Tuesday, January 1, 2013


Higher Education Department, Govt. of Odisha
e-Admission 2013-14 
www.dheorissa.in/

 for   +2 and +3 only

www.orissaexam.com-Odisha

 TET Admit Card-Hall Ticket Download 2013-OTET

www.orissaexam.in-Odisha TET Admit Card-Hall Ticket Download 2013-OTET

Orissa Teacher Eligibility Test (OTET) will be conducted by BSE Orissa Government. Orissa Teacher Eligibility Test admit card or hall ticket downloading option provided by official site at www.orissaexam.in.Candidates who have applied and waiting for Odisha TET Admit Card for appearing TET Examination on 9 June 2013 can download now.


ODISHA RESULTS SITE




http://orissaresults.nic.in/








Konark (Oriya: ) (Sanskrit: कोणार्क) is a small town in the Puri district in the state of Orissa, India. It lies on the coast by the Bay of Bengal, 65 kilometers from the capital of the state, Bhubaneswar[1] . It is the site of the 13th-century Sun Temple, also known as the Black Pagoda, built in black granite during the reign of Narasimhadeva-I. The temple is a World Heritage Site[2] . The temple is now mostly in ruins, and a collection of its sculptures is housed in the Sun Temple Museum, which is run by the Archaeological Survey of India.
Konark is also home to an annual dance festival called Konark Dance Festival, held every December, devoted to classical Indian dance forms, including the traditional classical dance of Orissa, Odissi.[3]
On 16th of February 1980, Konark lay directly on the path of a total solar eclipse                                           


The Sun Temple was built in the 13th century and designed as a gigantic chariot of the Sun God, Surya, with twelve pairs of ornamented wheels pulled by seven horses. Some of the wheels are 3 meters wide. Only six of the seven horse still stand today.[2] The temple fell into disuse after an envoy of Jahangir descreted the temple in the early 17th century.[2]
The Sun temple belongs to the Kalingan school of Indian temple architecture. The alignment of the Sun Temple is along the East-West direction. The inner sanctum or vimana used to be surmounted by a tower or shikara but it was razed in the 19th century. The audience hall or jahamogana still stands and comprises majority of the ruins. The roof of the dance hall or natmandir has fallen off. It stands at the eastern end of the ruins on a raised platform.[2


 'Welcome Odisha' at Puri beach


 Odisha food
CHANDMAHILA, ODISHA ~ In a matter of three minutes, it was all over. In the Gop block of Odisha’s Puri district, 45-year-old Sanaullah Khan had just laid his prayer mat next to his wife, when they heard shrieks outside. By the time they reached the door of their modest hut in Chandmahila village, the water had gathered so much force that it blew away the door. Suddenly, Khan found himself in chest-deep water. At about 9.40 pm on the night of 10 September, an embankment along the Kushabhadra, a sub-tributary of the Mahanadi river, was washed away. What was to follow was nothing short of a catastrophe. Khan somehow managed to save himself and his wife and children, and together they sought refuge on the roof of a pucca house in the village. They waited there, without food or water, for some government agency to come to the rescue. For 24 hours, they just waited.

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