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Introduction
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Attraction
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Jaugada is situated at a distance of 10
kms from Purushotampur. The place is of great historical importance as one
of the famous rock edicts of Ashok is located here.
Jaugada or Jatudurga (Lac fort) as it was known in classical times, is
said to be associated with Mahabharta episode. Tradition ascribes that the
fort of Jaugada was built by Duryodhana of Mahabharata fame. Its name jau
or Lac is from a tradition that it was made of Lac and was therefore
impregnable as no enemy could scale the walls as they were smooth and
slippery.
Jaugada stands as the symbol of all the historical heritage connected with
the Rushikulya Valley civilisation. From the bank of this river, silver
coins of the pre Mauryan age have been discovered. The Ashokan inscription
at Jaugada is incised on a rock face some 30 feet long and 15 feet high
elevated about 12 feet on a mass of granitic gneiss. The fort of Jaugada
was rectangular in shape, the opposite sides being 858 yards by 814 yards
respectively. The earthen bank at places is 18 feet high and 148 1/2 feet
across at the base and has two entrances on each side. The fort was
surrounded by a wide and deep moat which was not continuous slips being
left for ingress and egress. The walls and towers were made of earth whose
remnants still exist in high shapeless mounds. Jaugada is a part of the
Malati hill range. The inscription of this place is one of the two Kalinga
edicts which are supplements to the series of fourteen rock edicts of
Ashoka, the other being at Dhauli near Bhubaneswar in Puri district. These
two Kalinga edicts laid down the principles on which the newly conquered
province of Kalinga was to be governed. Long neglect and exposure the
saline breeze and age have caused much damage to this precious monument,
large strips have fallen off revealing blank places since Minchin, a
British merchant, who first brought the inscription to the notice of the
Europeans in 1858. To prevent it from further damage the Archeological
Survey of India has treated the rock surface chemically and has declared
it as a protected monument.
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