Virupaksha Temple, Pattadakal, Karnataka
Virupaksha Temple is a Hindu Temple dedicated to Lord
Shiva located in Pattadakal in Bagalkot District of Karnataka, India. This
temple is part of Pattadakal Group of Monuments, an UNESCO World Heritage Site. The Temple complex is
located on the west bank of the Malaprabha
River. The Virupaksha temple, located to the immediate south of the
Mallikarjuna temple, is the largest and most sophisticated of the monuments at
Pattadakal.
This is the only functioning shrine in the temple
complex. In inscriptions, it is referred to as "Shri Lokeshvara Mahasila
Prasada", after its sponsor Queen Lokmahadevi, and is dated to about 740
CE. The famous Kailasha temple at Ellora
Caves was modeled after this temple, although the Virupaksha
temple was itself modeled after the Kailasanatha Temple at Kanchipuram.
The monument is a protected site under Indian law and is managed by the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI).
History
For brief details, please refer below link;
The Temple
As is common with other temples at Pattadakal, the
Virupaksha temple was built facing east centered around a square garbha griha (sanctum),
with a Shiva Linga, surrounded by a covered circumambulatory path (pradakshina
patha). In front of the sanctum is an antarala with two small shrines
within which are facing images of Ganesha and Parvati, in her Durga aspect
as Mahishasuramardini killing the
buffalo demon. The external Nandi pavilion is aligned on an east-west
axis, as are the mandapa and antechamber.
The temple site forms a rectangle consisting of fused
squares bounded by walls, which are decorated with carvings. Within the
compound are smaller shrines, of which there were once 32, based on the
foundation footprint layout, but most have since been lost. The entrance leads
to a mandapa with 18 columns (4-5-aisle-5-4, with a 4x4 set forming the inner
mandapa and two leading to the Darshana space).
The tower above the sanctum is a three-storey pyramidal
structure, with each storey bearing motifs that reflect those in the sanctum
below. However, for clarity of composition, the artisans had simplified the
themes in the pilastered projections and intricate carvings. The third
storey is the simplest, having only parapet kutas, a kuta roof with each
face decorated with kudus – a structure common in later
Dravidian architecture Hindu temples.
A kalasha-like pot, found in festivals, social
ceremonies and personal rituals such as weddings, crowns the temple. The top of
this pot is 17.5 metres (57 ft) above the temple pavement, the highest for
any pre-9th century South Indian temple. The sukanasa on
the tower is large, exceeding half the height of the superstructure, to aid
visibility from a distance. The sanctum walls, and those of the nearby mandapa
space, are decorated with intricately detailed carvings.
These carvings depict images of Shaivism, Vaishnavism,
and Shaktism deities, and themes, such as Narasimha and Varaha (Vaishnavism),
Bhairava and Nataraja (Shaivism), Harihara (half Shiva-half Vishnu), Lakulisa
(Shaivism), Brahma, Durga, Saraswathi, Lakshmi, and others. Other than Hindu
gods and goddesses, numerous panels show depict people either as couples, in
courtship and mithuna, or as individuals wearing jewelry or carrying work
implements.
The temple has numerous friezes spanning a variety of
topics such as, for example, two men wrestling, rishi with Vishnu, rishi with
Shiva, Vishnu rescuing Gajendra elephant trapped by a crocodile in a lotus
pond, scenes of hermitages, and sadhus seated in meditative yoga posture. Vedic
deities such as Surya riding the chariot with Aruna, Indra on elephant and
others are carved in stone.
A few depict scenes from the Ramayana such as those
involving golden deer, Hanuman, Sugriva, Vali, Ravana and Jatayu bird, Sita
being abducted, the struggles of Rama and Lakshmana. Other friezes show scenes
from the Mahabharata, Krishna's playful life story in the Bhagavata
Purana and the Harivamsa as well as fables from the Panchatantra and
other Hindu texts.
There is a large Nandi mandapam opposite to the shrine
with black stone monolithic Nandi. The walls of the Nandi mandapa have few
beautiful carvings of female images. The temple contains historically
significant inscriptions that provide hints about the society and culture of 8th
century India. The epigraphy reveals this to have been built by Queen Loka
Mahadevi (originally named as Lokeswara) after the successful military
campaigns of King Vikramaditya II against the Pallavas (4th - 9th
centuries CE).
In ground plan it resembles the Kailasanatha temple
of Kanchipuram,
citadel of the Pallavas, but in stone it is a realization of the fully mature
Early Chalukyan architecture in all its glory. The temple is notable for its
range, and quality, of construction exemplifying a well-developed Dravidian
architectural style, as well as the inscribed names of the artists beneath the
panels they worked on.
Connectivity
For brief details, please refer below link;
No comments:
Post a Comment