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Gaay ghat
Scenic Location

Gaay ghat

Gaay ghat Varanasi

In the 12th century, if you stood at Gaay Ghat, you were standing at the southern boundary of Varanasi. Beyond this point, the city ended and the wilderness began. The name comes from "gai" (cow) — because people used to wash their cows here, and a 17th-century painting shows exactly that: cows drinking water at this ghat, their reflections merging with the river. But Gaay Ghat is also called Gaay Ghat because of the 3-foot-tall sculpture of a bull (Nandi) that stands here — Shiva's vehicle, silently watching over the river. In the early 19th century, Balabai Shitole of Gwalior made the ghat pucca (permanent), and the 17th-century text Girivana Manjari records its historical significance. The nearby Patna Darwaza (gate) got its name because it marked the road to Patna, the capital of Bihar — a reminder that this was once a frontier post between two great regions. Today, Gaay Ghat is the most happening of all southern ghats. It hosts everything — mundan ceremonies, weddings, religious functions, recreational events. The locals hold evening aarti here, and during Dev Diwali, the ghat explodes with rangolis and eco-friendly decorations that rival anything at Assi or Dashashwamedh. Old and new Shiva Lingas dot the stairs, placed in front of the Nandi statue by devotees over generations. It's clean, vibrant, and unapologetically local — a place where Varanasi celebrates itself without waiting for tourists to show up.

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