Kedarnath Temple
| Kēdāranātha Temple | |
|---|---|
| Kēdāranātha Jyotirliṅga | |
| Kēdāranātha Temple | |
| Religion | |
| Affiliation | Hinduism | 
| District | Rudraprayag | 
| Deity | Śiva | 
| Festivals | Mahā Śivarātri | 
| Governing body | Śrī Badarīnātha Kēdāranātha Temple Committee | 
| Location | |
| Location | Kēdāranātha | 
| State | Uttarakhand | 
| Country | India | 
| Geographic coordinates | 30°44′6.7″N 79°4′0.9″E / 30.735194°N 79.066917°E | 
| Architecture | |
| Type | North-Indian Himalayan Architecture | 
| Elevation | 3,583 m (11,755 ft) | 
| Website | |
| badrinath-kedarnath | |
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Kēdāranātha Temple (Sanskrit: केदारनाथ मंदिर, IAST: Kēdāranātha Mandira, lit. 'temple of the God of the field') is a Hindu temple, one of the twelve jyotirlinga of Śiva. The temple is located on the Garhwal Himalayan range near the Mandākinī river, in the state of Uttarakhand, India. Due to extreme weather conditions, the temple is open to the general public only between the months of April (Akṣaya Tritiya) and November (Kārtika Pūrṇimā, the autumn full moon). During the winters, the vigraha (deity) of the temple is carried down to Ukhimath to be worshiped for the next six months. Kēdāranātha is seen as a homogeneous form of Śiva, the 'Lord of Kēdārakhaṇḍa', the historical name of the region.
The temple is not directly accessible by road and has to be reached by a 17 kilometres (11 mi) uphill trek from Gaurikuṇḍa. According to Hindu legends, the temple was initially built by the Pāṇḍavas, and is one of the twelve Jyotirlingas, the holiest Hindu shrines of Śiva. The Pāṇḍava were supposed to have pleased Śiva by doing penance in Kēdāranātha. The temple is one of the four major sites in India's Chota Char Dham pilgrimage of Northern Himalayas and is the first of the Pañca Kēdāra pilgrimage sites. This temple is the highest among the 12 Jyotirlingas. It is one of the 275 paadal petra sthalams expounded in the Tēvaram. This temple is sung of by Tirugnāṇasambandar, Appar, Sundarar and Sekkizhar in their Tēvaram texts.
Kēdāranātha was the worst affected area during the 2013 flash floods in North India. The temple complex, surrounding areas, and Kēdāranātha town suffered extensive damage, but the temple structure did not suffer any major damage. A large rock among the debris acted as a barrier, protecting the temple from the flood.