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Ellora Caves |
34 temples carved out of stones, 34 sculptured caves expressing Hindu,
Buddhist and Jain themes, 34 priceless pages out of history. It took over
five centuries for the Hindu, Buddhist and Jain monks to chisel out these
monastries, temples, chaples and decorate them with remarkable imagination
and detail. These caves run North-South and take on the Golden Radiance of
the late afternoon sun. The Buddhist Expression - These
sixteen caves are the oldest in the group and were carved in the 5th
century. As one enters these caves, one crosses graceful angles and steps
in a high ceilinged chamber where a 15 feet huge statute of Buddha is
sitting in a preaching pose. In these caves the artist has tried an
element of surprise by giving them expression of wood. Most of these 16
caves are viharas but cave number 10 is a chaitya. The style of carvings
and sculplures in these caves indicate that initially the artist was going
in for a simple decoration but later as in caves 11 and 12 he became more
ambitious. The 10th cave has a impression of wooden beams on its ceiling
and has a small decorated window which illuminates the sitting Buddha.
These caves are rightly called the Vishvakarma caves and is considered to
be one of the finest in India. Here life and religion go hand in hand. The
amorous couples play joyfully. Step out of this cave and you come acros an
upper gallery giving a view of the precisely carved Naga Queen, the
harbinger of monsoon and the dwarfs who were the court entertainers. The
Buddhists believe that Buddha returns after every five thousand years,
thus the 12th cave has seven images of Budhha depicting his seven
incarnations. The Hindu Expression- The Hindu caves exhibit a totally
different league from the Jain and Buddhist temples in terms of style,
creative vision and execution skills. These temples were built top to
bottom and the architecture of these caves
show
that it required several generations of planning and cordination to give
it the final shape. Cave 14 was initially a Buddh Vihar but in the 7th
centutry it was dedicated as a Shiva temple. Here Shiva is depicted as
'The Destroyer'. The 16th cave in the group is one of the audacious feat
in architecture ever achieved. The idea was to build Mt. Kailash from a
single stone. Hence the name Kailasnath temple. The artist tried to give
the structure the shape of a Temple. The scale at which the work was
undertaken is enormous. It covers twice the area of the Parthenon in
Athens and is 11/2 times high, and it entailed removing 200,000 tonnes of
rock & took 100 years to be completed. The Ramesvara cave has figurines of
river Goddesses adorning its entrance. The Dumar Lena cave resembles the
great cave shrine at Elephanta and is dedicated to lord Shiva.
The Jain Dedication- Each of the caves show the beliefs of the Jains, and
their strict ascetism that embibed in them a spirit of non-violence
towards all. These caves do not carry the high voltage drama of the Hindu
or the Buddhist caves nor are they ambitious in size but they balance
these with their exceptionally detailed work. The 32nd cave is a beautiful
shrine with exquisite carvings of a lotus flower on the ceiling and an
imposing yakshi seated on her lion under a mango-tree laden with fruit.
The ceiling of this double-storied cave are also decorated with paintings.
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