Doleshwor Mahadeva is a Hindu Temple of Lord Shiva situated in the Sipadol Municipality, south eastern piece of Bhaktapur District, Nepal, and is accepted to be the head some portion of Kedarnath situated in Uttarakhand, India. For 4000 years individuals have been looking for the head of Hindu divinity Kedarnath who expected the state of a bull to maintain a strategic distance from the five Pandava siblings, the legends of the Mahabharat. The legend backpedals to the legendary skirmish of Kurukshetra battled between the five Pandava siblings and their cousins, the 100 Kaurava siblings, which is the rotate of the Mahabharata. The Pandavas won, yet grieved by the loss of lives, they denied the kingdom they had wrested back and set out toward the wonderful dwelling place the divine beings, accepted to be on the relentless Himalayan Mountains. The Pandavas came to the Kedarnath locale to look for pardoning from Lord Shiva for the loss of lives amid the 18-day Kurukshetra War. Be that as it may, Lord Shiva was not prepared to excuse them and he appeared as a bull to maintain a strategic distance from them. The Pandavas soon understood that the bull was Lord Shiva and attempted to stop it by pulling its tail. All of a sudden the head got isolated from the body of the bull and the Pandavas couldn't find it. The protuberance sponsored structure at Uttarakhand's Kedarnath sanctuary is venerated as the middle of the blessed bull, the arms showing up in Tungnath, the nabhi and stomach surfacing in Madhyamaheshwar, the face appearing at Rudranath and the hair and the head showing up in Kalpeshwar