Assistant Professor said, Khandwari is the heritage of Mahabharata period By Raj Kumar Sharma Edited by: Jagran News Network Updated: Sat, 01 Nov 2025 01:02 AM (IST) Khandwari is the heritage of Mahabharata period Assistant Professor said, Khandwari is the heritage of Mahabharata years found here g30 years civilization -0 civilization Two thousand year old toys found, evidence of human habitation also found, Baghpat: Delhi Dr. Shubham Kewaliya, Assistant Professor of Shaheed Bhagat Singh College of the University, visited Khandwari for about four hours. They found painted gray pottery and two-thousand-year-old clay toys, including humped bulls. He said that the painted gray pottery shows a three thousand year old civilization. It is clear from this that Khandwari is a legacy of the Mahabharata period. Humped bull toys have been found in early times. Remove Advertisement Only Read News Dr. Ujjain resident Kewalia said that he visited Western UP. Continuously coming to Baghpat since 2018. Sinauli did his PhD on the site. Have visited Lakshagriha, Kurdi, Bamnauli etc many times before. After getting information about antiquities found in Khandwari on internet media, MA students came here along with Harshit on Friday morning around 10 am and toured till 2 pm. Like Lakshagrih and other villages of Barnawa, painted gray ware i.e. painted gray pottery was found in Khandwari. Gupta or Uttar Gupta is a structure made of bricks, which we cannot even clearly call a well. There has been human habitation here for a long time, evidence of which has been found. On the other hand, not only Sisana, people from the surrounding area kept coming and going to Khandwari throughout the day. Their demand is that the excavation should start soon. — Khandwari came into limelight in the unpopulated village of Khandwari situated between Baghpat and Sisana. During the illegal exploitation of land, people saw the shape of the temple. On October 27, the youth made a video from a mobile phone and broadcast it on the Internet media. The worship started from the morning of October 28. During this period bones, pottery, coins and other antiquities were found. When the matter came into limelight, a three-member team of the Archaeological Survey of India reached Khandwari from Meerut on the morning of October 29 and searched an area of over two km. Reached the temple and saw the locked tunnel which is said to be used by Pandavas. Antiquities were taken into possession. ASI found in the preliminary investigation that the brick shape seen here is not a temple but a well of the Gupta period.