Mythology Nashik was known as "Padmanagar" during the
Satya Yuga, "Trikantak" during the
Treta Yuga, "Janasthana" during the
Dvapara Yuga, and finally "Navashikh" or "Nashik" during the
Kali Yuga, according to Hindu traditions. Nashik is significant in history, social life, and culture. The city is located on the banks of the
Godavari River, making it a sacred site for Hindus around the world. During his 14-year exile from Ayodhya,
Rama, the king of
Ayodhya, is said to have made Nashik his home. According to Hindu tradition, Nashik is associated with the epic Ramayana: it is the place where Lakshmana severed the nose of the demoness Shurpanakha on the banks of the Godavari River during the 14-year exile of Rama, Sita, and Lakshmana. The area around Panchavati is considered sacred and features several temples and holy sites.
Nashik Tram The Nashik Tram was started from the Old Municipal Building on the main road to Nashik Road railway station around 1889. The tram served the people of Nashik for almost 44 years. The tram station was at the Main Road, and the tram reached the Nashik Road railway station via the present Main Road, Bhadrakali Market, Ghasbazar, and Phalke Road. It covered a distance of about eight to ten kilometres, and the stretch used to be covered with dense jungle at the time. In the article ‘Nashik-then’, poet
Kusumagraj wrote: "If the carriages were full, the tram would leave. It would ring the bell and drive out of the village to the main road and then to the grass market. which was one among many in Maharashtra. On 21 December 1909,
Anant Kanhere, a Abhinav Bharat member and student from
Aurangabad, assassinated Nashik's governor
A. M. T. Jackson while he was watching a play in a theatre. Kanhere was arrested on the spot, and after investigation, police arrested Vinayak Savarkar and others for conspiring against the government to instigate an armed rebellion. The case was known as the "Nasik Conspiracy Case - 1910". In 1930, the Nashik
Satyagraha was launched under the leadership of
B. R. Ambedkar for the entry of Dalits in Kalaram Mandir. In 1931, a meeting of the Bombay Province
Charmakar Parishad was organised in Nashik to work out the Chambhars' position concerning the Second
Round Table Conference in which Ambedkar was going to participate. In 1932, he organised his temple entry movement for the abolition of untouchability in Nashik. == Geography ==