Vairagad is a small fort situated in the Gadchiroli district of Maharashtra, India, at the confluence of rivers Khobragadhi and Satnalas.
This village is supposed to have been established in Dvapara Yuga by a king named Vairacan (Son from a moon family).
On a hill at the foot were supposed to be a mine, now an old Idgah, and 108 Musalman tombs which appear to be of those soldiers killed in the battle when Ahmad Shah Bahamani of Bahmani Sultanate raided Vairagad around 1422.
In 1925 the fort was declared as protected monument [1] The fortress lies north of the village spread over a 10-acre (4.0 ha) area.
Outside the fort proper is the tomb of the Gond Prince Durga Sah and a grave of unknown English Girl who is believed to be the daughter of a British commandant of the garrison between 1818 and 1830.