Mahendragiri is associated with the Ramayana as Mahendra
Parvata (mountain). It is a 'Kula Parvata' along with
Malaya,
Sahyadri,
Parijatra,
Shuktiman,
Vindhya and
Malyavaan. In the
Puranas and
Ramayana It is said that
Parashurama was meditating on Mahendragiri when Lord
Rama broke the sacred bow of
Shiva. Mahendragiri is situated in
Gajapati district,
Odisha. Legend says that it is the place where Lord
Parashurama, a
chiranjeevi stays eternally and performs tapasya. Parashurama is the sixth avatar of Vishnu in Hinduism and he is one of the Chiranjeevis (long - lived), who will appear at the end of the Kali yuga to be the guru of Vishnu's tenth and last avatar, Kalki. He carried a number of traits, which included aggression, warfare and valor; also, serenity, prudence and patience. He retired in the Mahendra Mountains, according to chapter 2.3.47 of the Bhagavata Purana. He is the only Vishnu avatar who never dies, never returns to abstract Vishnu and lives in meditative retirement. Further, he is the only Vishnu avatar that co-exists with other Vishnu avatars Rama and Krishna in some versions of the Ramayana and Mahabharata respectively. Temples, which are said to be built by the
Pandavas are present. The main festival observed here is
Shivaratri. ==References==