The feet of Sati in the Shivalik foothills — one of the most visited Devi temples in Himachal, completing the celebrated five-shrine circuit alongside Jwalamukhi, Naina Devi and Chamunda Devi.
Chintpurni Temple, in the Shivalik foothills of Una district, marks where the feet of Sati fell, and is dedicated to Chhinnamastika — the fierce, self-decapitated form of the Goddess who holds her own severed head, a powerful Tantric image representing self-sacrifice and the transcendence of ego. The temple draws its name from "chinta" (worry) and "purna" (fulfilling) — devotees come specifically seeking relief from anxiety and worldly troubles.
Chintpurni forms the natural conclusion to the celebrated Himachal Devi circuit, traditionally visited alongside Jwalamukhi, Naina Devi, Chamunda Devi and Brajeshwari Devi in a single pilgrimage covering the region's five principal Shakti shrines. The temple sees enormous crowds during both Navratri periods, with devotees often completing the final approach on foot as an act of devotion regardless of how they travelled to reach the base.
Nearest railway: Una (45 km). By road: well connected from Una, Hoshiarpur and the wider Himachal-Punjab border region via regular bus services.
October to March for the most comfortable weather; Navratri (twice yearly) is by far the most significant and crowded period.
Combine with the other four Himachal Shakti shrines (Jwalamukhi, Naina Devi, Chamunda Devi, Brajeshwari) for the complete traditional circuit.
The Feet (Charan) of Goddess Sati fell at Chintpurni, consecrating this land as a Shakti Peetha. The Shakti here is Chhinnamastika (the Self-Decapitated Goddess) and the guardian Bhairav is Rudra Mahadev.
Shakti Peetha
One of the 51 sacred Shakti Peethas — explore its unique significance in the divine circuit.
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Shakti Peetha
One of the 51 sacred Shakti Peethas — explore its unique significance in the divine circuit.
Explore →
Shakti Peetha
One of the 51 sacred Shakti Peethas — explore its unique significance in the divine circuit.
Explore →