Pancha Ratna Shiva Temple, also known as Bhubaneswar Shiva Mandir, is a Hindu temple of the Puthia Temple Complex in Puthia Upazila, Rajshahi Division, Bangladesh. It is the largest Shiva temple in Bangladesh. The shrine overlooks the Shiv Sagar (Shiva's lake) to its left. The temple is well decorated in pancharatna (five spires) architectural style and is located at the entrance of the Puthia Rajbari.[1] [2] Among the surviving Hindu temples, this shrine is said to be "an exceptional and more attractive for its architectural beauty" in Bangladesh.[1]
The temple is in Puthia town which is away by road from Rajshahi city; the city is also a rail head and is on the Dhaka-Rajashahi Highway.[2]
The temple's construction is attributed to Rani Bhuban Mayi Devi, the widow of Raja Jagat Narayan Ray of the five-anna estate.[3] It was built between 1823 and 1830 at an estimated cost of three million taka.[1]
The lofty temple is unlike the terracotta plaster style decorations of the Govinda temple as it has a plaster finish. It is built over a raised platform of height, and its towers have beehive type design.[1] [3] Built in brick masonry, in plan it is square,[1] with "north Indian type turrets and plastered finish". The central sanctum is the only chamber of the temple which is square. A Shiva Linga, carved from black basalt stone is deified in the sanctum; it is the largest in the country. The central chamber is enclosed within a passage that runs on all four sides. The passage has cusp arched entrances from four sides. The temple tower consists of five decorated spires. The internal and external plastered walls of the temple are decorated with panels with themes from Hindu mythology. The raised platform of the temple is accessed through two brick built stairways, one from the north and the other from the southern direction.[1]
It is decorated with stone carvings and sculptural works, which were disfigured during the Bangladesh Liberation War in 1971. The invading Pakistani army attempted to displace and break the Shiva Linga, but were unable to move it from its position. The temple is now a protected monument.[4]
The corridors have a touch of Jaipuri architecture.