mahabhasya (2nd century BCE), which is a detailed commentary on Panini’s work, mentions the worship of Vasudeva-Krishna as a deity; and specifically mentions temples of Dhanapati (Kubera), Rama (Balarama), and Kesava (Vasudeva), where worship would occur with various elaborate rituals, accompanied by music and dance. From around the same time, there have been found murtis of Kupiro yakho (Kubera yaksa) from Bharhut, and of Balarama from Mathura. A murti with the inscription of four-armed Vasudeva-Visnu carrying gada and chakra in his upper hand and holding a sankha (broken) in the lower hand, from Malhar (Bilaspur in Madhya Pradesh), is dated to the 2nd century BCE. These murtis would all be worshipped in temples of their own.

Kautilya’s Arthasastra refers to various temples within a fortified city that enshrined Shiva, Vaisravana, Asvinikumãras, Sri (Laksmi), and Madeira (a fertility goddess associated with the Mother Goddess sect). The Arthasastra mentions images of Aparajita (Durga), Apratihata (Visnu), and Jayanta (Kumara), which were worshipped by King Bhagabhadra (131 BCE, the fifth Sunga ruler); and Vaishnava shrines erected by Gautamiputra Bhagavata, the ninth Sunga ruler, in his 12th year.

Evidence from inscriptions

Three inscriptions from Nagar (Chittorgarh, Rajasthan), refer to the construction of a stone wall that enclosed a place for worship of Sankarsana and Väsudeva by King Sarvatata of the Kanva dynasty (250-300 BCE). The Nanaghat (Pune) inscription of Naganika of the 1st century BCE refers to Vedic sacrifices by the Satavahana royal family and starts with homages to divinities such as Dharma, Indra, Sankarsana-Vasudeva, Chandra-Surya, and the Lokapalas (Yama, Varuna, Kubera, and Vasava). An inscription from Mora (Mathura) during the reign of Mahaksatrapa Sodasa (10-25 CE) records the installation of murtis of the five Vrsni heroes in a stone temple. Another Mathura inscription of the same time, found engraved on a door-jamb, records the construction of a temple with torana and vedika for Vasudeva.

An inscription from Nandsa (Udaipur, Rajasthan, 226 CE), records the performance of Vedic sacrifices after the construction of temples dedicated to Brahma, Indra, Prajapati, and Visnu.

Structural evidence from Mauryan periods

From the time of Ashoka Maurya (272-232 BCE) to the early Kusana period, various pieces of evidence from rock-cut shrines and from surviving foundations of temples suggest that in those times, temples were built in circular (vitta), elliptical (vettäyata), and apsidal (capakara) forms. The Ajivika caves at Barabar (Gaya, Bihar) of Mauryan times, preserve both circular and elliptical shrines in hut forms with domed or vaulted roofs.

Belonging to the Mauryan period is a circular brick-and-timber shrine (plinth) of the 3rd century BCE, located at Bairat (Jaipur). Temple No. 40 at Sanci was originally an apsidal stone temple of the Mauryan period, raised on a high rectangular plinth, the superstructure likely built of wood that no longer exists.

Structural forms prevalent during the Mauryan period continued into later periods, as found recorded in many bas-reliefs from Sanchi, Mathura, Amaravati, etc. The apsidal plan for temples was more popular than the circular or elliptical plan during this period. Three stone apsidal shrines from the 1st century CE are known from Taxila (Takshasila), while Temple No. 18 at Sanchi was also an apsidal shrine, datable to the 2nd century BCE.

Remains of temples from pre-Shunga and Shunga era

The apsidal temple at Sonkh (Mathura, dated 1st century BCE) was one of such early temples. The Ghosundi inscription (1st century BCE, near Chittorgarh) talks of a temple complex named Narayana-vatika dedicated to Samkarshana-Vāsudeva; foundations of an elliptical structure, dated 2nd century BCE, found at the site of Besnagar in Vidisha is that of a Vaishnava temple; an identical structure discovered at Nagar (Chittorgarh) by Bhandarkar is dated to 350-300 BCE; while the Mora well inscription (1st century CE) refers to a temple in Mathura.

Hindu temple architecture from the post-Mauryan era is known from the remains of the temple foundations, pertaining to their ground plans, found during various archaeological excavations. Unfortunately, the superstructures of these ancient temples were not preserved, because they would often be built of wood or bricks.

Heliodorus Pillar (113 BCE)

One such example of a temple from ancient India is the Vasudeva shrine from the 3rd century BCE (approximately dated 200 BCE), found close to the Heliodorus pillar in Besnagar, near Vidisha, Madhya Pradesh. From a study of the archaeological report of the excavation of this site by D.R. Bhandarkar (ASI Annual Report 1913-14), it is very clear the temple which belonged to the Sunga period was by no means a small one. In fact, the word prasadottoma was found in an inscription on a pillar stump from the site, meaning the temple was the best among the ones in Vidisha, clearly indicating the Heliodorus Garuda pillar was built in front of the most celebrated temple of Vasudeva of that time. Thus, we find archaeological evidence of a large Hindu temple from the 3rd-2nd century BCE.

Another example of a Hindu temple from ancient India is the Vasudeva-Sankarshana temple found in Nagari, Rajasthan. Here, a stone enclosure for a Vasudeva-Sankarshana shrine is mentioned in an inscription which belonged to 300-250 BCE. The site preserves a massive stone enclosure and the plinth of an elliptical brick temple. Below the surface level of this stone enclosure, archaeologists found the remains of an earlier building that dated to 350-300 BCE. The Vasudeva-Sankarsana shrine structure was elliptical in shape with a puja-sila-prakara built around it, and only the lower moulding of the superstructure had survived which was 2 feet high, showing the temple was a large one. The shrine remained an active place for Vaishnava worship until the 7th century CE.

A series of apsidal temples from ancient India were excavated at Sonkh, dating to the 1st century BCE. The apsidal Temple No. 2 at Sonkh had a large stone railing surrounding the shrine that had engravings on both sides. On the southern side of the railing, carved ruins of a stone entrance were found that had two pillars supporting a superstructure of three architraves with voluted ends. An architectural piece from the bottom lintel of the doorway showed carvings depicting a naga and a nagin sitting on thrones, surrounded by attendants and devotees, thus denoting the temple as a Naga shrine.

Yaudheya coinage with temple engraving (ca. 200 BCE).

Numismatic evidence of Hindu temples in 200 BCE

Numismatically speaking, ancient Hindu temple architecture was found depicted on coins and coin moulds marked by the Yaudheyas. The Yaudheyas were a martial republican clan, who were at the peak of their power between 200 BCE to 400 CE, in areas of what is now Haryana, Punjab, and Rajasthan. Being a martial clan, most of the Yaudheya coins depicted the war-god Karttikeya (Brahmanyadeva). Among the many temples seen on Yaudheya coins, one structure with a dome-shaped roof and square plan stands out. It stood on an elevated adhishthana, consisting of four mouldings. The object of worship would have stood in the centre. Double domes were a popular design at that time, as evident from the many coins depicting them, while there are examples of even triple-domed temples. The third image clearly shows a Shiva temple with the Shiva linga at the centre of the sanctum. The existence of Shaiva shrines is confirmed by a four-pillared double-domed structure surmounted by a trident, which is the established emblem of Shiva. The trident on top of a four-pillared double-domed structure also confirms the Shaivite affiliation of such shrines.

Sometimes temples on Yaudheya coins show a dome marked by vertical divisions, which indicate wooden beams on the sanctum roof. A double or triple-domed structure having a square plan shows that the domes would have been covered by slanting slabs giving the sikhara a triangular look. One Yaudheya coin also depicts a structure topped with a vajra-like motif, clearly indicating a shrine dedicated to Indra Deva.

Thus, from the above-presented evidence (texts, archaeological, and numismatics), it is quite clear that Hindu temples were indeed present much before the 5th century CE, and they were often large shrines dedicated to various gods. – News18, 18 February 2024

› Monidipa Bose Dey is a well-known travel and heritage writer. 

Sonkh Temple Foundation

Sonkh Temple Frieze