Chalisgaon: The Mathematical Heart of the Deccan
By Tina Khatri | March 24, 2026
The road from Indore to Shirdi unfolds as a meditation on the shifting geography of the Deccan. Descending from the Malwa plateau, soft greenery yields to the sun-scorched, basalt-grey plains of Khandesh. In a dip where railway tracks converge like iron veins, Chalisgaon emerges.
To casual travellers, it is a blur of dust and transit. For those who linger, it is a town of forty secrets—a place where mathematics, mysticism, and the scent of parched earth create a sensory experience unique to Maharashtra.
Chalisgaon: Where iron veins converge.
Weight of a name
Chalisgaon translates as "village of forty." Official records note a cluster of forty hamlets consolidated for revenue. Local lore paints a richer picture: once a fortieth serai, the final resting post for caravans journeying from Mughal heartlands toward southern temples. Arrival signalled proximity to the deep Deccan—horses unhitched, tobacco shared, stories whispered under stars that seem closer in the thin, dry air.
Silence of hills: Patna Devi
Eighteen kilometres off the highway, the Gautala Autramghat sanctuary absorbs the industrial hum. A rugged forest of teak and flame-of-the-forest trees leads to Patna Devi.
Not merely a temple, it is a monument to intellect. In the 12th century, the mathematician Bhaskaracharya sat in caves here, inspired by rhythmic drips and celestial motions, calculating the secrets of gravity and infinitesimals. Silence here bears the weight of academia, as though the rocks themselves guard equations etched into minds almost a millennium ago.
The Mind of Bhaskara II
Author of the Siddhanta Shiromani. From these hills, he mapped the cosmos, long before the modern age began.
The modern legacy of ancient equations.
Miracle of physics: Jhulta Minar
Nearby Farkande hosts **Jhulta Minar**, two brick minarets that defy the rigidity of stone. Built with advanced resonance knowledge, the towers are "connected" by an invisible physics thread. A gentle nudge on one tower sends vibrations through the earth to sway the second tower in ghostly unison. Standing between them evokes vertigo—a reminder of medieval mastery in material science, rediscovered slowly across centuries.
Grit and grace: Khandesh
Chalisgaon’s sensory profile thrives on contrasts:
- Sight: Deep black regur soil cracks into hexagonal patterns in summer; monsoon turns it into obsidian velvet nurturing endless banana plantations.
- Sound: Rhythmic cadence of Ahirani dialect—a musical language of fields. Poetry of Bahinabai Chaudhari captures the essence of land.
- Taste: Fierce heat of Khandeshi shev bhaji. Local "kala masala," roasted to near-charcoal, forms a smoky, dark, searing broth.
The searing heat of the Khandeshi kitchen.
Whistle of the pass
Driving toward Shirdi, Laling Ghats offer the signature tune of Chalisgaon. Wind funnels through porous volcanic hills, producing a low-frequency hum. A lonely, beautiful sound accompanies travellers from ancient silk traders to modern pilgrims.
Yadava legacy
The Yadava dynasty marked the final Hindu sovereignty flourish in the Deccan before sultanates reshaped the map. 12th-13th centuries saw immense wealth, soaring spires, and intellectual obsession. Ruling from Devagiri, Yadavas treated Chalisgaon as a laboratory, nurturing scholars who mapped the universe in elegant, solvable patterns.
Stone grant of mathematics
Ruins of Patna Devi hold a rare human detail: a stone inscription recording a royal grant from Yadava King Singhana. It funded not war or a palace, but a college of astronomy and mathematics. Here, Bhaskaracharya’s grandson Changadeva founded a learning lineage. Students traced geometric proofs in the dust, the wind through the valley carrying whispers of ancient debates on zero and celestial curves—a university town of antiquity.
Philosophy of soil: Bahinabai’s verses
Folk tradition builds in song. Bahinabai Chaudhari, centuries later, carries the DNA of this philosophical landscape. While Yadavas mapped stars, she mapped the human heart:
"The mind, oh the mind, is a bird in the sky,
Watch how it flutters, watch how it flies.
You may think you have caged it with reason and gold,
But it slips through the bars, defiant and bold."
Sensory transition: Malwa to Khandesh
The journey from Indore crosses more than a state border—a cultural threshold. The Malwa plateau is soft, defined by Mandu aesthetics and Narmada marble. The Chalisgaon stretch hardens: architecture is defensive and muscular, cuisine shifts to charred, unapologetic Khandeshi rassa, and trees change to silver-barked babul and scrub silhouettes.
Chalisgaon embodies transition: refinement of the north meets the iron-willed pragmatism of the south, a town built on forty traveller stops, offering intellectual clarity before the final descent into Shirdi’s spiritual intensity.