Situated on the extreme western tip of the Kathiawar, Dwarka is one of the
four most holy Hindu pilgrimage sites in India and is closely related to the
Krishna legend. It was here that Krishna set up his capital after Mathura.
Dwarkanath, the name of the main temples here, is dedicated to Krishna.

Located
in the western state of Gujarat, it has the fascinating and extremely
beautiful Jagatmandir temples, bordered on one side by the ocean coast and
on the other side by the town of Dwarka. One of India's oldest and most
venerated pilgrimage sites, Dwarka's archaeological and historical
background is shrouded in mystery.
Mythologically, Dwarka was the site chosen by Garuda, the Divine Eagle, who
brought Krishna here when he departed Mathura. Krishna founded the beautiful
city and lived there the remaining years of his life until he died in 3102
BC. Legends tell that Dwarka was once entirely swept away by a great tidal
wave and scholars confer that the oldest parts of the Jagatmandir temples
may only date to the relatively recent re-buildings of the Gupta period in
413 AD.
The pilgrimage shrine of Jagatmandir in Dwarka is thus highly charged with
the quality or energy of devotion and will awaken and amplify that quality
in visiting pilgrims.