Bhojeshwar Temple, Bhojpur – History
The Bhojpur temple is believed
to have been constructed by the 11th century Paramara King Bhoja. King
Bhoja was also responsible for the establishment of Bhojpur and the
construction of now-breached dams in the area. Because the temple was never
completed, it lacks a dedicatory inscription. However, the name of the area
("Bhojpur") corroborates its association with Bhoja. This belief is
further supported by the site's sculptures, which can be dated to the 11th
century with certainty. A Jain temple in Bhojpur, which shares the
same sets of mason's marks with the Shiva temple, has
an inscription explicitly dated to 1035 CE.
Besides several literary works,
historical evidence confirms that Bhoja's reign included the year 1035 CE:
the Modasa copper plates (1010-11 CE)
were issued by Bhoja; and the Chintamani-Sarnika (1055 CE) was
composed by his court poet Dasabala. Moreover, the area around the temple once
featured three dams and
a reservoir.
The construction of such a large Shiva temple, dams and reservoir could have
only been undertaken by a powerful ruler. All this evidence appears to confirm
the traditional belief that the temple was commissioned by Bhoja.
The temple is believed to be
built during the later part of Bhoja's reign, around mid-11th century.
The Udaipur Prashasti inscription
of the later Paramara rulers states that Bhoja "covered the earth with
temples" dedicated to the various aspects of Shiva, including
Kedareshvara, Rameshwara, Somanatha, Kala,
and Rudra. It is believed that King Bhoja built a Saraswathi Temple.
The Jain writer Merutunga, in his Prabandha-Chintamani, states that Bhoja
constructed 104 temples in his capital city of Dhara alone.
However, the Bhojpur temple is the only surviving shrine that can be attributed
to Bhoja with some certainty.
According to a legend in
Merutunga's Prabandha-Chintamani, when Bhoja visited Srimala,
he told the poet Magha about the "Bhoja Svamin" temple that he was about to build, and then
left for Malwa (the region in which Bhojpur is
located). However, Magha (c. 7th century) was not a contemporary of
Bhoja, and therefore, the legend is anachronistic.
The temple originally stood on the banks of a reservoir 18.5 long and 7.5 miles
wide. This reservoir was formed through construction of 3 earth-and-stone dams
during Bhoja's reign. The first dam, built on Betwa
River, trapped the river waters in a depression surrounded by hills.
A second dam was constructed in a gap between the hills, near present-day
Mendua village. A third dam, located in present-day Bhopal, diverted more water
from the smaller Kaliasot river into the Betwa dam reservoir. This man-made
reservoir existed until 15th century, when Hoshang
Shah emptied the lake by breaching two of the dams.
The attribution of the temple to
Bhoja is based on the testimony of Merutunga, who reports in the Prabandha Chintamani that Bhoja bestowed on the poet Magha
"all the merit of the new Bhoja Svamin temple that he was about to
build himself", and then "set out for the country of Malava".The style of the sculpture on the building
confirms an early to mid-eleventh-century date for the structure. It appears
that the construction work stopped abruptly due to unknown reasons. Historians
speculate that the abandonment may have been triggered by a sudden natural
disaster, lack of resources or a war. To the north and east of the temple,
there are several quarry sites, where unfinished architectural fragments in
various stages of carving were discovered.
Funerary Monument Theory:
The Bhojpur temple features
several peculiar elements, including the omission of a mandapa connected
to the garbhagriha (sanctum), and the rectilinear
roof instead of the typical curvilinear shikhara (dome
tower). Three of the temple's walls feature a plain exterior; there are some
carvings on the entrance wall, but these are of the 12th century
style. Based on these peculiarities, researcher Shri Krishna Deva proposed that
the temple was a funerary monument. Deva's
hypothesis was further corroborated by the discovery of a medieval
architectural text by M. A.
Dhaky. This fragmentary text describes the construction of memorial
temples erected over the remains of a dead person, conceived of as vehicles
for ascent to the heaven.
Such temples were
called svargarohana-prasada ("temple commemorating the ascent to
the svarga or
heaven"). The text explicitly states that in such temples, a roof of
receding tiers should be used instead of the typical shikhara. Kirit Mankodi
notes that the superstructure of the Bhojpur temple
would have been in this exact form upon its competition. He speculates that
Bhoja may have started the construction of this shrine for the peace of soul of
his father Sindhuraja or of his uncle Munja,
who suffered a humiliating death in enemy territory.
Abandonment of Construction:
It appears that the construction
work stopped abruptly. The reasons are not known, but historians speculate
that the abandonment may have been triggered by a sudden natural
disaster, a lack of resources, or a war. Before its restoration
during 2006–07, the building lacked a roof. Based on this, archaeologist KK
Muhammed theorizes that the roof could have collapsed due to a
mathematical error made while calculating the load; subsequently, circumstances
might have prevented Bhoja from rebuilding it.
The evidence from the abandoned
site has helped the scholars understand the mechanics and organisation of 11th
century temple construction. To the north and the east of the temple, there are
several quarry sites,
where unfinished architectural fragments in various stages of carving were
found. Also, present are the remains of a large sloping ramp erected for
carrying the carved slabs from the quarries to the temple site. Several
carvings brought to the temple site from the quarries had been left at the
site. The ASI moved these carvings to a warehouse in the 20th century.
Detailed architectural plans for the finished
temple are engraved on the rocks in the surrounding quarries. These architectural
plans indicate that the original intention was to build a massive temple
complex with many more temples. The successful execution of these plans would
have made Bhojpur one of the largest temple complexes in India. The marks of
over 1,300 masons are engraved on the temple
building, the quarry rocks and two other shrines in the village. This includes
the names of 50 masons engraved on the various portions of the temple
structure.
Other marks are in the form of
various symbols such as circle, crossed circle, wheel, trident, swastika, conch
shell, and Nagari script characters. These marks were
meant to identify the amount of work completed by individuals, families or
guilds involved in the construction. The marks would have been erased while
giving the finishing touches, had the temple been completed.
Conservation and Restoration:
By 1950, the building had become
structurally weak because of the regular rainwater percolation and removal of
the stone veneers. In 1951, the site was
handed over to the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI)
for conservation, in accordance with the Ancient Monuments
Preservation Act 1904. During the early 1990s, the ASI repaired the
damaged steps of the platform and the sanctum, and also restored the missing
ones. It also restored the facade on the north-west corner of the temple.
During 2006–07, the ASI team
supervised by KK Muhammed carried out a restoration of
the monument. The team added a missing pillar to the structure. The 12-tonne
pillar was carved out of a single stone by expert masons and sculptors in a
style that matches the original. The monolith was procured from the area
near Agra after
a nationwide search for material matching the stone originally used in the
temple.
The team was unable to procure
a crane with a sufficiently long boom.
So, they lifted the monolith 30 feet up with the help of a system of pulleys and levers, which
took 6 months to devise. KK Muhammed noted that two other pillars in the
temple weigh 33 tons and are also carved out of a single stone: it must have
been very challenging for the original builders to erect these pillars without
modern technology and resources.
The team closed the ceiling with
a new architectural component matching the original one, to stop the water
percolation. This fiber glass component weighs less than the original one,
thus reducing unnecessary weight which could damage the structure. To further
prevent the rainwater from getting in, the ASI also closed the portion between
the wall and the superstructure by placing slanting stone
slabs. In addition, the ASI placed new stone veneers matching the original ones
on the northern, southern and western exterior walls of the temple. The
ASI also cleaned the dirt that had accumulated on the temple walls over the
past few centuries.
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