Dashavatara Temple, Deogarh – The
Temple
Dashavatara Temple was the first
North Indian temple with a shikhara or tower, although the shikhara
is curtailed and part of it has disappeared. The temple has a high plinth and
is set with a basement porch. It has a simple, one cell square plan and is one
of the earliest Hindu stone
temples still surviving today. Built in the Gupta
Period, the Dashavatara Temple at Deogarh shows the ornate Gupta style architecture.
The Dashavatara temple has a compelling presence in spite of its dilapidated
condition.
A protective wall made of undressed
stone was built around the temple after it was first discovered. However, the
idol of the sanctum sanctorum of the temple is missing, believed to have been
relocated elsewhere. The ancient treatise Vishnudharmottara
Purana describes several temples including a "Sarvatobhadra
temple", which has been identified by archaeologists and Indologists with
the Dashavatara Temple.
The temple at Deogarh is
dedicated to Vishnu,
but includes in its small footprint images of Shiva, Parvati, Kartikeya,
Brahma, Indra, River goddesses Ganga and Yamuna, as well as a panel showing the
five Pandavas of the Hindu epic Mahabharata. The
Temple was built out of stone and masonry brick. Legends associated with
Vishnu are sculpted in the interior and exterior walls of the temple. Also
carved are secular scenes and amorous couples in various stages of courtship
and intimacy.
The temple provides steps in the
center of all sides of the platform to let the pilgrim enter the temple from
all four directions. The temple faces west, with slight deviation to the south
that enables the setting sun's rays to fall on the main idol in the temple. The
plinth is square with a 55.5 feet (16.9 m) side, about 9 feet (2.7 m)
above the bottom step (called the moon stone) of the shrine. Each corner of the
platform has a 11 feet (3.4 m) square projection with remnants of a
shrine. The plinth was molded in four parallel courses, each molding about 0.95
feet (0.29 m) thick.
Above the four moldings,
rectangular panels separated by pilasters ran all along the plinth with friezes
narrating Hindu texts such as the Ramayana and the Mahabharata. Some
of these friezes are now in museums such as the National Museum in Delhi. On
the platform is a nine squares layout. The surviving Vishnu temple is in the
middle square. The sanctum is a square with 18.5 feet (5.6 m) side.
Its doorway is intricately carved with reliefs. The images on the top of the
lintel of the sanctum and walls show Vishnu and Lakshmi, flanked by Shiva,
Parvati, Indra, Kartikeya, Ganesha, Brahma and others.
The outer wall of the sanctum on
three sides have niches with sculptures of Vishnu legends: Gajendra-moksha
flying in with Garuda, Nara-Narayana seated in lalitasana yoga position, and
Anantasayi Vishnu in reclining position. On the top of the sanctum is the
remnants of sikhara of the Dashavatara temple. This sikhara is one of the
earliest extant lithic illustration in North India along with the one in
Mundeshvari temple in Bihar. The Deogarh temple is built on a square plan,
while the Mundeshvari temple is built on an octagonal plan. The Deogarh temple
sikhara was pyramidal of receding tiers (tala), with a straight edge.
Sculptures:
Sculpted panels are seen on the
terraced basement, with carved figurines of river goddesses Ganga and Yamuna
flanking the doorway to the sanctum sanctorum, standing respectively on their
vahanas: crocodile and tortoise. The panels of the stone door have intricate
carvings showing amorous couples in different stages of courtship and intimacy.
On the facade are two males standing, one holding a flower and the other a
garland as if greeting the visitor.
The relief on the doorway lintel
of the sanctum shows Vishnu. He is four-armed, holds his iconic conch
shell in his rear left hand, the iconic chakra in his rear right, front right
hand is in abhaya mudra while the left front is on his thigh. Below
him, to his right, is a female figure presumably Lakshmi but her iconic details
are missing. To the right, he is flanked by standing Narasimha (the
man-lion avatar of Vishnu) in namaste posture,
while on left is a dwarf who has been interpreted as Vamana (the
dwarf avatar), or more often Gana as he lacks the iconic details
of Vamana.
On the outer walls of each side
of the sanctum are niches. Each niche has an alto-relievo of Vaishnava mythology:
On the north side is the Gajendra
Moksha in a niche that is 3.25 feet by 5 feet (0.65:1 ratio). A
symbolic elephant is praying for help with his leg inside a pond and lotus
flower in his trunk, where he is being strangled. Vishnu is shown flying in on
Garuda to liberate the elephant from evil strangulation.
On the east side is the Nara
Narayana alto-relievo. Nara and Narayana are seated in
meditation in lalitasana. Both of them hold a rosary in hand, are shown to be
with closed eyes and calm, as if lost in their meditation. Apsaras are shown
flying above with cusped hands as if showering flowers. Below Nara and Narayana
sit lion and deer in peace and without anxiety. The panel also has four headed
Brahma seated on lotus and in lotus asana.
In the south side niche is the
Anantasayi Vishnu legend as he rests after creating a new cosmic cycle. He
sleeps on Sesha whose 7-headed hood shades him. Lakshmi is sitting near
Vishnu's feet and shown caressing his right leg. Vishnu is wearing an elaborate
crown (kiritamukuta) and neck, ear, arm and body jewelry. A miniature four
headed Brahma is above in center, but he does not emerge from Vishnu navel (a
version found in later-dated Puranas). Brahma also has only two hands, with one
holding his iconic kamandalu (water pot).
Others flanking Brahma are Indra
and Kartikeya (Skanda) on one side, Siva and Parvati on Nandi, and a person
with a garland. Below the reclining Vishnu is a panel depicting the five males
(Pandavas)
and one female (Draupadi) of the Mahabharata legend. It
is likely that the entrance is dedicated to the Vasudeva aspect of Vishnu; the
Anantashayana side is his role as the creator (Aniruddha); the sage form of
Nara-Narayana side symbolizes his preservation and maintainer role in cosmic
existence (Pradyumna); and the Gajendramoksha side represents his role as the
destroyer (Samkarsana).
Reliefs:
The parapet of the plinth was
decorated with two series of rectangular sculpted panels separated by means of
pilasters which are carved in typical Gupta fashion. Cunningham mentions of 80
such panels, 16 on each side and 4 on the walls of the staircases of that side
making 20 on each side. Remains of many of these panels have been found however
the count does not go to 80. At present, there is no such panel in situ except
the two pieces. Most of the excavated panels are exhibited in the National
Museum at New Delhi.
These plinth panels are about
2.5 feet by 2 feet each, with friezes related to secular life and themes of
Hinduism. Some of these reliefs were found during excavations at the site, some
recovered nearby and identified by their location, the material of construction
and the style. Many are lost. The recovered reliefs are now housed in major
museums.
Some of the significant reliefs
identified include:
Ramayana Scenes:
A panel depicts
the Ahalya-uddhara legend where Hindu god Rama redeems Ahalya. The
scene shows Ahalya in a reverential state offering flowers, Rama and Lakshmana
holding their bows, and a rishi monk sitting nearby with a rosary.
Other legends include the departure of Rama, Sita and Lakshmana for their
exile; the three arriving at sage Atri's hermitage;
the Surpanakha legend; the Dandaka forest legend; the
abduction of Sita by Ravana; the bullying of Sita by Ravana legend; the Sugriva
victory legend and the Hanuman bringing the herb containing mountain for
Lakshmana legend.
Mahabharata and Vishnu Purana Scenes:
Another sculpture found in the
Vishnu temple depicts the Krishna legend in which Devaki hands
over her new born son Krishna to her husband Vasudeva.
This sculpture is said to be one of the best depictions of Gupta period art,
based on the sensuous and graceful modelling of the figurines, but different in
that its clothes are shown draped in an exclusive fashion. It is now housed at
the National Museum in New
Delhi.
Yashoda and Nanda playing with
Baladeva and Krishna; Krishna battling Kamsa legend; Krishna stealing bathing Gopi
clothes and two nude women concealing their breasts; the Sudama legend and a
few others. One of the panels shows the Vamana, Bali and Trivikrama legend;
another the Narasimha saving Prahlada legend.
Secular life scenes:
A number of panels show solitary
women with various expressions; small boys playing; girls picking flowers in a
field; six girls together of which five are watching and one is dancing; five
girls of which one in center is dancing and the other four are playing musical
instruments; a woman giving a baby to a man so that he can hold the baby, but
the man stands indifferent; and others.
Kama and Mithuna scenes:
Lovers are shown as if having a
conversation with one of his hand on her shoulder, the shy woman looking the
other way; she is sitting in his lap and he is fondling her breasts; a man and
woman with intertwined bodies, her body reclined on his; a man turning away
while the woman embracing him from behind and clinging to him; another panel
showing a woman declining a man making advances; and others. The panels show
the culture and dress of ancient India. The jewelry and clothing
including dhoti, sari, kurta, lahanga, blouse, pleated
skirt, dopatta (uttariya), langoti, neck wear and others.
Textual Roots:
This temple was built according
to the third khanda of the Hindu text Vishnudharmottara Purana,
which describes the design and architecture of the Sarvatobhadra-style
temple, thus providing a flourit for the text and likely temple
tradition that existed in ancient India. Though ruined, the temple is
preserved in a good enough condition to be a key temple in the Hindu temple
architecture scholarship, particularly the roots of the North Indian style of
temple design. The Hindu treatise Vishnudharmottara Purana describes
several temples including a "Sarvatobhadra temple", which has been
compared by archaeologists and Indologists with the Dashavatara Temple (Vishnu
temple) or the Gupta Mandir of Deogarh.
A comparative study suggests
that the ideal temple design and iconography described in the treatise as
"Sarvatobhadra temple" was the same as the Vishnu temple of Deogarh. This
conclusion was based on plan, size, iconography and several other norms
described for building the Sarvatobhadra style Hindu temples. Based on this
comparison, the structural details of the Deogarh temple have been inferred.
Maps have also been drawn of the temple structure. The probable date of the
temple's construction has been estimated to be between 425 and 525.
The Sarvatobhadra design
requires a superstructure with nine sikharas. The Dashavatara temple at Deogarh
shows only one "shikara", and right squares with no remnant
structure. This aspect of the Sarvatobhadra design cannot be fully established
by existing evidence. However, the supporting features of copings and amalakas (a bulbous
stone finial)
have been found in the ruins, which supports the theory that more shikaras
existed on eight mandapas, as part of the temple. Four stairways outside the
platform provide access to the temple. However, as per excavation details,
combined with the two small shrines with the central shrine seen now, the
layout of the temple has been interpreted to represent a
typical Panchayatana style of the temples of North India.
The total height of the shrine
based on isometric projections is about 45 feet (14 m). Provision of
porches has not been corroborated but some analogous comparison with the Varaha
temple (boar incarnation of Vishnu) in the fort precincts, which belonged to
the same period, suggests the existence of porticoes even in the Vishnu temple.
Further, a later date Kuriya Bira temple about 2 miles (3.2 km) to the
south of the Vishnu temple, has been cited to substantiate that this temple had
a mandapa around a small shikara shrine, as required in the Sarvatobhadra
design. The Deogarh temple tallied with the description provided for the
Sarvatobhadra temple in the ancient treatise of Vishnudharmottara Purana.
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