Bishnupur, also spelled Vishnupur, historic town, central West Bengal state, northeastern India. It lies just south of the Dhaleshwari (Dhalkisor) River (a tributary of the Damodar River), about 18 miles (29 km) southeast of Bankura.


Bishnupur was the capital of the Hindu Mallabhum kingdom, which was founded in the 8th century CE and was once the most important Hindu dynasty in Bengal. It was constituted a municipality in 1863. The town is surrounded by old fortifications and has more than a dozen temples. The 16th-century Jor Bangla and stepped Ras Mancha are excellent examples of brick temples of the Bengali style.


The dhrupad school of Indian music was founded there in the 16th to 17th century under royal patronage. Bishnupur has several colleges affiliated with the University of Burdwan in Burdwan. It has major Grand Trunk Road and rail connections and is an agricultural-trade and silk-weaving centre. Pop. (2001) 61,947; (2011) 67,783.

Bishnupur was ruled under the Gupta period by local Hindu kings who paid tribute to Samudra Gupta[citation needed]. Following a long period of obscurity, where the land oscillated between being a minor independent principality and a vassal state. The land is also called Mallabhum after the Malla rulers of this place. The Malla rulers were Vaishnavites and built the famous terracotta temples during the 17th and 18th century at this place. The legends of Bipodtarini Devi are associated with Malla Kings of Bishnupur.[1]
Bishnupur (the distance from Kolkata is 132 km), now the headquarters of the subdivision of the same name in Bankura district, is a seat of crafts and culture.
For almost a thousand years it was the capital of the Malla kings of Mallabhum, of which Bankura was a part, till their power waned during the times when Mughal Empire weakened under the last monarchs of the dynasty.

The patronage of Malla king Veer Hambir and his successors Raja Raghunath Singha Dev and Bir Singha Dev made Bishnupur one of the principal centres of culture in Bengal. Most of the exquisite terracotta temples for which town is justly famous were built during this period.
Mrinmoyee temple of kings is treated as a valuable historic place.

Apart from the unique architecture of the period, Bishnupur is also famous for its terracotta craft and its own Baluchari sarees made of tussar silk.
Royal patronage also gave rise to Bishnupur Gharana (school) of Hindustani classical music in late 18th-century and the Bishnupur school of painting.
Since 1997, the temples of Bishnupur is on UNESCO World Heritage Site’s Tentative list.

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