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The cultural remains of Jaintapur consist of the dilapidated Rajbadi or King's palace, Jainteshvari temple, and megalith ie monuments. The palace, which was built by the Jainta King Laxmi Sinha (1670-1701) in 1602 Shaka/1680 AD, is now completely ruined.
The superstructure of the Jaintesvari temple is also badly damaged. Though the enclosure wall of the temple complex is in a better state of preservation, it has been crudely ornamented with plastered relief, representing horses, lions and winged semi-divine beings. Jayanta Ray, the last ruler of the Deva dynasty, had a daughter named Jayanti, who got married to a son of a Khasi chief, named Landowar.
Due to this matrimonial alliance, Jaintapur kingdom went under the control of the Khasis in c 1500 AD. Subsequently, Khasi kings ruled over the kingdom independently till the British occupied it in 1835 Nevertheless among the cultural remains of Jaintapur are a few megalithic monuments that are worthy of mention. Megalithic structures are defined as graves or commemorative monuments made by large and small stone chunks. These structures can be seen throughout Asia, Africa and Europe.
In different parts of the Indian subcontinent these are present in large numbers and their form and spatial distribution have proved extremely valuable in the re-construction of past cultures, especially after the beginning of the Iron age in India.
The only megalithic remains discovered so far in Bangladesh are the ones in Jaintapur.
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