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Orissa is full of interesting and exciting destinations. Deciding on where to go and which places to visit can be a daunting task. We have listed possible destinations in Orissa which you could visit from Balipada. All places are within 2-3 hours reach from the village resort. 

Cities and Places  

BHUBANESWAR (90 mins) - The State Capital, is a perfect blend of the past and present. It is dotted with ancient temples and monuments, while offering the very best in accommodation and entertainment. It is one of the preferred bases for tourists wanting a quick glimpse of Orissa.
While at Bhubaneswar, you could also visit:
Dhauli, Sisupalgarh, Hirapur, Atri, Nandankanan

PURI (60 mins) - The Abode of Lord Jagannath, is also famous for its beautiful beach. It attracts both pilgrims and pleasure seekers alike, and it is not surprising that some of the now permanent residents of the enchanting town were originally visitors who decided to stay back!
While at Puri, you could also visit:
Balighai, Brahmagiri, Satyabadi, Baliharachandi, Raghurajpur, Satapada

KONARK (45 mins) - Famous for the Sun Temple, this small hamlet plays host to a huge number of visitors who are spell bound by both the size of the temple as well as the delicacy of the erotic sculpture. The beautiful Chandrabhaga beach is an added bonus to visitors to help them relax after the awe inspiring tour of the temple.
While at Konark, you could visit:
Kuruma, Chaurasi, Ramachandi, Astranga

CUTTACK (2 hrs) - The Millennium City
Ansupa, Bhattarika, Chhatia, Chandikhol, Choudwar, Dhabaleswar, Jajpur, Kendrapara, Naraj, Niali-Madhava, Paradeep, Patharajpur, Ratnagiri, Lalitgiri, Udayagiri 

CHILIKA (2 hrs) - Asia's Largest Brackish Water Lake, is famous for the wide variety of birds that come here during winter. It is also home to the Irrawady Dolphins that make every trip into the lake memorable.
While at Chilika, you could visit:
Narayani, Nirmaljhara, Banpur

SATAPADA (1.5 hrs) - Irrawaddy Dolphins - Satpada is around 50 kilometers from Puri on the shores of lake chilika - the point where Chilka lake pours into the Bay of Bengal. The term Satapada means cluster of seven villages and is famous for the irrawaddy dolphins. The dolphin center attracts a large number of tourists for dolphin watching every year.

Several resorts offer good accomodations including beaches, golf clubs, etc.

ORISSA COAST (1 hr) - Olive Ridley Turtles - The beaches of Orissa provide one of the last nesting grounds of the endangered Olive Ridley Turtles in the world. Every year between December and April, after swimming thousands of miles from places as far as Australia and The Philippines, thousands of turtles come ashore to mate and lay their eggs. Six weeks later their newborn babies make their way back into the sea. The turtles are endangered due to construction in their breeding ground and they often get entangled in nets and die.  In several places conservationists have come together to rescue trapped turtles and to protect their breeding habitat by promoting the establishment of marine sanctuaries. 

                   

Yogini Temples (90 mins) - Orissa has the distinction of preserving two of the outstanding temples of goddess Yogini, one at Hirapur, a village near Bhubaneswar and another at Ranipur-Jharial in Bolangir district. The temple was built in the 9th century AD and is the center of Tantricism and Shakti even till today. The Bhauma and Somavamsis rulers of Orissa built the Yogini temples. There was a gradual amalgamation of Shaivism, Shaktism and Avajrayana form of Mahayana Buddhism during this period in this region. There are nine Chausanth Yogini temples in India out of which the best kept are at Jabalpur and Khajuraho in Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh and Tamil Nadu. They were built between 9th and 13th centuries AD.

The Yoginis were considered to be able to confer their devotees with the power to become small or gigantic in size, to control one's body and mind of others, to fly, become invisible, and infinite other useful abilities. The devotees repeated the names of the Goddesses. In the subsequent centuries, when the active use of the shrines reduced, worshippers shifted their venerations to occult paper diagrams. The growth of Yogini cult can be traced to the rural and tribal form of worship. The goddess Yogini derived its form from the local village goddess or the gram devi. The entire development of Yogini worship and the construction of temples are derived from outside the confines of orthodox Brahmanical tradition. The Yogini came into existence in the 7th-8th century AD in the shape of a Sakta-Tantric cult. It continued to flourish as an important manifestation of Shakta Tantricism.

In the villages of India, especially in Orissa, each village has a favored deity. Each gram devi, like Ramchandi, Shyamkali, Harachandi, Tarini, Viraja, Bhagavati, Durgamata, Sarala, Bhadrakali, Kamakhya, Bhabani, Mangala, all presides over the well-being of the village. These village goddesses seem to have been gradually transformed and consolidated into potent numerical groupings of sixty-four acquiring thereby a totally different character. The remains of Yogini temples in various parts of the country clearly reveal that the exponents and followers of this esoteric cult made vigorous attempts to popularize it and this cult was of impelling and vital significance from the 9th to the 12th century. 

The Yogini temple at Hirapur was probably built towards the end of the Bhauma rule, i.e., 9th century AD, as the sculptures strongly resemble those of the famous Mukteshwar temple of Bhubaneswar, which was erected in the 9th century. The Hirapur temple is the smallest among all the Yogini temples and measures 30 ft in diameter with stonewalls barely eight feet high. It is built of coarse sandstone blocks with laterite in foundation. The Yoginis are carved from fine-grained gray chlorite. The inner walls of the temple have sixty-four niches with sixty Yoginis still in position. It is the only temple, which has sculptures on its outer walls. We can see nine niches each containing a female figure made of sandstone. Each figure stands upon a large severed human head, holding a curved knife or javelin in one hand and a skull cup in the other. The entrance of the temple is unusual as it has a projecting entrance way flanked by doorkeepers. There is a skeletal male of fearsome presence on either side of the narrow vestibule. He is wearing a garland of skulls and snake anklets with one figure holding a severed human head. On the pedestal below are two more similar skeletal figures holding skullcaps and jackals beside them.

The sculptures of Hirapur temple are inordinately graceful. Faces are exquisitely carved often depicting a gentle smile and with hair style of various styles and heavily ornamented.

(from wikipedia.com)

Temples and Monuments

HINDU TEMPLES
Ananta Vasudeva, Baladevajew, Bharateswar, Bhaskareswar, Chandana, Kotitirtheswar, Lingaraja, Mukteswara, Konark, 64 Yogini Shrines, Leaning Temple, Puri Jagannath , Rajarani, Rameswar,

BUDDHIST MONUMENTS
Dhauli, Padmapur, Balasore District, Deogarh, Buddhist Heritage, Kuruma, Prachi Valley, Biswanath Hill, Lalitgiri, Ratnagiri, Jaugada, Naraj, Udaygiri 

JAIN MONUMENTS
Khandagiri & Udaygiri

Archaeological Site

SISHUPALGARH

From under the ruins of an ancient fort on the outskirts of Bhubaneswar, archaeologists have dug out the remains of a 2,500-year-old city which they believe was bigger than classical Athens. Eighteen pillars were found among the remnants of the grand city at Sishupalgarh, a ruined fortification first discovered 60 years ago. The findings include debris of household pottery and terracotta ornaments, pointing to an advanced lifestyle led by the people who lived there. The polished potteries even have ownership marks on them. 


 Source: Orissa360.com

Monica L Smith, head archaeologist from the University of California said the site is the "most visible standing architectural monument" discovered in India so far. It's a huge city that existed about 2,500 years ago. The city had four gateways and could have housed up to 25,000 people. Even classical Athens had only 10,000 people.  It is believed to have been a very important city with well-built walls and a big expanse. The pillars we found were part of a gigantic structure, probably used for public gatherings. Sishupalgarh was once ruled by the Kalinga kings.

 

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