Chapter-I Origin and Development of Temple Architecture in Different Parts of India
Chapter-I Origin and Development of Temple Architecture in Different Parts of India
Chapter-I Origin and Development of Temple Architecture in Different Parts of India
The practices and traditions of temples exist not only in history but
also in present time which greatly influence the socio-cultural life of its
people and gives continuity to traditional Indian values. However, unlike
the western architecture, the evolution of Indian temple architecture is
marked by a strict adherence to the original ancient models that were
derived from religious consideration and that continued over many
centuries with the use of the basic proportion and rigid forms of the early
temples.2
1
S.B.Fletcher, A History of Architecture on the Comparative Methods, (London, 1961), p.61.
2
Ibid.,
28
Buddhist shrines differed from those of the Hindus and Jains in two
principal respects: they were designed for congregational as well as
devotional use by the monks and in their design decorative detail was
used to emphasise rather than conceal the structure. By comparison to
Buddhist and Jain structures, Brahmanical and Hindu buildings
conformed to a rigidly prescribed plan form leading to a single focal point
in the temple group 3.
Along the valley of the Sindhu and its tributaries, from Rupar in
the north to Suktagendor in Makran in the south and to Lothal in Gujarat,
seventy such settlements have been discovered; some of them represent
small villages, others small towns, while about five hundred kilometres
apart were two large cities Harappa on the left bank of the river Ravi in
the Punjab and Mohenjodaro on the right bank of the river Sindhu in
3
A.Ghosh (Ed.), Jaina Art and Architecture, (New Delhi 1975), p.79.
29
Sind. This urban culture dates back to the middle of the 3rd millennium
B.C.
4
. G. Michell, Hindu Art and Architecture, (Singapore, 2000), p.151.
5
. Percy Brown, Indian Architecture (Hindu and Buddhist Periods), (Bombay, 1959), pp.164-165.
30
6
. Ibid, p.181.
31
each side is approached by a bridge across the moat. Four main streets
from the four principal gateways converged to the centre of the city. 7
7
. Sharmin Khan, History of Indian Architecture, Buddhist, Jains and Hindu Period,(New
Delhi,2014), p.205.
32
8
. Ibid.,
33
9
. S.Maheswari,& R.Garg, Ancient Indian Architecture from Blossom to Bloom,(New Delhi, 2001),
p.265.
34
about two centuries later and enlarged to nearly twice its original size. It
comprises an almost hemispherical dome (anda) flattened at the top,
supported on a low circular base (medhi) approached by a double ramp
on the south and enclosed by a balustrade serving as an upper procession
path. Over the dome is a square pavilion, literally box (harmika) enclosed
again by a balustrade surrounding the sacred parasol (chatra).10 The
whole structure is surrounded by a massive rail with four imposing
gateways on the four sides; these stone adjuncts evidently replaced the
original wooden ones. The technique of construction is essentially
wooden. In contrast to the rail which is severely plain, the gateways are
covered with elaborate carving. There are also early stupas in which the
rails as well as the gateways bear profuse carvings.
10
. Ibid., pp.167-168.
35
11
. Krishna deva, Temples of North India, (New Delhi,1 997), p.366.
36
intervening spaces were packed with earth arid the monument was given
the required shape. This inner body was next encased in richly carved
slab usually of limestone. With the free-standing ayaka pillars ranged on
the front faces and with rich embellishments of the balustrades, the drum
and even the dome, these southern stupas presented a new expression.
The chaitya shrine in its typical form was a long rectangular hall,
apsidal at the rear end and divided into three sections by two rows of
pillars along the length of the hall meeting at the back end. The few
remains of structural chaitya halls are extremely fragmentary; in most
cases only the foundations are left, and in plan they conform to the typical
chaitya shrine. Western India abounds in rock-hewn monuments of this
class, and from these it is possible to ascertain other characteristic
features of such shrines. The nave is covered by a barrel shaped vault and
the two aisles by two vaults, each being half the section of that of the
nave. 12
12
. Sharmin Khan, History of Indian Architecture, Buddhist, Jains and Hindu Period, (New
Delhi,2014), p.239.
37
Rock cut chaitya shrines of the typical form in western India may
be divided into two groups representing two phases of development. Of
the early group, the shrine at Bhaja, near Pune, seems to be the oldest (c.
2nd century B.C.) representing in some respects an initial movement in
this direction. Numerous shrines of this class were excavated at Kondane
Pitalkhora, Bedsa, Nasik, Kanheri, Ajanta (IX & X), Karle and other
places in Western India. 14
A study of the design and setting of the interior pillars and of the
scheme of facade ornamentation may enable one to arrange them in
13
. J.Fergusson, History of Indian Eastern Architecture, Vol.1, (London,1910),p.55.
14
James Fergussion and James Burgess, The Cave Temples of India, (London, Reprint 1970), p.214.
38
chronological and stylistic sequence. The caitya cave at Kafle (c. 1st
century A.D.) is the most mature expression of this early movement, at
once grand and imposing in its noble proportions, richness of carving and
the striking and organic combination of the colonnade and the vault at the
interior.
standing or seated, all carved in bold relief. This new style reflects the
change from the earlier an iconic attitude to an extremely iconic one.
With this change the caitya as the votive object gradually dwindles in
sanctity and importance in relation to the image which becomes the
supreme object of veneration.
The remains at Nalanda and Paharpur are the most noteworthy. The
monastery at Nalanda belongs to the 5th century A.D. and one at the
Paharpur (Somapura mahavihara of old) was established towards the
close of the 8th or the beginning of the 9th century. Both survived many
vicissitudes till the Muslim conquest. Hiuen Tsang has left a graphic
description of the monastery at Nalanda. He refers to its many-storeyed
and imposing buildings, and tall and stately temples. The excavated
remains indicate that this establishment comprised several-storeyed
monastic blocks, each being an aggregate of four ranges of cells with
continuous corridors around an open courtyard and aligned in a row;
opposite and separated from the monastic blocks by a broad promenade
stood a row of temples. 17
The two groups, which faced each other, were surrounded by high
protecting walls with other accessory buildings, coherently disposed
16
Vasudeva Agarwala, Heritage of Indian Art,(New Delhi,1964),p.198.
17
Parul Pandya Dhar (ed.,), Indian Art history changing perspectives, (New Delhi, 1996), p.54.
40
18
U.P.Shah and M.A.Dhaky (eds.,), Aspects of Jaina art and architecture, (Ahmedabad, 1975),p.239.
41
The most notable in this group are Ajanta (VIII, XII and XIII),
Nasik (X and III), the Ganesa lena at Junnar and the monastic caves at
Kondane and Pitalkhora. They belong to the centuries immediately
preceding and succeeding the Christian era. The last two caves introduce
a new feature, that of pillars forming a square at the centre of the hall.
Karle has examples of storeyed viharas of the rock-cut order. Both these
features are known to have gone through interesting developments in the
later phase. 19
The rock cut mode reaches its most exuberant expression during
the 4th to the 8th centuries A.D. The rock-cut monastery becomes larger
and more decorated as in the vihara caves at Ajanta (XVI, XVII, I, II,
XXIV), Ellora (II, V, VIII, IX, XI, XII) and Aurangabad (III, VII), all in
Maharashtra and Bagh in Madhya Pradesh.20 The classic plan remains,
but with notable innovations. One is the peristylar arrangement of the
central hall, usually more spacious in contrast to the usually astylar
formation in the former group.
19
James Fergussion and James Burgess, op. cit., pp.155-156.
20
Ibid.,
42
Again, at Ellora (II and XII, second storey) the central hails are provided
with galleries for images instead of monastic cells on the lateral sides,
each in the form of a kind of iconostasis. Ajanta (VI) and Ellora (XI and
XII) are storeyed in elevation; the last two cave structures rise to three
storeys.
(XXI) and the Dhumar lena (XXIX) besides the far famed Kailasa entire
temple complex hewn out of the rock in imitation of a distinctive
structural form are the most important. They may be divided into three
types.
Two caves, one at Badami and the other at Aihole (middle of the
7th" century A.D.), represent the earliest of the Jaina caves of this phase.
Each exhibits a pillared quadrangular hall with the sanctum cella dug out
at the far end. The Jaina caves at Ellora date from the 9th century. Of
21
Sathish K.Kapoor, Hinduism and Art, Centre for Preservation of Heritage of Maharashtra,
(Sholapur, 2012), p.211.
44
these the Chota Kailasa (XXX), the Indra Sabha (XXXII) and the
Jagannatha Sabha (XXXIII) are important. 22
22
Ibi`d.,
23
Jose Pereira, Monolithic Jinas: The Iconography of the Jain Temples of Ellora, (Delhi, 1977),
p.120.
24
Ibid., p.125.
45
(1) Hat roofed, square temple with a shallow pillared porch in front.
(3) Square temple with a low and squat sikhara (tower) above.
25
Sharmin Khan, History of Indian Architecture, Buddhist, Jains and Hindu period, op.cit., p.122.
46
26
Percy Brown, Indian Architecture (Hindu and Buddhist Period), op.cit., p.247.
47
27
Ibid., p.186.
48
term rekha, applied to this form of the sikhara in the Orissan canonical
texts, is very appropriate.
29
Ibid., p.214.
51
while the mastaka, of which the topmost part is the amalaka, is circular.
Each of these sections has further subdivisions of which those of the bada
may be useful for a study of the evolutionary sequence.
The rathas are carried up the body of the gandi as pagas. Next
comes the finely preserved Parasuramesvara temple (Bhuvanesvara)
which illustrates an advance on the archetypal design in its anticipation of
the future pancharatha plan and in having in front a mandapa
(jagamohana) with a clerestory roof.
Along the vertical axis the bada is, in each case, divided into three
sections, as in the earlier temples, the moulding of the pabhaga and the
treatment of jangha and baranda being much more elegant. The sikhara
likewise is superbly treated. With the corners carefully rounded off and
the surface covered with exquisite ornamentation, the most important
being the delicate tracery of caitya window motifs, the entire effect is one
of sensitive refinement.
The Muktesvara does not as yet signify any definite departure from
the archetypal design of the Nagara temple. Belonging approximately to
the 9th century A.D., it represents a mature expression of the Nagara
temple in Orissa. Temples of similar design and form may be found in
other Nagara zones indicating a stage in the evolution of the Nagara
temple' prior to the emergence of any regional characteristics. The
Siddhesvara, the Kedaresvara and the Brahmesvara temples
(Bhuvanesvara) represent the transition from the Nagara form to the
typical Orissan form. 30
Of these, the last is dated in the second half of the 11th century. In
each of these temples, along with a pancharatha ground-plan there is
five-fold division of the bada, the jangha being subdivided into lower and
upper sections by one or more courses or mouldings (bandhana) running
along its middle. There is a greater number of mouldings in the pabhaga
and the baranda take the shape of several courses of shallow mouldings.
Again, at the bottom the gandi is found to have sikhara replicas (anga-
30
Krishna deva, Temples of North India, op.cit., pp.175-176.
53
sikharas), one on each paga, and the figure of the rampant lion projecting
from the raha-paga on each face. In the Brahmesvara the Jagamohana
roof is surmounted by a domical member with the amalaka as its crown.
With the rounding off of the sharp angles at the corners there was a
tendency of the different sections of the gandi being transformed, into
miniature sikhara replicas, an early stage of which is to be recognized in
the above three temples. In Orissa this tendency found emphatic
expression in the Rajarani temple (Bhuvanesvara), notable also for its
rich exterior decoration. But its many anga-sikharas, each with its own
mass and volume, had the effect of breaking up and dissolving the
forceful outline of the rekha tower which seems to have been of great
significance to the Orissan builders. 31
32
S.Maheswari & R.Garg, Ancient Indian Architecture (From Blossom To Bloom), op.cit., p.222.
55
its finish. Grand and impressive even in its ruin, the Konarak temple
represents the fulfilment and finality of the Orissan architectural
movement 33.
In Orissa such halls are usually astylar, but in Central India pillars
have been introduced in the interior as well as at the lateral ends to
support the roof. These pillars with their architraves, supporting the
domed ceiling, afford suitable background for elegant carvings with the
result that the interior of these halls is richly ornamented in strong
contrast to the bare and dull appearance of the interior of the Orissan hall.
Again, the halls in Orissa are closed, but in Central India they are open on
the lateral sides, the openings between the pillars forming balconied
windows shaded by projecting caves. Along the sides there are seats
(kaksasanas) with sloping balustrades.
34
Ibid.,
57
35
G. Michell, Hindu Art and Architecture, op.cit., p.198.
58
the typical Central Indian style which is at its richest in the magnificent
creations at Khajuraho.
36
Ibid., p.203.
59
37
India: Art and Architecture in Ancient and Medieval Periods, Publication Division,(New Delhi,
979), p.101
60
The Solanki temple differs from the Central Indian or the Orissan
temple in some fundamental aspects of planning and elevation. In plan
the sanctum is normally pancharatha with the bada divided into three
sections along the vertical axis. The practice of balancing the vertical
chases formed by the rathaka projections with horizontal segments in the
bada, as one finds in Orissa and Central India, is absent in the Western
Indian temple. Apart from the rathaka projections the Western builders
have used in several instances a different mode of diversifying the
exterior walls with vertical chases.
The technique is to rotate the square of the plan on its own axis and
to stop at required intervals this gives a foliated star shaped plan in the
exterior. The mode is not entirely unknown in other zones of the Nagara
style. It seems to be a different application of the same idea that inspired
the introduction of the system of adding rathaka projections on the
38
Rama Shankar Tripathi, History of Ancient India, (New Delhi,1960), p.110
61
exterior walls of the early Nagara temple, and is known to have been
used in a substantial measure in the Deccan and Malava as also in the
Chalukya and the Hoysala territories. 39
39
ibid.,p.112.
62
propriety of the various parts as well as of the whole, the rich and varied
embellishments which match and blend with the architectural lineaments
(seen best in the sabha-mandapa aptly described as 'a magnficent pile of
pillared splendour') and the sense of organic unity, all combine to rank
this complex among the supreme creations of Indian genius.
The Jaina temples at Dilwara have put to admirable use the white
Makrana marble of Rajasthan. The best works are to be seen in the
temples associated with the names of Vimala (A.D. 1031) and Tejapala
(A.D. 1230). Each complex, besides the principal elements, has a
colonnaded cloister of cells around (devakulika); it is in the cloister and
the sabha mandapa that the infinite skill of the artists has been expanded
and 'the crisp, thin, shell like treatment of the marble', as seen on the
pillars, architraves, ceilings and colonnades, surpasses anything seen
elsewhere.
The Deccan temples of the Nagara conception fall into two well-
defined groups. The earlier group is confined to Southern Deccan, in the
Krishna-Tungabhadra basin, while monuments of the later group are
found scattered over the western part of Upper Deccan in the region of
Khandesh and its neighbourhood. In respect of shape and form this later
series, illustrating yet another distinct type of the Nagara style, is
affiliated to a group of temples in Malava and the adjoining regions.
Temples with the early form of the sikhara are found side by side
with the Dravida at Aihole, Pattadakal, Mahakutesvara and Alampur, all
in the Krishna-Tungabhadra basin. Such temples bear the characteristic
features of the early Nagara temple, though the attenuated and globular
shape of the amalaka provides a significant divergence.
40
Ibid., p.222.
41
Shanti Swarup, Five Thousand Years of Arts and Crafts in India And Pakistan, (Bombay, 1968),
p.177.
64
In either case, the central offset on each face of the sanctum cube is
carried and continued on the body of the sikhara upto its top as an
unbroken vertical band covered all through by rich tracery of caitya
window motifs. These prominent bands, following the main contours of
the sikhara on the four sides, act, so to say, as spines to keep the latter in
shape. The vertical chases in between the spines are filled in upto the top
by horizontal tiers of miniature sikharas diminishing in size as they go
up. The new interpretation of the theme of the anga-sikhara in which the
disturbing effect on the contours is effectively held in check by the
strongly pronounced vertical spines. The latter, with their emphatic
verticalism, keep the anga-sikharas subordinated to the principal design.
42
Ibid.,
66
former, represented best by the Dharmaraja and the Arjuna rathas, has
the storeyed roof topped by a domical member, the stupi or stupika.
The latter, illustrated by the Bhima and the Ganesa rathas, has an
elongated barrel-shaped vault, with gable at the tower ends, as the
crowning element of the roof. In these two forms one may recognise the
origin of the two fundamental components of the full-fledged Dravida
temple—the vimana representing the sanctum with its tall pyramidal
tower, and the gopuram or the immense pile of the gateway leading to the
temple enclosure. At Mahabalipuram the square and the rectangular types
of rathas appear each as an independent conception. Their association
together to form two important elements of the Dravida temple complex
was yet to come. 43
With its beginnings in two distinct types of Pallava rock cut rathas
in the first half of the 7th century A.D., the Dravida style passes through
a long process of evolution and elaboration under different dynasties of
kings which came to be politically supreme in the South. The style
flourished for nearly a thousand years and, confined within a
comparatively small area, remained more or less compact and unilateral.
A succession of datable monuments, spread over the southern end of the
peninsula, supplies definite landmarks in the development of the style.
43
N.S.Ramaswami, Seven Pagodas The Art and History of Mahabalipuram,(Madras,1970), p.45
67
This complex consists of the sanctum with its pyramidal tower and
a pillared hall or mandapa with flat roof, both situated in an axial line
within a rectangular court composed of a series of cells. In the pyramidal
tower there is far greater harmony in the different storeyed stages leading
to a more effective design of great beauty and graceful contours. In the
middle of the peristyle on the east and in one axial line with the sanctum
and its mandapa, there is a rectangular building with a barrel-vaulted
roof. Though now serving as a subsidiary chapel, it is not difficult to find
in this building the original entrance of the temple enclosure.
44
Ibid., p.56.
68
With all the appurtenances, like the walled court, the gopuram, the
pillared mandapa and the vimana, all complete and in their forms and
positions, the Kailasanatha temple at Kanchipuram may be described as
one of the key monuments of the early Dravida style. A more developed
sense of composition is clearly evident in the Vaikuntha Perumal temple
at Kanchipuram, probably slightly later in date.
45
K.V.Soundararajan, Early Temple Architecturein Karnataka and Its Ramifications,
(Dharwar,1969),p.205.
46
Ibid., pp.212-213.
69
immensity of its scheme and the bold technique employed, the Kailasa
temple is certainly a titanic undertaking, superbly executed in respect of
composition as well as beauty of decoration, and has been described as
'the world's greatest rock poem'.
At the same time they display a certain freshness of spirit that may
indicate a revivifying of the style from its dormant state in the late
Pallava phase. A typical monument of the early Chola phase is the
Koranganatha at Srinivasanallur, attributed usually to the reign of
Parantaka I (A.D. 907—955). Fundamentally of the same conception as
the Pallava temple, it also heralds a new phase in the development of the
Dravida style under the great Cholas. 47A notable feature of this temple is
the string course with a row of griffin heads in the stylobate, entirely a
new element which was to become distinctive of the Chola development
of the style.
47
K.R.Srinivasan, Temples of South India, (New Delhi, 1971), p.142.
70
Along the vertical axis the wall-section is divided into two equal
stages by a bold and heavy cornice like moulding that casts a deep
horizontal shadow. The bays, above and below, are occupied by image
niches. The pyramidal section of the vimana is evidently a derivation
48
L.Gajendran, Temple Architecture of the Tamils through the ages, (Madras, 1983), p.56.
49
Ibid., p.61.
71
The treatment of the lower upright sections is. essentially the same
as at Thanjavur. But in the tapering body above consisting of eight
diminishing zones, the introduction of curves, in place of the strongly
pronounced straight lines in the previous example, adds a richer note to
the creation of Rajendrachola. In these two monuments the Dravida
temple style may be said to have reached its supreme expression.
After Rajendrachola the style loses much of its force and tends to
become more and more ornate and florid, tendency already
envisaged at Gangaikondacholapuram.
50
K.R.Srinivasan, temples of south india, op.cit., p.74.
72
51
K.V.Soudararajan, Early Temple Architecture in Karnataka and Its Ramifications, op.cit., p.132.
52
Ibid.,
73
of the tower, simulate the vertical bands of the northern spire. Here,
obviously, is an inspiration from the Nagara shikhara.
54
Ibid., p.147.
55
K.R.Srinivasan, Temples of South India, op.cit., p.105.
75
Of the many temples of the next phase a few represent the style at
its best. The Kasivisvesvara Temple at Lakkundi would date back to the
later half of the 12th century A.D. It is a double shrine temple with the
second shrine facing the principal complex. The Mahadeva temple at
Ittagi (A.D. 1112) forms the central scheme of a number of structures on
a common terraced platform. Each of these temples has the usual
complements of the Chalukyan temple complex, so organically related to
one another as to form a complete whole.56
Each bears the above distinctive features of the style treated in the
most affluent fashion. From the base to the top the entire exterior surface
is encrusted with rich ornamental detail, bold in design and exuberant in
expression. The deep and crisp plinth moldings produce a sparkling effect
of light and shade. The embellishment of the tower is far more delicate
and refined, while the decorative treatment of the doorways excels
anything seen till then.
In the Ittagi temple the hypostyle hall in front of the complex with
its range of many pillars of varied and of almost bewildering patterns and
its coffered ceiling of rich and spirited arabesque work, is itself an
imposing conception. In each of these two temples is revealed a certain
voluptuousness in its wealth of ornamentation, but the scheme as a whole,
still remains perfectly balanced and expresses the style at its height. The
tendency to over ornamentation finds its full scope in the Hoysala
56
Ibid., p.110.
76
57
J.D.M.Dereett, The Hoysalas, op.cit., p112.