Bhamer, is a village with a historical fort in Sakri tehsil of Maharashtra state in India.
The old stone palace with two entrance gates and which served as a government office during Peshwa's time is almost tottering.
[clarification needed] On one of these gates is carved an animal like a heraldic lion, with a circular shield on the right.
At either end is an archway and between the arches on each side of the roadway is a raised terrace between 1.524 and 1.628 metres (5.00 and 5.34 ft) high.
The natural escarpment of the fort that overlooks the village has been strengthened in places by masonry constructions.
Inside are several cisterns of good water as also four large store rooms hollowed out of the rock.
It is supposed that the town was destroyed while punishing Kale Khan, a Muslim rebel, who had seized it in 1736.
The rock generally overhangs the doorways and another rising in front forms a sort of a parapet.
In the fluting below the moulded part, are, on the left side of the doorway, two figures about 0.431 metres (15 inches) high.
There are a number of rude sculptures on the walls of these caves, of Jain Tirthankara Parshvanath and other Jain Tirthankaras and protecting deities yaksha and yakshinis, much defaced from the decay of the rock, but apparently of the same coarse rough type as those on the Chamar Leni hill.
The second cave is in very good preservation and its pillars are divided into successive portions, alternately round and square.