is his incarnation as
Varaha inside the Varāha Narasiṃha temple at Halsi This temple is under the protection of the
Archaeological Survey of India and appears in the
List of Monuments of National Importance in Belgaum district. Traditions noted in the nineteenth century ascribe its construction to Jakhnācāraya. This appears to refer to the popular hero
Amarashilpi Jakanachari. A large stone tablet inside the temple carries an inscription over sixty lines in two parts that record gifts in different years. The first is dated 1169 (
Kali Yuga 4369) and registers the gift of a village by the sixth Goa Kadamba Permādi or Shivchitt (1147-1175) to Brahmins for the performance of rites to the holy Narasiṃha whose shrine had been established in the pure city of Halsi by Mātāyogi. The second inscription belongs to Vijayāditya II and is the only inscription of his reign. Dated 1171–72 (
Kali Yuga 4272–73) in the twenty-fifth year of his reign, it records the gift of a village name Bhalaka. Inside the temple there are two
garbhagṛha chambers facing each other. In the right one is the deity of Lord Śrī Viṣṇu in a sitting posture. The deity of Sūryanarāyaṇa and Mahālakṣmī are just behind the main deity. The chamber on the left side has the deity of Bhūvāraha Swami, lord Vishnu's
Varaha avatar, where he carries Mother Earth (or
Bhoodevi) on his tusk. Just outside the main temple are smaller temples dedicated to
Ganesha,
Shiva and
Vitthala. One statue of
Radha Krishna can also be seen in a smaller shrine. A yearly fair is held at the temple on the full moon of
Ashvin. On the full-moon day of Kārttika or
Kartik Purnima, the palanquin of Varāhanarasiṃha is carried in procession to the temple of Rāmeśvara. ==Śrī Suvarṇeśvara temple==