Padmapur is a village in the Rayagada district of Odisha, India. It is the most populated village[1] and one of the identified tourist centers[2][3] of the district. A hillock adjoins the village to its northern side. A 7th century inscription found here, in the Nilakantheswar Temple (a religious place[4] i.e. the shrine of Lord Manikeswar Shiva),[5][6] indicates that the Jagamanda hill, located close by, once housed the monastery of the famous Buddhist logician-philosopher Dharmakirti.[3][7][8]
Padmapur is a populated village in Rayagada district situated about 67 km away from the district headquarters. As of 2001[update] India census,[9] Padmapur village had a population of 6530.The total population of the village as per the 2011 Census of India was 6654 out of which the male population is 3411 and the female population is 3243.[10]
The postal Index Number (PIN) of padmapur is 765025.
A number of old and new temples in and around Padmapur, as detailed below, attract the nearby mass during festive seasons.[12]
The seventh century-old Nilakantheswar temple at Padmapur (a shrine to Shiva) on the top of the hillock adjoining the village. This temple is also believed to be the Mallikeshwara temple
The temple of Mallikeswar at the foot of the hillock, which is built of red rocks
The temple of Dhabaleswar beside the temple of Mallikeswar
Another temple of Pudukeswar close to these temples at the foot of the hillock,
The Radhakrushna temple in New Street
The Giridhari temple in the Badasahi
The Gopinatha temple or Dasima Matha
The Trinath temple beside the road leading to Gunupur
The Gramadevati temple at the heart of the village
The Gayatri temple on the hillock area
The temple of Hanumana and the temple of Sai Baba on the hillock
Another small temple of Trinath at Jhumuruguda beside the main road
^"Tourism"(PDF). State of the Environment Report. Orissa. 2007. Archived from the original(PDF) on 23 September 2015. Retrieved 24 June 2015.
^Patra, Dasarathy. Tribal Tourism and Culture(PDF). Orissareview-November,2011. pp. 63–68. Archived from the original(PDF) on 24 June 2015. Retrieved 24 June 2015.