Bhubaneswar

City

Bhubaneswar

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India / Odisha

Bhubaneswar’s history stretches from early urban experiments to its modern role as a planned state capital. The region has been inhabited since at least the early historic period, and one of the strongest proofs is Sisupalgarh on the city’s outskirts. Archaeologists describe it as a large, walled town with formal gateways and a broadly planned layout. Research suggests it flourished from around the mid–first millennium BCE and continued well into the early centuries CE—evidence that this landscape supported organised urban life long before the present-day city expanded over it.

The next major layer comes from the classical story of Kalinga. Just south of the city, Dhauli preserves major rock edicts of Emperor Ashoka, tying the area to the wider political world of the Mauryan period. In popular memory and tourism narratives, Dhauli is linked with the aftermath of the Kalinga War and Ashoka’s later emphasis on peace and dhamma—showing how the region sat close to key corridors of imperial power, trade, and religious change along eastern India.

Bhubaneswar’s most enduring identity, however, was shaped in the early medieval period as Ekamra Kshetra—a living temple landscape. The city became celebrated for dense clusters of shrines built in the Kalinga architectural tradition, and this sacred geography culminated in the Lingaraja Temple complex. Standard historical accounts attribute the core construction of Lingaraja to Somavamsi patronage, with later additions by Ganga rulers, and emphasise how its architecture and continuing worship helped define the city’s reputation as the “Temple City.”

Jain heritage adds another crucial chapter through the nearby Udayagiri and Khandagiri caves, rock-cut monastic shelters generally dated to around the 2nd century BCE. The hills also preserve the famous inscription credited to Kharavela, among the most significant epigraphic records from eastern India. Together, the caves and inscriptions show that this region was a shared cultural zone where Jain, Buddhist, and Brahmanical traditions developed side by side over long periods.

In the 20th century, Bhubaneswar’s story changed again—this time through modern planning. After Independence, the state decided to move its capital from Cuttack, and the foundation of the new capital was laid on 13 April 1948. The modern city’s plan was prepared in 1946 by German planner Otto Königsberger, making Bhubaneswar one of India’s early planned cities; sources also note Jawaharlal Nehru laying the cornerstone for the capital’s development. Over time, administrative and educational institutions, wide roads, and new residential sectors reshaped the landscape.

Rapid post-1950s growth pushed development beyond the original layout, yet the old temple quarters remain the cultural heart of Odisha’s capital region.

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