Akshayavat, Prayagraj - Prayagraj

4.6/5 based on 8 reviews

Contact Akshayavat, Prayagraj

Address :

Allahabad fort, Prayagraj, Uttar Pradesh 211005, India

Postal code : 211005
Opening hours :
Tuesday 8AM–12AM
Wednesday 8AM–12AM
Thursday 8AM–12AM
Friday 8AM–12AM
Saturday 8AM–12AM
Sunday Closed
Monday 8AM–12AM
Categories :
Description : Sacred banyan tree & pilgrimage site associated with a Hindu legend, set within a riverside fort.

Allahabad fort, Prayagraj, Uttar Pradesh 211005, India
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Dr Sanjay Dhawan on Google

Forever Green tree inside the Prayagraj Fort. A witness to 4 Yugs. Must visit. Lord Ram and Krishna rested here but beware of the smaller temples below the tree where each Pandit will try to extract maximum money on some pretext or the other
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amit kasat on Google

Akshay vat tree temple and patalpuri temple opening and closing time is sunrise to sunset and it is a 3km long journey to take approx 1.5 hrs. Very tight security no snap allowed from camera however camera is allowed. Must visit holy place . PF my snapshots.
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Eternal Shrivastava on Google

It's aoldest tree in India from many yugas. Few years ago it's not available for visitors because of army's cant area but now it's available . Some people and some old litrature tells us that it's contain four routes of all directions East West North and South. Long time ago many people assumpted that it's a path or route of Haven that's why they are jumped on the nearest situated a Deep well but in the Akbar's period it's totally covered by Akbar. It contains a secret doar also but this time it's totally prohibited for all. Thank you ?
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Anjali Jaiswal on Google

Akshayavat or Akshay Vat ("the indestructible banyan tree") is a sacred fig tree mentioned in the Hindu mythology. According to a legend, once the sage Markandeya asked Lord Narayana to show him a specimen of the divine power. Narayana flooded the entire world for a moment, during which only the Akshayavat could be seen above the water level.[1] Jahangir cut the Akshayvat to its roots and hammered a red-hot iron cauldron on its stump so that it doesn't grow again. However, within a year, the tree began to grow again.[2] tree in Prayagraj has been described as Akshayavat in the Prayag Mahatmya of the Matsya Purana.[3] In The Encyclopaedia Asiatica (1976), Edward Balfour identifies a banyan tree mentioned in Ramayana with the tree at Prayag.[4] Rama, Lakshmana and Sita are said to have rested beneath this tree.[1] The Chinese Buddhist pilgrim Xuanzang mentions a tree (a stump with few branches[4]) which was said to be the home of a man-eating demon. As part of a custom, some pilgrims would offer themselves at the nearby temple. Xuanzang mentions that the tree was surrounded by human bones. Alexander Cunningham identified this tree with the Akshayavat at Prayag.[1] Rishabha (Jain tirthankar) is also said to have practised tapasya beneath the historical Akshayavat at Prayag. Currently, a sacred fig tree located within the Patalpuri Temple at the Prayagraj Fort is worshipped as the Akshayavat described in ancient texts. As of 2011, a permission from the Commandant of Prayagraj Fort's Ordnance Depot is needed to visit this tree. On one day during the Kumbh Mela, the site is open to all the pilgrims. However, a popular opinion is that the Patalpuri Temple tree is not the authentic Akshayavat: the real Akshayavat is in another underground temple inside the Fort. When the British gained control of the Prayagraj Fort after the Treaty of Prayagraj in 1765, they did not want general public to access the sensitive parts of the fort. So, the shrine was moved to the fringes of the fort compound, that is, the present-day Patalpuri Temple.[3] According to the Welsh travel writer Fanny Parkes, who visited both the tree sites in 1831, when the original Akshayavat chamber was closed, the local Brahmins set up the stump of a ber tree in Patalpuri. They claimed that it was a branch of the original Akshayavat that had penetrated through the walls. Parkes states that the local Hindus of Prayag knew about this and did not worship the false Akshayavat.[5] An 18th-century map of the Fort from the British Library confirms this: the location of the original temple is shown in the center of the fort; while the present-day Patalpuri Temple is on the outskirts of the Fort. In the 1950s, Shiva Nath Katju also claimed that the "tree" placed in the Patalpuri Temple was only a log that was replaced by the priests every 4–5 years. The commander of the fort acknowledged his claim as true.[3] tree at Gaya, Bihar[4][6] and another tree at Varanasi are also worshipped as the Akshayavat. The Bodhi tree is said to be a manifestation of the Akashayavat at Prayag.[7] According to Tibetan Buddhist tradition, Buddha is said to have planted a seed of the Prayag's Akshayavat next to Mount Kailash on a mountain known as the Palace of the Medicine Buddha.[7]
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Hitesh Minocha on Google

Akshay vat mandir is a place where bhagwan shri ram do offering to the to his dead father dashrath.This is made a under a fort there is a popular tree.
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Arunachalam Subbram on Google

Darshan during KASI visits. This Time on 2.11.2021.
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Geetika Saraswat on Google

It is inside a fort. Place was clean. Wish it could be maintained. It’s a nice place and can see the view of sangam from the fort
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Sunil Sharma on Google

Akshayavat is spiritual place ,which has a Banyan tree ? believed to be there from time immemorial and one that will never decay , it is situated inside the Fort campus , Prayagraj

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