HERITAGE: GODDESS OF THE MOUNTAINS
My Indian friends insist Sharda was a university in ancient times. I, however, find no reference to a school at the site. Sources only mention the temple. Nor, too, did I find any archaeological trace in the area around the temple compound.
Up in the valley of the Kishanganga (duly Islamised to Neelam) River, in the elbow where the Madhumati flows into it from the south-east, the ruined Sharda temple sits on a hill above the village named after the temple.
An impressive stone stairway leads up the hill past the military post to the remains of a thick stone wall and a ruined gateway. Though only portions of the boundary wall now remain, it is not difficult to see that it once enclosed a rectangle whose corners are aligned with the cardinal points of the compass.
The Sharda Temple in the valley of Kishanganga represents the typical features of Kashmiri temple architecture
Smack in the middle of the quadrangle stands the temple. Built of locally quarried reddish sandstone, the temple dates back very likely to the eighth century CE, in the age of the Karkota dynasty of Kashmir. The brilliant Lalitaditya Muktapida (reigned 699-735), celebrated as much for his administration and military conquests as his fine taste in raising monuments, is the likely author of the Sharda temple. The breathtakingly beautiful and magnificent Martand Sun Temple, near Anantnag, was constructed in his time and, as one looks up to the much humbler facade of the ruins of Sharda, one cannot but remark on the similarity of architecture.