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TEMPLE
ARCHITECTURE
The
Mauryas were famous for their art and architecture Evidence of
the earliest known structural temples has been recovered through
excavations. A circular brick and timber shrine of the Mauryan
period of 3rd century B.C., was excavated at Bairat District of
Jaipur, Rajasthan. The shrine measures 23 meters in diameter and
was made of lime-plastered brick work, alternating with 26 octagonal
pillars, of wood. It was entered from the east through a small
portico, supported by two wooden pillars and was surrounded by
a seven feet wide ambulatory. A second example of a Maurya temple
uncovered by excavations, Temple 40' at Sanchi, has a similar plan,
it was a stone temple on an apsidal plan enclosed by an ambulatory,
and raised on a high, rectangular scale, approached by two flights
of steps from diagonally opposite sides. The super-structure was
possibly built of wood, and has disappeared. In the following centuries
the temple underwent a series of changes making it difficult to
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Temple 18
at Sanchi, Madhya Pradesh
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Temple
18 at Sanchi also was an apsidal stone temple probably with a timber
superstructure, originally dating from the 2nd century B.C. The
present remains of the apsidal temple with its stately pillars
and pilaster dates from about the 7th century A.D. though the temple
remained in use till the medieval period.
Perhaps
the earliest structural temple still standing in its original condition
is the one constructed at Aihole in Karnataka. This is a little
structure built of huge almost boulder-like blocks of stones. The
temple consists of a simple square cell the garbhagriha or
sanctum sanctorum, in front of which there is a covered verandah, a
portico, which consists of four heavy pillars supporting a stone
roof. The pillars as well as the entire structure is as simple
as can be, except for a small frieze-like motif on the small parapet
that runs on two sides of the ground length of the portico.
It
is interesting to observe that the architect who built this edifice
had not yet discovered that the two pillars nearest the cell need
not have been built standing clear away from the wall but that
they could easily have been pilasters, half pillars, half jutting
out of the back wall of the verandah. Nor had he taken
the climate into consideration and did not provide gargoyles to
allow the rain water to run off the roof. The entire structure
is heavy, bulky and clumsy. Probably, this was constructed near
about 300 to 350 A.D.
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Temple
No. 17, at Sanchi is a small temple built about 400 A.D. and everything
attempted earlier, is done much better here. The stones are smaller
and laid out in regular neat rows; the roof has been separated
so that the portico has a slightly less prominent height - the
Sanctum-Sanctorum being the main house of the God. Gargoyles have
been thoughtfully provided to drain off rain water and the four
back pillars are more slender and beautifully carved. This temple
truly belongs to the Classical Period and is marked by elegance,
harmony, balance and dignity. Decoration is minimal and is only
used where one structural form joins another.
An
inverted lotus is placed where the top of the shaft joins. The
capital and little lions, seated back to back, act as support where
the roof rests on top of the pillar. The entire structure is simple,
with no complication. However, in the course of time the extremely
plain and simple temple architecture becomes increasingly complicated,
from a simple quadrangle it evolves into salient and re-entering
angles, protrusions are added, making the outline more and more
involved, till eventually it becomes almost like a star with more
than a hundred little corners on the ground level.
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Temple 17 at Sanchi, Madhya Pradesh
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Lad Khan Temple, Aihole, Karnataka
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The
Ladkhan temple of Aihole belongs to about 5th century A.D. Here the
architect has tried to give attention to the circumambulation path
which is enclosed by means of a wall allowing devotees to have pradakshana or
cirumambulatory of the holy of holies. Obviously when a large number
of people would be going round in a dark gallery the consideration
of light and ventilation would naturally arise and for that purpose
the architect has provided perforated jallies. The entrance
portico is in this particular case kept relatively small and not too
much stress is laid on it. After all, it is only the entrance gateway.
The structure still reminds us of a wooden prototype with stone walls,
supporting a slanting roof made of large boulders of stone slabs. Cleverly
enough the roof has been given a slant and provided with gargoyles
to allow rain water to run off and on the sanctum sanctorum proper
the roof is a little higher, and very rightly so, for that is the,
abode of the God. On the top of the structure is the very first attempt
to raise a turret, a precursor to the future loftier spire, the Shikhara.
The idea behind it must have been that, a temple being the home of
the God must be seen from far and near, from different parts of the
village or town so it must be tall and higher than the surrounding
buildings.
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The
Durga temple at Aihole is an apsidal temple of about 550 A.D. in which
the architect has made immense improvements upon his previous attempts.
This temple is provided with a high pedestal, an open pillared verandah serving
as pradakshanapatha, in place of a dark, ambulatory passage
as in the case of the Ladkhan temple. Instead of perforated jallies is
a pillared verandah running round the shrine, open, well ventilated
and well lit. There is a high entrance with steps leading up to a tall
base; the roof is almost double in height and in this particular case
the turret is beginning to take the shape of a little spire, which,
during the course of the next centuries; evolved into a towering Shikhara.
The pillars would have looked very dull had they not provided an opportunity
to the sculptors to carve with beautiful figures. Carving is also done
under the row of pillars and for the first time we come across brackets
supporting the beam of the roof across the wide opening of the temple.
This again reminds us of the practice followed by the architect working
in wood, who wanted to make either a house or a shrine by putting up
pillars or posts of bamboo or wood on top of which he put horizontal
beams so as to hold the roof. To make this construction doubly strong,
he hit upon the 'idea of making brackets, an essential element in Hindu
and Buddhist architecture in India and used much earlier in China;
a slanting piece of stone emerging as it were from the pillars or posts,
reaching out like an arm to hold the lintel or beam steadily. This
kind of construction is known by the architectural term, trabeate,
as distinct from accurate which was later made use of by the Muslims.
Apart
from structural temples the other variety of temples are rock cut,
found at Mahabalipuram, about 38 miles down south of Madras on the
sea shore, datable to the 5th century A.D. In local parlance they
are known as Ratha or chariots and are named after the five
Pandava brothers and Draupadi but they neither have anything to do
with chariots nor probably with the Pandavas and these associations
are purely of a local character. The great Pallava rulers of Kanchipuram,
were great builders and the Pallava craftsmen, seized upon the long
outcrop or rocks and boulders available on the sea shore, carved
them and gave to them the shape of temples (monolithic) as well as
colossal statues of lions, elephants and bulls, etc. carved out of
smaller boulders.
One
of these rock cut temples is known as the Draupadi Ratha. It
is a rock cut imitation of a mud hut, supported by wooden posts,
crowned by an imitation of a thatched roof. The Draupadi Ratha consists
of a square cell, with not even a portico, surmounted by a. hanging
roof suggestive in its shape of a Bengali hut. There is every reason
to believe that this, like so many other forms of structural Indian
architecture is an imitation of a proto-type construction of bamboo
and thatch. Two lovely girls adorn the entrance, each carved in a
small niche provided for the purpose on either side of the entrance.
A floral decoration runs along the edge of the roof which, according
to some, is nothing but a rock cut representation of the original
brass or copper edging over the thatching to keep it in position.
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Durga Temple, Aihole, Karnataka
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Draupadi and Arjuna Ratha, Stone, Mahabalipuram, Tamil Nadu
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In
shape and appearance the rest of the rathas seems to have
evolved out of a building composed of cells arranged round a square
courtyard. As the community of monks occupying the monastery increased
another storey was added, and then another and still another, the whole
structure eventually being topped with a domical roof. These are square
in plan and are surmounted by a pyramidal tower such as Arjuna's ratha and
the Dharmaraja ratha.
There
is another type of the Ratha which has a longitudinal and
barrel vaulted roof, i.e., they have a roof of the so called elephant-back
type (Gajapristhakara). The Durga temple at Aihole, and
the Vaital deul at Bhubaneswar are examples. The roof, in the case
of the square shrines consists of a simple multiplication of hut
roofs, very much the way we can see them in Buddhist monuments and
other little huts. Though these are carved in rock they show a so-called
Buddhist chaitya window with a little Buddha head. In the case of
Arjuna's ratha and Dharmaraja ratha, their wonderful
proportions, magnificent disposition of mass of light and shade reveal
their classic character. The simple upright posts imitations, of
wooden pillars support brackets and the pilasters have small animal
bases. Whereas earlier at Sanchi the animals were used for the capital,
here they are used as a base.
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A
temple, named after the twin heroes, Nakula and Sahadeva, is an apsidal
one, with ornamental features as in the Dharmaraja, Arjuna and other rathas. There
is a slight forward extension of the roof to form a porch supported
by two lion pillars. There are no figure-carvings on this temple. Close
to this is a monolithic elephant suggesting the Gajapristhakara (elephant
back) shape of the apsidal temple.
The
Ganesh-rath is one of the finest monolithic temples at Mahabalipuram.
Though three-storeyed and of better workmanship, it resembles
the Bhima-ratha in roof form. The gable-ends of the wagon-roof
have a finial showing a human head decorated by a trident shaped
head-gear, the slide prongs suggesting the usual horns in the dvarpala-figures
and the central one long and narrow crown. This motif is repeated
in the finials of the decorative gables along the wagon-roof. There
is, as usual, the pavilion and Kudu ornamentation. The elaborately
worked roof has nine vase-shaped finials and is the precursor of
the later gopuram. A row of pilasters decorates the sides
and the back, while the main opening is to the west. Between the dvarapalas at
either end are two lion pillars in the centre and two pilasters.
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Nakula and Sahadev Temple, Mahabalipuram, Tamil Nadu
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Shore Temple, Mahabalipuram, Tamil Nadu
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The
Shore temple at Mahabalipuram datable to late 7th century is specially
known because of its location on the sea-shore. This temple though
very similar stylistically to the Dharmaraja ratha, differs
from it in an important respect that it is a structural temple and
not a rock-cut one. It is about 3 to 4 times the size of the Dharmaraja ratha and
is made a triple structure by adding a shrine at the back and slightly
jutting out in the front. There are two spires, much loftier than in
the case of the previous temples, the higher spire has more storeys
than the Dharmaraja ratha and the pinnacle is higher and pointed.
It is much more complicated, enlarged and enriched. The shrine is enclosed
by a massive wall, having the typical Pallava rampart lion pilasters
at regular intervals. On its outer side, the wall is surmounted by
seated bull figures.
The
Kailasanath temple at Kanchipuram was built by Raja Simha shortly
after the Shore temple in the 8th century A.D., and compared to the
latter, is larger in dimensions and more majestic in appearance.
The Kailashnath temple is situated in a rectangular courtyard surrounded
by a peristyle composed of a continuous series of cells resembling rathas. But
there the Pallava style is further evolved and more elaborate. It
consists of the sanctum (garbha griha), a pillared hall (mandapa), the
ambulatory, the vestibule in the shape of a hall. The flat roofed
pillared mandapa, which was a separate building originally,
was connected with the sanctum by a vestibule.
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An
interesting feature of this temple is that on the three sides of the garbha
griha, there are nine shrines. The pyramidal tower, having graceful
contours, is a storeyed elevation, each having heavy cornices and stupikas.
The shikhara is well-proportioned, substantial, yet at the same
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The
Dhamekh stupa at Sarnath is an imposing cylindrical structure (ht.
43.5 m., dia at base 28.3 m.) of the Gupta age, partly built of stone
and partly of brick. Its stone basement has eight projecting faces
with large niches for statuary and is further adorned with delicately-carved
floral and geometrical patterns. Making the holy spot of the enlightenment
of the Master, this site is looked upon with, greatest sanctity and
became a flourishing Buddhist establishment with numerous temples,
stupas and monasteries. According to tradition a large number of
shrines and memorials were created at the site to commemorate the
incidents before and after enlightenment.
The
main brick built shrine known as the Mahabodhi temple which appears
to have been originally erected in circa 2nd century A.D. is encumbered
with heavy renovation, the four corner-towers being an arbitrary
addition of circa 14th century A.D. Its central tower, standing on
a high plinth, is about 55m. high and is a straight-edged pyramid
of seven storeys, by pilasters and chaitya niches.
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Dhamekh Stupa at Sarnath,
Utter Pradesh
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Mahabodhi Temple, Bodh Gaya, Bihar
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According
to literary tradition, Nalanda, 10 kilometres north of Rajgir and a
suburb of the ancient city, was visited by Buddha and Mahavira. Ashoka
is said to have worshipped at the chaitya-niches of Sariputra, Buddha's
disciple, and erected a temple. By the time of Harsha A.D. 606-648,
Nalanda had become the principal centre of Mahayana learning and a
famed University town with numerous shrines and monasteries which attracted
scholars from far and near. The Chinese Pilgrims Huien Tsang and Fa-hien
studied at Nalanda and have left account of the settlement and its
life.
Temple
3 was more than 31 m. high and consisted of seven successive accumulations
of which the two latest belonged to the 11th and 12th centuries and
the fifth one, dating from circa 6th century, was notable for its
sculptural wealth. The monasteries were imposing rectangular buildings,
each with an open courtyard, enclosed by a covered verandah which
leads into cells, arranged on the four sides. The cell facing the
entrance served as a shrine. Nalanda was an important centre of Pala
sculptures and bronzes and has also yielded seals and sealings of
great historical significance.
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Let
us now turn to a region where the north Indian style of temple architecture
developed in an interesting direction.
Till
about the 6th century A.D., the style of temple architecture was
similar both in the north as well as in the south. It is only after
this date that each began to evolve in its own different direction.
For the present let it be understood clearly that the two areas where
temple architecture developed most markedly were the Deccan and Orissa
and in both these areas the northern and southern style temples can
be found side by side. The Vimana, the temple tower over
the main shrine in Orissa is one of the most glorious inventions
of architecture in India and is functionally a much finer conception
than the south Indian Gopuram, where the barrel-shaped tower
does not crown the sanctum sanctorum or the garbha-griha but
is a glorified entrance gate. We had suggested in our introduction
that the architect wanted to impart to the temple more importance,
prominence than the other buildings in the neighbourhood, because
here lived his God in the garbha griha or the womb-house.
The Orissan spire does precisely this, proclaiming the presence of
God far and wide, from its lofty and imposing structure as at the
Jagannath temple at Puri or the Lingaraja at Bhubaneswar; driving
awe and respect into the hearts of the faithful and impressing all
who approach it. The temple tower or the vimana, as it is
called in Orissa, is thus, a mighty expression of the religious faith
of people. It is interesting to study the temple projected here which
is the Vaitala Deul at Bhubaneswar, a barrel roofed shrine of
the Sakti cult, datable to the 8th century A.D. The facade or outer
side of the temple is divided by ribbon like elements that run down
the base from under the barrel roof. These ribbons project slightly
and contain niches with sculptures, while the actual barrel shaped
roof is resting on a number of regularly diminishing highly decorated
mouldings, one on top of the other. The barrel roof itself is an
imitation in stone of a thatched roof of an ancient hut, going back
to very early times and still found over bullock carts in Bengal
and other regions of the east.
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Jagannatha Temple, Puri, Orissa
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Shikhara, Vaital Deul Temple, Bhubaneswar, Orissa
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It
is interesting here to remember that there is a definite pattern in
the elaboration, complication and ornamental decoration evolving out
of the dignified simplicity and harmony of the classic period such
as seen in the Sanchi temple, gradually giving place to every increasing
ornamentation and decoration.
We
have already seen that in India the sculptor and the architect were
often one and the same person and it would be highly misleading to
treat sculpture and architecture separately. As a matter of fact,
sculpture was introduced as a decorative element over the facade
on outer walls of a temple. To recapitulate let us look back at the
great Sanchi temple of about the 5th century and .see how very simple
the structure is and how bare and undecorated the walls are. Then
you might have observed that on the walls of the Ladkhan temple,
by providing a variety of perforated screen windows, some variation
was introduced by about the middle of the 5th century and about a
100 years later in the Durga temple at Aihole, sculpture were added
at the base of the pillar round the verandah and gradually
in the Vaitala Deul, datable to about the beginning of the 7th century,
the sculptor has made rich use of the niches in the ribbon like projections
to embellish and decorate the temple.
By
about the year 1000 A.D. the temple was treated with decorative elements.
The Raja Rani temple of Bhubaneswar, is superbly decorated, showing
sensuous and graceful figures of Yakshis and Vrikshikas standing
amidst luxurious natural surroundings.
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The
early Indian temple was provided with a flat roof and there was a problem
of letting out accumulated rain water. In the Aihole temples of Ladkhan
and Durga, the roof slabs have been given a slant and these slabs of
large stones which were used in the early Orissan temples datable to
about the mid 7th century, namely the Parasurameshvara temple at Bhubaneswar.
In this case there are two roofs of slanting slabs, one above the other,
providing in between, small skylights allowing light to penetrate inside
the shrine. Gradually these slanting slab-roofs begin to increase from
one to two and from two to three and gradually by multiplying these
roofs, a pyramidal roof results over the shrine, called Jagamohana in
Orissa, which precedes the main shrine.
A
masterpiece of Indian architecture is the Rajarani temple of Bhubaneswar,
a work of exquisite grace in which the masses of the Jagamohana and
the Vimana are admirably combined to express perfection.
There is a very lovely beehive shaped tower rising from the ground
with a gentle curvature over the sanctum sanctorum. Shikhara on Shikhara, miniature
temple towers, one on top of the other, mount higher and higher to
ever loftier heights like the great Mount Everest surrounded by smaller
crags. It is possible that the architect conceived the idea of the
ever rising succession of these miniature Shikharas and
was inspired by the great mountain range and the highest peak in
the Himalayas which is surrounded by lesser peaks and might well
symbolise the aspirations of the human soul to reach up till it merges
and mixes with the Eternal and the Almighty Spirit. The Orissan temple
stands as a great monument to the infinite patience and loving care
and perseverance that moves these architects and the kings who carved
ornaments and distinct from the severely simple pyramidal roof of
modest height over Jagamohana or the mandapa. The
multiplication of the slanting slabs has been carried to 13 horizontal
elements, diminishing as they reach towards the pinnacle on the top
of the pyramid. But even this pinnacle is dwarfed by the importance
of the lovely round stone, the amlaka, the chhatra or
the crown on top of the spire or tower. The Jagamohana and
the Vimana are connected by means of miniature spires emerging
from the pyramidal roof of the Jagmohana towards the Shikhara of
the sanctum sanctorum, making a transition a kind of step that leads
the eye towards the height of the tower.
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Parasurameswara Temple, Bhubaneswar, Orissa
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Surya, Vital Deul Temple, Bhubaneswar, Orissa
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We
have seen that the evolution of temple architecture in Orissa is towards
the greater elaboration of the plan and pronounced ornamentation over
the outside of the walls, with decorative elements, including human
figures, gods and goddesses, flora and fauna. Early temples of modest
size and somewhat smaller shikharas such as the Parasurameswara
temple at Bhubaneswar datable to the middle of the 7th century, with
a squat and heavy shikhara over the sanctum sanctorum and
a low flat roofed mandapa, embellished with a relief of dancers
and musicians of great charm, gradually matures into an elaborate structure
of towering height, embellished with sculptural decorations.
Then
comes the Vaitala Deul which is known for its sculpture grace and
exuberance of decoration, with a rectangular sanctum with wagon-vault
roof similar to that of the Parasurameswara temple, and is datable
on the basis of its decorative motifs and designs, which are mature,
expressive and dynamic, to the close of the 8th century.
Then
comes the Mukateswara temple regarded as a gem of Orissan architecture.
The
Brahmesvara temple is a panchyatana temple securely dated by an inscription,
to about 1060 A.D. This is a temple in which the central shrine is
surrounded by four small shrines in the four corners of the compound.
Though a very beautiful shrine, the spire or shikhara appears
to be curving rather abruptly under the amlaka, unlike the
spire of the Rajarani which is perfect and admirable for its style
and decoration. The Jagamohana has a rather top heavy pyramidal
roof, unlike the Rajarani which is of modest height and much simpler.
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The
Lingaraja temple, datable to about 1000 A.D., is perhaps the most marvellous
temple ever erected in this century, the grandest and the loftiest
(above 36.50 m. high) marking the culmination of the architectural
activities at Bhubaneswar. This temple consists of the sanctum sanctorum,
a closed hall, a dancing hall and a hall of offerings, the last two
being later additions. The Lingaraja is surrounded by a large number
of additional shrines which clutters up the entire compound. The enormous
height of the spire, 5 times the height of the Rajarani, dominates
the entire surroundings by its soaring loftiness and volume, emphasised
by the deeply incised vertical lines of the rathas, a pair
of which flanking the central ratha, carry four diminishing
replicas of the spire itself as a decorative pattern. The Jagamohana and
the spire match each other splendidly and both express the greatness
of the Lord. The nine lower roof and seven upper roofs of the Jagamohana are
exquisitely adorned with friezes representing a procession of infantry,
cavalry, elephants and miscellaneous other scenes that break the monotony
of the rising pyramid and a great shikhara surface too is
elegantly varied by the introduction of corner miniature shikharas and
flying lions. The elegant and lovely female figures, loving couples
in embrace, and other gods and goddesses decorating the surface are
all carved with sensuous charm, beauty and delight in fine form. The
mature planning of the whole structure, the proportionate distribution
of its part, the graceful curve of its shikhara and its elegant
architectural and plastic decoration, together with its impressive
dimensions make the Lingaraja, at Bhubaneswar, one of the greatest
creations of Indian architecture. Technically speaking it is a marvellous
architectural feat to build a tower and a shrine of such enormous size,
of the fashioned stone.
It
may be mentioned at this juncture, that in the later temples of Orissa,
including the Lingaraja, there are two additional shrines attached
along one axis - in front of the Jagamohana, a natamandapa, or
a hall of dance and music, and a bhogmandapa, a hall of
offerings. As a matter of fact, the temple was a total work of art
in which we have not only sculptures and painting, but music, dancing
and theatrical performance, making it a true civic centre for artistic
and cultural activities, somewhat like the modern community halls,
which are places for social and cultural gatherings. In the olden
days the temple performed this task and was truly the hub around
which all civic and religious life of the community revolved.
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Lingaraja Temple, Bhubaneswar, Orissa
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Surya Mandir, Konarak, Orissa
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Among
the later shrines of Bhubaneswar the Ananta Vasudeva temple, founded
in 1278, is remarkable in more ways then one. It is the only temple
dedicated to Vaishnava worship at this predominantly Shiva site and
stands on an ornate platform terrace. It continues with the developed
plan and decorative scheme of Lingaraja, but the grouping of the roofs
over the four compartments in a gradual ascent is more spectacular
here. Further, the walls of the sanctum and the Jagamohana display
images of the Regents as well as those of their consorts.
The
last great temple, the grandest achievement of the artistic and architectural
genius of Orissa is the Sun temple at Konark which was constructed
by the eastern Ganga ruler Narasimha Varmana, about 1250 A.D. It
is a vast and wonderful structure, magnificently conceived as a gigantic
chariot with 12 pairs of ornamental wheels, pulled by seven rearing
horses. The colossal temple originally consisted of a sanctum sanctorum,
with a lofty curvilinear shikhara, a Jagamohana and
a dancing hall, built on the same axis, and an extensive compound
wall with three entrance gateways. The sanctum sanctorum and the
dancing hall have lost their roofs and it is only the Jagamohana which
has remained intact with its roof. The sanctum sanctorum and the Jagamohana together
stand on a lofty platform, richly ornamented by friezes of elephants,
decorative ornaments interspersed with figures sculptures, often
of a highly sensuous character. Over the stupendous roof of the Jagamohana consisting
of horizontal tiers, grouped in three stages, stand life size female
sculptures of great charm, dancers, cymbal players and others adorning
each stage. The whole structure of the Jagamohana unparalleled
for its grandeur and structural propriety, is surmounted by an effective
contrast of light and shade.
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Udaipur,
about 40 miles from Bhilsa in Madhya Pradesh, is yet another ancient
and remarkable site. The finest and best preserved temple is the Nilakantha
or Udayesvara at Udaipur, built by Udayaditya Paramara between 1059
and 1080. It has a covered porch, a pyramidal roof and a tower or Shikhara ornamented
by four narrow flat bands running from base to summit, the intervening
spaces being occupied with repeated ornaments consisting of reduplication
in miniature of the main tower. The whole is carved with particular
precision and delicacy, and both tower and mandapa are in
perfect preservation, the former surmounted by an amalasila or
a vase.
The
most important of the temples at Pattadakal date from the first half
of the 8th century and show the strongest possible evidences of Pallava
influence. The great Virupaksha temple, dedicated to Siva as Lokesavara,
by the queen of Vikramaditya II datable to 740 A.D., was most likely
built by workmen brought from Kanchipuram, and in direct imitation
of the Kailasanath at Kanchipuram.
The
main shrine is distinct from the Mandapam, but has a pradakshana passage,
the pillared mandapam has solid walls, with pierced stone
windows. The square shikhara consists of clearly defined
storeys each of considerable elevation. Chaitya window motifs are
much used and there are many sculptured lintels, slabs and monolithic
pillars. It is built of very large, closely-jointed blocks of stone
without mortar, in keeping with early Dravidian temple building practices.
One of the noblest structures in India, this is the only ancient
temple at Pattadakal still in use.
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Virupaksha Temple, Pattadakal, Karnataka
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Brihadeshvara Temple, Thanjavur, Tamil Nadu
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Let
us turn our attention once again towards the South of India, where
the Dravidian style of temple architecture flourished roughly from
the 8th century to about the 13-14 century A.D. Unlike the North, the
South is literally dotted with thousands of temples, having been relatively
free from repeated foreign invasions to which the North was subject.
Behind the architectural achievements of the country, lay the urge
of the Hindu mind to give vent to its religious and spiritual hopes
and aspirations, and the construction and maintenance of a temple became
an act of merit or Dharma both here and in the hereafter for
all - Kings, nobles and laymen alike. It was the centre of all cultural
and social life, the hub around which all activities revolved. Its
influence extended beyond the purely religious and spiritual realms
and made the temple an important centre. The temple was a leading landowner,
thanks to the frequent donations from kings, nobles and lay-devotees.
The construction of a temple usually took many years and it gave employment
to hundreds of artists and engineers. The finest craftsmen from neighbouring
provinces found employment and a whole generation of talented sculptors
were trained by them during its construction. The daily routine gave
assured employment to a large number of people, priests, musicians,
dancing girls, teachers, florist, tailors, etc. In course of time the
simple unostentatious temple became a vast conglomeration of structures,
consisting of subsidiary shrines, Natamandaps and Bhogamandapas, or
a dance hall and hall of offerings. Poet pavillions, confectioners
and others were allowed to become part of temple complex. In other
words the temple almost embraced and enveloped the town or the town
embraced and enveloped the temple. With the increase in all these additional
structures, more compounds were added to the original temple compound,
one inside the other, like Chinese boxes.
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The
present South Indian temple, therefore, consists of walls, quadrangles,
one within the other. The inner most wall in the area contains the
temple proper, a much smaller and unpretentious structure than the
other larger gateways which now began to attract the attention of architects,
sculptors and carvers. The Brihadesvara temple which was erected about
1000 A.D. is a contemporary of the Rajarani temple of Bhubaneswar.
The temple is a magnificent and dignified edifice consisting of a pyramidal
spire, made up of ever diminishing tiers, regularly tapering towards
the top surmounted by a domica1 pinnacle. In many respects this shrine
resembles the Shore Temple at Mahabalipuram. The domica1 pinnacle,
however, is different in conception and execution from the amlaka of
the Orissan Shrine. The highest shikhara rises straight over
the garbha griha from the sanctum sanctorum. The structure
is adorned with beautiful sculpture and paintings; inside as well as
outside. The Brihadesvara Temple, dedicated to Shiva, stands in a courtyard
500 ft. by 200 ft. and consists of the sanctum sanctorum, large hall
a pillared hall and a Nandimandapa arranged on the same axis. The pyramidal vimana is
about 190 ft. high consisting of 13 zones in diminishing order and
has been so conceived that at no time during the day does the shadow
of its pinnacle fall anywhere outside the temple base.
The
famous Kailasa temple at Ellora is in a class by itself because it
is a rock-cut temple complex, which in many respects resembles the
various rathas at Mahabalipuram. This temple was constructed
during the reign of the Rashtrakuta King Krishna and belongs to the
middle of the 8th century A.D. The carvers at Ellora cut three trenches
down into the rock and then began to carve the rock from the top
downwards. Even though it is carved on the model of a structural
temple, the Kailashnath temple is a rock-cut shrine within a rectangular
court. The different parts of the temple are the entrance portico,
the vimana and the mandapa as well as a pillared
shrine for Shiva's bull, Nandi. Both inside as well as outside the
temple, there are beautiful, graceful and dignified sculptural decorations,
largely pertaining to the theme of Shiva and Parvati, Sita's abduction
and Ravana shaking the mountain.
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Kailash Temple, Ellora, Maharashtra
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Temple Complex, Madurai,
Tamil Nadu
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The gopuram, is
the tower, an oblong quadrangle, sometimes a square, with a passage
through the centre and is situated on the entrance gateway unlike in
the north, or even at the Brihadesvara temple in Tanjore, where the
tower-like structure was on the top of the sanctum sanctorum or garbha-griha.
In many ways the gopuram could have descended from the Buddhist
gateway such as we have already seen at Sanchi and Bharhut, etc. It
is crowned by a barrel-vault roof over which a large number of pinnacles
rise which remind us once again of a barrel roof on a longitudinal
hut which used to be made of timber. As stated earlier these gopurams are
towering structures, some having 9 storeys, others even 11. The gopuram provided
an excellent opportunity to the sculptor to practice his craft and
contain some of the finest sculptures produced in the country. The gopuram at
Chidambaram has a series of sculptures showing dance poses of Bharatanatyam.
At night time, lights used to be lit in each storey of the gopuram tower
and these acted as a sure guide to the nocturnal traveller, acting
like a light house or beacon. As a rule the highest gopuram tower
was the latest, the earliest being the least high size as in the gopuram of
the Meenakshi temple at Madurai. Visitors can climb into these towers
to appreciate the carvings at close quarters and incidentally get a
marvellous view of the temple complex. South Indian temples of this
period are remarkable for the great size of their structures, mandapas and gopurams. In
addition elaborate mandapas of hundred pillared type are also
constructed during the period of late Vijaynagar and the period of
the Nayakas in the 16th century A.D. This is an interesting departure
from the evolution of the temple from early times. These pillared halls
now become more and more elaborate with pillars showing donor couples,
kings, queen, mythical animals with fantastic shapes and size. The
paintings over these as well as over the pillars and ceiling are very
colourful.
In
some temples there are tanks surrounded by elegant pillared halls
which are functionally and architecturally admirable structures.
The temples built in the 12-13th centuries under the patronage of
the Hoysalas of Mysore, are at Somnathpur, Belur and Halebid. The
well-known Kesava temple at Somnathpur, and the Hoysala temple at
Halebid and Belur are veritable treasure houses of ornamental and
decorative elements, carved in niches, and intricate vegetal and
floral carvings. The vimana is of a star shaped plan with
salients and reentering angles with mouldings, multiplication and
over-decoration. Not an inch of space is left uncarved and there
are animals and other denizens of the forest shown on the lower most
three or four mouldings, interspersed with floral and creeper designs
and, above them all, in more than life size, are shown huge sculptural
representations of gods and goddesses, completely covered with by
lavish decorations and rich ornaments.
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Khajuraho,
twenty five miles North of Panna and twenty seven miles of Chhatarpur
in Madhya Pradesh is an important place because of the exquisite temples
built there by the Chandellas.
The
Khajuraho temples are cruciform in plan with the long axis from East
to West. Built of buff sandstone from the quarries of Panna, these
temples have a soft texture and a most pleasing colour. The temples
have usually been made on high terraces. Almost all the temples have
an inner shrine an assembly hall or mandapa, and an entrance
portico. The temples at Khajuraho have a circumambulatory passage
also. Some of the temples at Khajuraho are a cluster of five shrines
- the main temple surrounded by four others at each corner. In architecture,
these types of temples are known as Panchayatana - a temple that
has a central shrine surrounded by four other shrines.
The
Kandariya Temple, the Mahadeva Temple, the Devi Jagadamba Temple,
the Chitragupta Temple, the Vishwanatha Temple, the Parvati Temple,
the Lakshamana or Chaturbhuja Temple; the Varaha Temple; the Chaunsat
Yogini Temple (the only temple made entirely of granite and dedicated
to sixty four yoginis) are some of the very famous and worth
studying from the art and architectural point of view.
These temples
were built between tenth to late twelfth centuries. The South-East of
Khajuraho is famous for Jain Temples. The Parsvanatha Temple is most
important one whereas the Ghantai Temple is named because of the bell
and chain ornaments at its pillars.
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Vishwanath temple, Khajuraho,
Madhya Pradesh
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PALA AND SENA KINGS
From
the eighth to twelfth centuries, the eastern portion of India was
host to a florescence of artistic activity. Under the Pala dynasty,
which ruled large portions of Eastern-South Asia for nearly four
hundred years span, many centres of Buddhism and Hinduism flourished.
The
Pala dynasty came to power around 750 A.D. The Pala school of art
first flourished in the Magadha region of Southern Bihar, the homeland
of Buddhist religion. Not surprisingly, the majority of early Pala-period
remains are Buddhist. Due to intense religious activity during Pala Sena
period, many religious structures were built or renovated. Most of
these buildings have vanished leaving no extant architecture from
this period and making it very difficult to reconstruct a systematic
overview of the architectural development. Inspite of non-availability
of any building, a huge corpus of sculpture and a few paintings survive
from this period.
During
the Pala-period, a number of monasteries and religious sites that
had been founded in earlier periods grew into prominence. The large
cruciform stupa at Paharpur (ancient Somapura) in Bengal (now Bangladesh),
for example, measures more than one hundred meters from North to
South. It was built around the late eighth or early ninth century.
The walls of the courtyard contain 177 individual cells that served
as shrines.
Although
the first two hundred or so years of Pala-period art were dominated
by Buddhist art, the Hindu remains also exist in some quantities
in that phase and clearly dominate in the last two hundred years
of the Pala-period.
The
remains, though damaged, suggest that Bengali architecture styles
in particular shared many features with other northern schools especially
that of Orissa. The surviving examples from Bengal later than Pala-Sena
period especially from the sixteenth century and later show greater
Islamic influence. Thus, for an understanding of the Hindu artistic
development from the eighth to twelfth centuries, the greater attention
must be placed on the surviving sculptures.
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Under
the aegis of Ministry
of Culture,
Government of India
15-A, Sector - 7, Pappankalan, Dwarka,
New Delhi - 110075 |
Centre for Cultural Resources and Training |
Telephone:(011)
25088638,
47151000
Fax: 91-11-25088637,
Gram: CENCULT
E-mail:- dg.ccrt@nic.in |
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