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Ellora Caves

Ellora Caves are a multi-religious rock-cut cave complex with inscriptions dating from the period 6th century CE onwards, located in the Aurangabad District of Maharashtra, India.[1] They are also called verul caves.

Ellora Caves
Cave 16 of the Kailasa Temple, Interior
TypeMonolithic caves
LocationAurangabad District , Maharashtra, India
Coordinates20°01′36″N 75°10′38″E / 20.0268°N 75.1771°E / 20.0268; 75.1771
AreaIndian
TypeCultural
Criteriai, iii, vi
Designated1983 (12th session)
Reference no.243
UNESCO RegionAsia-Pacific
Location of Ellora Caves in India
Ellora Caves (Maharashtra)
Ellora Caves (South Asia)

There are over 100 caves at the site, all excavated from the basalt cliffs in the Charanandri Hills, 34 of which are open to public.[2]

These consist of 17 Hindu (caves 13–29), 12 Buddhist (caves 1–12) and 5 Jain (caves 30–34) caves.[3][4] Each group represents deities and mythologies prevalent in the 1st millennium CE, as well as monasteries of each respective religion.[3] They were built close to one another and illustrate the religious harmony that existed in ancient India.[5][6] Because of their exceptional architecture of ancient India, the Ellora Caves were inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List in 1983.[5]

All of the Ellora monuments were built during the Satavahana period, which constructed part of the Vedic Dynasty and much later Buddhist caves and the Jain caves, were named .[2][7]

Although the caves served as temples and a rest stop for pilgrims,[4] the site's location on an ancient South Asian trade route also made it an important commercial centre in the Deccan region.[8]

Ellora Caves are situated 29 kilometres (18 miles) north-west of Aurangabad, and about 300 kilometres (190 miles) east-northeast of Mumbai. Today, the Ellora Caves, along with the nearby Ajanta Caves, are a major tourist attraction in the Marathwada region of Maharashtra and a are a protected monument under the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI).[9]

Etymology Edit

Ellora, also called Verul or Elura, is the short form of the ancient name Elloorpuram.[10] The older form of the name has been found in ancient references such as the Baroda inscription of 812 CE which mentions "the greatness of this edifice" and that "this great edifice was built on a hill by Krishnaraja at Elapura, the edifice in the inscription being the Kailasa temple.[2] In the Indian tradition, each cave is named and has a suffix Guha (Sanskrit), Lena or Leni (Marathi), meaning cave.[2][11]

It is also thought to be derived from Ilvalapuram, named after the asura Ilvala who ruled this region who was vanquished by Sage Agastya.[12]

Location Edit

 
Ellora Caves, general map (the rock is depicted as dark green)

The Ellora caves are situated in state of Maharashtra about 29 kilometres (18 miles) northwest of the city of Sambhaji Nagar, 300 kilometres (190 miles) east-northeast of Mumbai, 235 kilometres (146 miles) from Pune and about 100 kilometres (62 miles) west of the Ajanta Caves, 2.3 kilometres (1.42 miles) from Grishneshwar Temple (India).

Ellora occupies a relatively flat rocky region of the Western Ghats, where ancient volcanic activity had created multilayered basalt formations, known as the Deccan Traps. The volcanic activity that formed the west-facing cliff that houses the Ellora caves occurred during the Cretaceous period. The resulting vertical face made access to many layers of rock formations easier, enabling architects to pick basalt with finer grains for more detailed sculpting.[13]

Chronology Edit

 
Excavations at Ellora Caves, Aurangabad District of Maharashtra, India, 1823

The construction at Ellora has been studied since British colonial rule. However, the overlapping styles between the Buddhist, Hindu and Jain caves has made it difficult to establish agreement concerning the chronology of their construction.[14] The disputes generally concern: one, whether the Buddhist or Hindu caves were carved first and, two, the relative dating of caves within a particular tradition. The broad consensus that has emerged is based on comparing the carving styles at Ellora to other cave temples in the Deccan region that have been dated, textual records of various dynasties, and epigraphical evidence found at various archaeological sites near Ellora and elsewhere in Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh and Karnataka.[15][16] Geri Hockfield Malandra and other scholars[who?] have stated that the Ellora caves had three important building periods: an early Hindu period (~550 to 600 CE), a Buddhist phase (~600 to 730 CE) and a later Hindu and Jain phase (~730 to 950 CE).[15][17][18]

The earliest caves may have been built during the Traikutakas and Vakataka dynasties, the latter being known for sponsoring the Ajanta caves. However, it is considered likely that some of the earliest caves, such as Cave 29 (Hindu), were built by the Shiva-inspired Kalachuri dynasty, while the Buddhist caves were built by the Chalukya dynasty.[15] The later Hindu caves and early Jain caves were built by the Rashtrakuta dynasty, while the last Jain caves were built by the Yadava dynasty, which had also sponsored other Jain cave temples.[19][20][21]

The Hindu monuments: Caves 13–29 Edit

 
 
Parvati and Dancing Shiva (right) in an Ellora cave

The Hindu caves were constructed during the Kalachuri period, from the mid-6th century to the end of the 8th century in two phases. Nine cave temples were excavated early in the 6th century,[22][23] followed by a further four caves (caves 17–29). Work first started , in order, on Caves 28, 27 and 19 then Caves 29 and 21, which were excavated concurrently with Caves 20 and 26. Caves 17 and 28 were the last ones to be started.[24][25]

The later caves, 14, 15 and 16, were constructed during the Rashtrakuta period, some being dated to between the 8th to 10th centuries.[26] Work first began in Caves 14 and 15 with Cave 16, the world's largest monolith,[citation needed] being the last of the three to be constructed.[24] These caves were completed in the 8th century with the support of king Krishna I.[27][28]

Early Hindu temples: Dhumar Lena, Cave 29 Edit

 
View from Cave 29
 
Stone Pillar at the Kailashanatha Temple (Cave #16)

Construction in the early Hindu caves commenced before any of the Buddhist or Jain caves. These early caves were generally dedicated to the Hindu god Shiva, although the iconography suggests that the artisans gave other gods and goddesses of Hinduism prominent and equal reverence. A common feature of these cave temples was a rock-cut linga-yoni within the core of the shrine with each being surrounded by a space for circumambulation (parikrama).

Cave 29, also called Dhumar Lena, is one of earliest excavations in Ellora and among the largest.[29] Early Hindu temple building in the cave centred around the "Vale Ganga", a natural waterfall that was integrated into the monument.[30][25] The waterfall is visible from a rock carved balcony to the south and has been described as "falling over great Shiva's brow", particularly during monsoon season.[30] The carvings in this cave are larger than life size but, according to author Dhavalikar, they are "corpulent, stumpy with disproportionate limbs" compared to those found in other Ellora caves.[31]

Rameshwar temple, Cave 21 Edit

 
Goddess Ganga at the entrance of Cave 21

Cave 21, also called Rameshwar Lena, is another early excavation[32][33] whose construction has been credited to the Kalachuri dynasty. The cave was completed prior to the ascension of Rashtrakuta dynasty which went on to expand the caves at Ellora[2]

Although the cave features similar works to those in other Ellora caves, it also has a number of unique pieces, such as those depicting the story of goddess Parvati's pursuit of Shiva. Carvings depicting Parvati and Shiva at leisure, Parvati's wedding to Shiva, Shiva dancing and Kartikeya (Skanda) have been found in other caves.[34] The cave also features a large display of the Sapta Matrika, the seven mother goddesses of the Shakti tradition of Hinduism, flanked on either side by Ganesha and Shiva.[34] Inside the temple are other goddesses important to Shakti tradition, for example, the Durga. The entrance to Cave 21 is flanked by large sculptures of the goddesses Ganga and Yamuna representing the two major Himalayan rivers and their significance to the Indian culture.[35]

The cave is laid out symmetrically according to the mandapa square principle and has embedded geometric patterns repeated throughout the cave.[36] The Shiva linga at the sanctum sanctorum of the temple is equidistant from the major statues of goddesses Ganga and Yamuna, with all three set in an equilateral triangle.[37] According to Carmel Berkson, this layout likely symbolizes the BrahmanPrakriti relationship, the interdependence of the masculine and the feminine energies, that is central to Hindu theology.[35]

The Kailāśa temple: Cave 16 Edit

 
 
Kailash temple at Ellora. Right: James Fergusson's 19th-century drawing of the temple

Cave 16, known as the Kailasa temple, is a particularly notable cave temple in India as a result of its size, architecture and having been entirely carved out of a single rock.[38][39]

The Kailasha temple, inspired by Mount Kailasha, is dedicated to Shiva.[40] It is modeled along similar lines to other Hindu temples with a gateway, an assembly hall, a multi-storey main temple surrounded by numerous shrines laid out according to the square principle,[41] an integrated space for circumambulation, a garbha-grihya (sanctum sanctorum) wherein resides the linga-yoni, and a spire-shaped like Mount Kailash – all carved from one rock.[39][42] Other shrines carved from the same rock are dedicated to Ganga, Yamuna, Saraswati, the ten avatars of Vishnu, Vedic gods and goddesses including Indra, Agni, Vayu, Surya and Usha, as well as non-Vedic deities like Ganesha, Ardhanarishvara (half Shiva, half Parvati), Harihara (half Shiva, half Vishnu), Annapurna, Durga and others.[38][39][43] The basement level of the temple features numerous Shaiva, Vaishnava and Shakti works; a notable set of carvings include the twelve episodes from the childhood of Krishna, an important element of Vaishnavism.[44]

 
Kailasanatha temple, remarkably carved out of one single rock was built by Rashtrakuta king Krishna I (r. 756–773 CE)[45]
 
The Ramayana panel

The structure is a freestanding, multi-level temple complex covering an area twice the size of the Parthenon in Athens.[46] It is estimated that the artists removed three million cubic feet of stone, weighing approximately 200,000 tonnes,[40] to excavate the temple.[39]

The construction of the temple has been attributed to the Rashtrakuta king Krishna I (r. 756–773 CE),[47] but elements of Pallava architecture have also been noted.[48] The dimensions of the courtyard are 82 meters by 46 meters at the base, and 30 meters high (280 × 160 × 106 feet).[42] The entrance features a low gopuram. The central shrine housing the lingam features a flat-roofed mandapa supported by 16 pillars, and a Dravidian shikhara. An image of Shiva's mount Nandi (the sacred bull) stands on a porch in front of the temple.[38] Two of the walls in the main temple house rows of carvings depicting the Mahabharata, along the north side, and the Ramayana, on the south side.[49]

The Kailasha temple is considered a highly notable example of temple construction from 1st millennium Indian history,[50][51][40] and was called, by Carmel Berkson, "a wonder of the world" among rock-cut monuments.[52]

The Dashavatara: Cave 15 Edit

 
Vishnu at the Dashavatara Ellora temple

The Dashavatara temple, or Cave 15, is another significant excavation that was completed sometime after Cave 14 (Ravan ki Khai, Hindu). Cave 15 has cells and a layout plan that are similar to Buddhist Caves 11 and 12, which suggests this cave was intended to be a Buddhist cave; however, the presence of non-Buddhist features, such as a Nrtya Mandapa (an Indian classical dance pavilion) at its entrance, indicated otherwise. According to James Harle, Hindu images have been found in Buddhist Cave 11, while many Hindu deities have been incorporated in Buddhist caves of the region. This overlap in disparate designs between Buddhist and Hindu caves may be due to the sites being worked on by the same architects and workers, or perhaps a planned Buddhist cave was adapted into a Hindu monument.[53][54]

According to Geri Malandra, all the Buddhist caves at Ellora were an intrusion in a place that was already an established Brahmanical Tirtha (Hindu pilgrimage site), and not the other way around. Furthermore, given that both the Hindu and Buddhist caves were predominantly anonymous, with no donative inscriptions having been discovered for the Buddhist Ellora caves other than those of Hindu dynasties that built them, the original intent and nature of these cave temples is speculative.[55]

 
An early 19th-century painting of Cave 15

The Hindu temple housed in Cave 15 has an open court with a free-standing monolithic mandapa at the middle and a two-storeyed excavated temple at the rear. Large sculptural panels between the wall columns on the upper floor illustrate a wide range of themes, including the ten avatars of Vishnu. An inscription of Dantidurga, critical to establishing the age of the temple, is on the back wall of the front mandapa. According to Coomaraswamy, the finest relief of this cave is the one depicting the death of Hiranyakashipu, where Vishnu in man-lion (Narasimha) form, emerges from a pillar to lay a fatal hand upon his shoulder. It is a Rastrakoot dynasty sculpture.[56] Other reliefs in Cave 15 include the Gangadhara, marriage of Shiva and Parvati, Tripurantika of Shakti tradition, Markendeya, Garuda, aspects of life, Nandi in mandapa, dancing Shiva, Andhakasura, Govardhanadhari, Gajendravarada and others.[57] The panels are arranged in dyads, which states Carmel Berkson, reinforce each other by displaying "cooperative but also antagonistic energy" with a mutuality of power transference.[58]

Other Hindu caves Edit

Other notable Hindu caves are the Ravan ki Khai (Cave 14) and the Nilkantha (Cave 22), both of which house numerous sculptures, Cave 25 in particular features a carving of Surya in its ceiling.

The Buddhist monuments: Caves 1–12 Edit

 
Caves 11 (above) and 12 are three-storey monasteries cut out of a rock, with Vajrayana iconography inside.[59]

These caves are located on the southern side and were built either between 630 and 700 CE,[60] or 600–730 CE.[61] It was initially thought that the Buddhist caves were the earliest structures that were created between the fifth and eighth centuries, with caves 1–5 in the first phase (400–600) and 6–12 in the later phase (650–750), but modern scholars now consider the construction of Hindu caves to have been before the Buddhist caves.[61][62] The earliest Buddhist cave is Cave 6, then 5, 2, 3, 5 (right wing), 4, 7, 8, 10 and 9,[60] with caves 11 and 12, also known as Do Thal and Tin Thal respectively, being the last.[63]

 
Plan of Cave No. 5 (Mahawara Cave)

Eleven out of the twelve Buddhist caves consist of viharas,[61] or monasteries with prayer halls: large, multi-storeyed buildings carved into the mountain face, including living quarters, sleeping quarters, kitchens, and other rooms. The monastery caves have shrines including carvings of Gautama Buddha, bodhisattvas and saints. In some of these caves, sculptors have endeavoured to give the stone the look of wood.

Caves 5, 10, 11 and 12 are architecturally important Buddhist caves. Cave 5 is unique among the Ellora caves as it was designed as a hall with a pair of parallel refectory benches in the centre and a Buddha statue in the rear.[64] This cave, and Cave 11 of the Kanheri Caves, are the only two Buddhist caves in India arranged in such a way.[8] Caves 1 through 9 are all monasteries while Cave 10, the Vīśvakarmā Cave, is a major Buddhist prayer hall.[8]

 
Numerous tantric Buddhist goddesses are carved in Cave 12.

Caves 11 and 12 are three-storied Mahayana monastery caves with idols, mandalas carved into the walls, and numerous goddesses, and Bodhisattva-related iconography, belonging to Vajrayana Buddhism. These are compelling evidence to suggest that Vajrayana and Tantra ideas of Buddhism were well established in South Asia by the 8th-century CE.[8][65]

The Vishvakarma Cave Edit

Notable among the Buddhist caves is Cave 10, a chaitya worship hall called the 'Vishvakarma cave', built around 650 CE.[66][67] It is also known as the "Carpenter's Cave", because the rock has been given a finish that has the appearance of wooden beams. Beyond its multi-storeyed entry is a cathedral-like stupa hall also known as chaitya-griha (prayer house). At the heart of this cave is a 15-foot statue of Buddha seated in a preaching pose.

 
Part of the Carpenter's cave (Buddhist Cave 10)

Cave 10 combines a vihara with a chapel-like worship hall that has eight subsidiary cells, four in the back wall and four in the right,[68] as well as a portico in the front.[60] It is the only dedicated chaitya griha amongst the Buddhist caves and is constructed along similar lines to Caves 19 and 26 of Ajanta. Cave 10 also features a gavaksha, or chandrashala, arched window and a side connection to Cave 9 of Ellora.[66]

The main hall of the Visvakarma cave is apsidal in plan and is divided into a central nave and side aisles by 28 octagonal columns with plain bracket capitals. In the apsidal end of the chaitya hall is a stupa on the face of which a colossal high seated Buddha in vyakhyana mudra (teaching posture). A large Bodhi tree is carved at his back. The hall has a vaulted roof in which ribs (known as triforium) have been carved in the rock imitating the wooden ones.[69] The friezes above the pillars are Naga queens, and the extensive relief artwork shows characters such as entertainers, dancers and musicians.

The front of the prayer hall is a rock-cut court entered via a flight of steps. The entrance of the Cave has a carved facade decorated with numerous Indian motifs including apsaras and meditating monks.[68] On either side of the upper level are pillared porticos with small rooms in their back walls. The pillared verandah of the chaitya has a small shrine at either end and a single cell in the far end of the back wall. The corridor columns have massive squared shafts and ghata-pallava (vase and foliage) capitals. The various levels of Cave 10 also feature idols of male and female deities, such as Maitreya, Tara, Avalokitesvara (Vajradhamma), Manjusri, Bhrkuti, and Mahamayuri, carved in the Pala dynasty style found in eastern regions of India.[70] Some southern Indian influences can also be found in various works in this cave.[71]

The Jain monuments: Caves 30–34 Edit

 
Lord Mahavira
 
Lord Bahubali

At the north end of Ellora are the five Jain caves belonging to the Digambara sect, which were excavated in the ninth and early tenth centuries.[72][73] These caves are smaller than the Buddhist and Hindu caves but nonetheless feature highly detailed carvings. They, and the later-era Hindu caves, were built at a similar time and both share architectural and devotional ideas such as a pillared veranda, symmetric mandapa and puja (worship).[74] However, unlike the Hindu temples, emphasis is placed on the depiction of the twenty-four Jinas (spiritual conquerors who have gained liberation from the endless cycle of rebirths).[75] In addition to these Jinas, the works at the Jain temples include carvings of gods and goddesses, yaksa (male nature deity), yaksi (female nature deity) and human devotees prevalent in Jain mythology of 1st millennium CE.[76]

 
Shikhar of Indra Sabha

According to Jose Pereira, the five caves were actually 23 distinct excavations, over different periods. A 13 of these are in Indra Sabha, 6 in Jagannatha Sabha and rest in the Chhota Kailash.[75] Pareira used numerous sources to conclude that the Jain caves at Ellora likely began in the late 8th century,[77] with construction and excavation activity extending beyond the 10th century and into the 13th century before coming to a halt with the invasion of the region by the Delhi Sultanate.[78] This is evidenced by votive inscriptions dated to 1235 CE, where the donor states to have "converted Charanadri into a holy tirtha" for Jains by gifting the excavation of lordly Jinas.[79]

Particularly important Jain shrines are the Chhota Kailash (cave 30, 4 excavations), the Indra Sabha (cave 32, 13 excavations) and the Jagannath Sabha (cave 33, 4 excavations);[75] cave 31 is an unfinished four-pillared hall, and shrine.[80] Cave 34 is a small cave, which can be accessed through an opening in the left side of Cave 33.[81]

The Jain caves contain some of the earliest Samavasarana images among its devotional carvings. The Samavasarana is of particular importance to Jains being the hall where the Tirthankara preaches after attaining Kevala Jnana (liberating omniscience).[82] Another interesting feature found in these caves is the pairing of sacred figures in Jainism, specifically Parsvanatha and Bahubali, which appear 19 times.[83] Other artworks of significance include those of deities Sarasvati, Sri, Saudharmendra, Sarvanubhuti, Gomukha, Ambika, Cakresvari, Padmavati, Ksetrapala and Hanuman.[84]

Chhota Kailasha: Cave 30 Edit

 
Chhota Kailasha

The Chhota Kailasha, or the little Kailasha, is so named due to the similarity of the carvings to those in the Kailasha temple. This temple was likely built in the early 9th century, concurrent with the construction of the lower level of the Indra Sabha, some decades after the completion of the Kailasha Temple.[85] It features two larger-than-life size reliefs of dancing Indra, one with eight arms and another with twelve, both adorned with ornaments and a crown; Indra's arms are shown in various mudra reminiscent of the dancing Shiva artworks found in nearby Hindu caves.[86] However, the iconography has several differences that indicate this cave shows a dancing Indra and not a dancing Shiva. The Indra panels at the entrance also feature other deities, celestials, musicians and dancers.[87]

Art historian Lisa Owen has raised questions concerning whether music and dance were part of 9th-century Jainism, given that Jain theology focuses on meditative asceticism. Rajan, for example, has proposed that Cave 30 May have originally been a Hindu monument that was later converted into a Jain temple. However, Owen suggests that the celebration-filled artwork in this temple is better understood as part of the Samavasarana doctrine in Jainism.[87]

The overlap between Jain and Hindu mythologies has caused confusion, given Book Three of the Hindu Mahabharata describes Indra's abode as one filled with a variety of heroes, courtesans, and artisans, within a paradise-like setting.[88] This imagery is repeated throughout Cave 30, similar to the Hindu caves, setting the context of the temple.[88] However, the symbolism closer to the centre of the temple is more aligned with the core ideas of Jainism; a greater prevalence of meditating images and Jinas – the place where the Jain devotee would perform his or her ritual abhisheka (worship).[89]

Cave 31 Edit

 
Mahavira with yaksha Matanga and yakshi Siddhaiki

Cave 31, consisting of four pillars, a small shrine a number of carvings, was not completed. Carvings of Parshvanatha, guarded by yaksha Dharanendra with his 7 hoods, and Gommateshvara were made into the left and right walls of the hall, respectively, while within the shrine resides an idol of Vardhamana Mahavir Swami. The idol is seated in a padmasan position on a lion-throne and a chakra is seen in the middle panel of the throne. The figure of yaksha Matanga on an elephant is on the left side of shrine while one of yakshi Siddhaiki, seated in savya-lalitasana on a lion with a child on her lap, is on the right.[90][91]

The Indra Sabha: Cave 32 Edit

 
Indra Sabha is the largest of the Jain series and dates from the 9th century, Rashtrakuta patronage. A simple gateway leads to a courtyard in which there is a monolithic shrine with a pyramidal roof. The double-storey temple is excavated in the rear of the courtyard. The interior of the cave has a columned mandapa or hall with niches on the three sides and the sanctuary in the middle of the back wall. Carved figures of the Jain Tirthankharas decorate the walls.

The Indra Sabha (Cave 32), excavated in the 9th century, is a two-storey cave with a monolithic shrine in its court. 19th-century historians confused the Jain Yaksas for alternate images of Indra that were found in Buddhist and Hindu artworks, thus leading to the temple being given the misnomer "Indra Sabha".[92] Indra is an important deity in all three major religions, but is of particular importance in Jainism as not only is he one of 64 deities who reign over the heavens, he is, specifically, the king of the first Jain heaven, Saudharmakalpa, and the chief architect of the celestial assembly hall according to the Adipurana, a Jain holy text. [93]

The Indra Sabha Jain temple is historically significant as it contains evidence, in the form of layered deposits and textual records, of active worship inside by the Jain community. In particular, rituals were known to have been held in the upper level, where the artwork may have played a central role.[94]

As with many caves in Ellora, numerous carvings adorn the temple, such as those of the lotus flower on the ceiling. On the upper level of the shrine, excavated at the rear of the court, is an image of Ambika, the yakshini of Neminath, seated on her lion under a mango tree, laden with fruit. The centre of the shrine presents Sarvatobhadra, where four Tirthankaras of Jainism – Rshibha (1st), Neminatha (22nd), Parsvanatha (23rd) and Mahavira (24th) are aligned to the cardinal directions, forming a place of worship for devotees.[95]

The Jagannatha Sabha: Cave 33 Edit

 
Seated Jinas

The Jagannatha Sabha (Cave 33) is the second-largest Jain cave at Ellora and dates to the 9th century according to the inscriptions on the pillars. It is a two-storeyed cave with twelve massive pillars and elephant heads projecting towards a porch, all carved from a single rock. The hall has two heavy square pillars in front, four in the middle area, and a pillared interior square principal hall with fluted shafts, all intricately carved with capitals, ridges and brackets. Inside the major idols are of Parshvanatha and Mahavira, the last two Tirthankaras in Jainism.[96]

Cave 34 Edit

 
Goddess Ambika sitting on a lion, Cave 34

Certain inscriptions in Cave 34, or J26 according to historian José Pereira,[75][97] are not deciphered as yet but were likely to have been executed between 800 and 850 CE. Other inscriptions, such as the one by Sri Nagavarma, are thought to date from the 9th or 10th century.[98]

This cave features a large seated Parshvanatha Jina with four camara attendants, two of whom hold fly-whisks and seemingly emerge from the back of the Jina's throne.[99] As with many other Jain excavations, a large pair of yaksa-yaksi is also found in this cave near the Jina.[100] In the back of the cave is a bearded figure with a bowl containing round sacrificial offerings, which have shapes reminiscent of pindas (rice balls) or laddus (sweetmeat). This suggests the scene may be related to Jain devotional worship, possibly a shraddha ceremony.[101] The Parshvanatha in the cave is paired with a standing Gommateshvara,[102] and accompanied by other carvings showing musicians playing a variety of instruments such as horns, drums, conchs, trumpets, and cymbals.[103] A particularly notable feature of the cave is a giant, open lotus carving on its ceiling and rooftop, which is found in only one other Jain excavation and one Hindu Cave 25 in all of Ellora. The placement of the lotus on the cave rather than a sculpture symbolizes that the temple is a divine place.[104]

Rock carved image of Lord Parshvanath Edit

 
16 feet (4.9 m) rock-carved image of Lord Parshvanath

On the hill to the northeast of the main complex of caves is a Jain temple containing a 16-foot (4.9 m) rock-carved image of Lord Parshvanath from the Rashtrakuta period with an inscription dated 1234 A.D. The well-preserved image is flanked by Dharaıendra and Padmavati. The inscription mentions the site as Charana Hill, a holy site.[105] It is still in active worship and thus not protected by the ASI. Six hundred steps must be climbed to reach it. It is managed by a Jain Gurukul in the village.[106]

Visitors, desecration and damage Edit

There have been several records written in the centuries following their completion indicating that these caves were visited regularly, particularly as it was within sight of a trade route;[107] for example, Ellora was known to have been frequented by Buddhist monks in the 9th and 10th centuries.[108] It is mistakenly referred to by the 10th-century Baghdad resident Al-Mas‘udi as "Aladra", site of a great temple, a place of Indian pilgrimage and one with thousands of cells where devotees live;[109] in 1352 CE, the records of Ala-ud-Din Bahman Shah mention him camping at the site. Other records were written by Firishta, Thevenot (1633–67), Niccolao Manucci (1653–1708), Charles Warre Malet (1794), and Seely (1824).[110] Some accounts acknowledge the importance of Ellora but make inaccurate statements regarding its construction; for example, a description of the caves by Venetian traveller Niccolao Manucci, whose Mughal history was well received in France, wrote that the Ellora caves "...were executed by the ancient Chinese" based on his assessment of the workmanship and what he had been told.[111] Ellora was a well-known site in Mughal times: the emperor Aurangzeb used to picnic there with his family, as did other Mughal nobles. Mustaid Khan, a courtier of Aurangzeb, stated that people visited the area in all seasons but especially during the monsoon. He also spoke of "many kinds of images with lifelike forms" carved on all the ceilings and walls, but noted that the monuments themselves were in a state of "desolation in spite of its strong foundations."[112]

 
 
Typical damage to idols centres around the face, nose, breasts, and limbs. Desecrated statues in a Hindu Cave (left) and a Buddhist Cave.

The Lilacharitra, a Marathi text dated to the late 13th century CE, is the first report stating that active use of Ellora ceased in the 13th century.[107] Islamic court records indicated that Deogiri, the capital of the Yadava dynasty, and about 10 kilometres from Ellora, had come under sustained attack during this period and subsequently fell to the Delhi Sultanate in 1294 CE.[113] According to José Pereira, there is evidence that work in the Jain caves at Ellora had flourished under Singhana, who ruled the Yadava dynasty between ~1200 and 1247 CE, and these caves were in use by Jain visitors and worshippers into the 13th century. However, Jain religious activity ceased after the region came under Islamic rule in the late 13th century.[114]

The Buddhist, Hindu, and Jain monuments at Ellora show substantial damage, particularly to the idols, whereas intricate carvings on the pillars, and of natural objects on the walls, remain intact. The desecration of idols and images was traced to the 15th to 17th centuries when this region of the Deccan peninsula was subjected to iconoclasm by Muslim armies.[115] According to Geri Malandra, such devastation by Muslims stemmed from the perceived offense caused by "the graphic, anthropomorphic imagery of Hindu and Buddhist shrines".[109] Muslim historians of the Islamic Sultanate period mention Ellora in their descriptions of the widespread damage and fanatical destruction of idols and artwork of the region, with some Muslims of this era being known to have expressed concern regarding the wanton damage and "deplored it as a violation of beauty", according to Carl Ernst.[116]

Ellora inscriptions Edit

Several inscriptions at Ellora[117] date from the 6th century onwards, the best known of which is an inscription by Rashtrakuta Dantidurga (c. 753–757 CE) on the back wall of the front mandapa of Cave 15 stating that he had offered prayers at that temple. Jagannatha Sabha, Jain cave 33, has 3 inscriptions that give the names of monks and donors, while a Parshvanath temple on the hill has a 1247 CE inscription that gives the name of a donor from Vardhanapura.[118]

The Great Kailasa temple (Cave 16) is attributed to Krishna I (c. 757–783 CE), the successor and uncle of Dantidurga. A copper plate inscription found in Baroda, Gujarat, states that a great edifice was built on a hill by Krishnaraja at Elapura (Ellora):[119]

...was caused to be constructed a temple on the hill at Elapura, of wonderful structure, on seeing which the best of immortals who move in celestial cars, struck with astonishment, say "This temple of Shiva is self-existent; in a thing made by art such beauty is not seen (...). The architect builder of which (...) was himself suddenly struck with astonishment, saying "Oh, how was it that I built it!"

— Karkaraja II copper inscription, 812 CE[120]

Painted carvings and paintings Edit

 
Brahma at Kailasha temple of Ellora, with painted decorations
 
Cave 16 (6), surviving plaster and painted artwork
 
Painting Jain Ellora Caves
 
Cave 32

The carvings at Ellora were at one time profusely painted. The rock was covered with a lime plaster which was painted. The plaster and the paint has survived in places.

In popular culture Edit

The famous Bengali filmmaker (and author) Satyajit Ray wrote the crime thriller novel Kailashey Kelenkari in 1974, featuring fictional detective Feluda. In the novel, Feluda travels to the Ellora caves to uncover a smuggling racket involving illegal trade of historical artifacts from Indian temples, including the largest cave at Ellora, the Kailasa Temple. Satyajit's son Sandip Ray adapted the novel into a movie of the same name in 2007.[citation needed]

In Art and Literature Edit

Fisher's Drawing Room Scrap Book, 1832 contains a plate of 'Skeletal Group in the Ramedwur, Caves of Ellora, supposed to represent the nuptials of Siva and Parvati' by George Cattermole, engraved by W. Kelsall, accompanied by a poetical illustration by Letitia Elizabeth Landon paraphrased from a translation from the Siva-Pooraun.[121] This is from cave 21.

See also Edit

References Edit

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  2. ^ a b c d e . Archaeological Survey of India. Archived from the original on 30 March 2014.
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  5. ^ a b "Ellora Caves". UNESCO World Heritage Convention. United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization. Retrieved 28 May 2023., Quote: "These 34 monasteries and temples, extending over more than 2 km, were dug side by side in the wall of a high basalt cliff, not far from Aurangabad, in Maharashtra. Ellora, with its uninterrupted sequence of monuments including Magnificent Indra Sabha , with Indra , Meditating Vedic Aajivikas, Nataraja, brings the civilization of ancient India to life. Not only is the Ellora complex a unique artistic creation and a technological exploit but, with its sanctuaries devoted to Vedic principles, it illustrates the cosmological aspect that was characteristic of ancient India."
  6. ^ Time Life Lost Civilizations series: Ancient India: Land Of Mystery (1994)
  7. ^ Gopal, Madan (1990). K.S. Gautam (ed.). India through the ages. Publication Division, Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Government of India. p. 178.
  8. ^ a b c d Pandit 2013.
  9. ^ "Ellora Caves". Retrieved 19 May 2012.
  10. ^ World Heritage Series Ellora, Archaeological Survey of India, Government of India, p. 6. ISBN 81-87780-43-6. Printed by GoodEarth Publications, Eicher GoodEarth Limited @ Thomson Press, New Delhi
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  16. ^ Owen 2012, pp. 109–110.
  17. ^ Owen 2012, pp. 7–9.
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  19. ^ José Pereira 1977, pp. 21, 24.
  20. ^ Owen 2012, pp. 200–202.
  21. ^ "Close view of base of pillars in the upper floor of the Jain Cave XXXIII (Jaganatha Sabha), Ellora". Retrieved 2 September 2013.
  22. ^ Owen 2012, p. 7.
  23. ^ Walter M. Spink 1967b.
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  26. ^ Owen 2012, pp. 8–9.
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  30. ^ a b Owen 2012, pp. 7–8.
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  32. ^ Dhavalikar 2003, pp. 73–79, 84.
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  34. ^ a b Berkson 1992, pp. 86–87, 134–135.
  35. ^ a b Berkson 1992, p. 124.
  36. ^ Berkson 1992, pp. 145–147.
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  46. ^ Sarina Singh; Joe Bindloss; James Bainbridge; Lindsay Brown; Mark Elliott; Stuart Butler (2007). India. Footscray, Vic.: Lonely Planet. p. 810. ISBN 978-1-74104-308-2.
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  95. ^ World Heritage Sites – Ellora Caves – Jaina Group of Caves 12 July 2016 at the Wayback Machine, Archaeological Society of India (2011), Government of India
  96. ^ [a] Jagannath Sabha: Façade of Jain Cave XXXIII (Jaganatha Sabha), Ellora, British Library, Henry Cousens Photograph (1875); [b] Pillared interior of Jagannath Sabha: Ellora, British Library, Anonymous sketch (1825)
  97. ^ José Pereira 1977, p. 90.
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  99. ^ Owen 2012, p. 70.
  100. ^ Owen 2012, p. 82 with footnote 2.
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  104. ^ Owen 2012, p. 25.
  105. ^ Lisa Nadine Owen, Beyond Buddhist and Brahmanical Activity: The Place of the Jain Rock-Cut Excavations at Ellora, PhD thesis 2006, University of Texas at Austin p. 255
  106. ^ Ellora Jain Gurukul
  107. ^ a b Geri Hockfield Malandra 1993, p. 3.
  108. ^ Geri Hockfield Malandra 1993, p. 110:"Although the art historical record of Buddhist activity here [Ellora] essentially ends in the sixth century, epigraphic material documents renewed use of the site in the ninth and tenth centuries."
  109. ^ a b Geri Hockfield Malandra 1993, pp. 1–4.
  110. ^ World Heritage Sites – Ellora Caves, Archaeological Survey of India http://asi.nic.in/asi_monu_whs_ellora.asp
  111. ^ Geri Hockfield Malandra 1993, p. 4:"In the next century, Ellora's attraction to travelers did not diminish; neither did understanding increase. The Venetian Niccolao Manucci, whose history of the Mughals reaches Paris in 1701 or 1702, attributed the excavations to the Chinese (...) As they are so cleverly done, and their appearance somewhat Chinese, many say that they were executed by the ancient Chinese."
  112. ^ Abraham Eraly (2007). The Mughal World: Life in India's Last Golden Age. Penguin Books India. pp. 6–7. ISBN 978-0143102625.
  113. ^ Matthew Bennett (1998). The Hutchinson Dictionary of Ancient & Medieval Warfare. Routledge. pp. 97–98. ISBN 978-1-57958-116-9.
  114. ^ José Pereira 1977, pp. 24–25.
  115. ^ Trudy Ring; Noelle Watson; Paul Schellinger (2012). Asia and Oceania: International Dictionary of Historic Places. Routledge. p. 256. ISBN 978-1-136-63979-1., Quote: "Some had been desecrated by zealous Muslims during their occupation of Maharashtra in the fifteenth, sixteenth and seventeenth centuries."
  116. ^ Carl Ernst (2000). David Gilmartin; Bruce B. Lawrence (eds.). Beyond Turk and Hindu: Rethinking Religious Identities in Islamicate South Asia. University Press of Florida. pp. 106–110. ISBN 978-0-8130-3099-9.
  117. ^ José Pereira 1977, p. 87.
  118. ^ Beyond Buddhist and Brahmanical Activity: The Place of the Jain Rock-Cut Excavations at Ellora, Lisa nadine Owan, PhD Dissertation University of Texas at Austin, May 2006, pp. 254–257
  119. ^ Geri Hockfield Malandra 1993, pp. 7–10.
  120. ^ Geri Hockfield Malandra 1993, p. 10.
  121. ^ Landon, Letitia Elizabeth (1831). "poetical illustration". Fisher's Drawing Room Scrap Book, 1832. Fisher, Son & Co.Landon, Letitia Elizabeth (1831). "picture". Fisher's Drawing Room Scrap Book, 1832. Fisher, Son & Co.

Bibliography Edit

  • Pia Brancaccio (2013). Helaine Selin (ed.). Encyclopaedia of the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine in Non-Western Cultures. Springer Science. doi:10.1007/978-94-007-3934-5_9848-1. ISBN 978-94-017-1416-7.
  • James Burgess (1880). The Cave Temples of India. Cambridge University Press (Reprinted 2013). ISBN 978-1-108-05552-9.
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  • Berkson, Carmel (1992). Ellora, Concept and Style. Abhinav Publications. ISBN 0-19-565458-7.
  • Susan L. Huntington; John C.. Huntington (2014). The Art of Ancient India: Buddhist, Hindu, Jain. Motilal Banarsidass. ISBN 978-81-208-3617-4.
  • Damien Keown; Charles S. Prebish (2013). Encyclopedia of Buddhism. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-136-98588-1.
  • Geri Hockfield Malandra (1993). Unfolding A Mandala: The Buddhist Cave Temples at Ellora. State University of New York Press. ISBN 978-0-7914-1355-5.
  • Owen, Lisa (2012). Carving Devotion in the Jain Caves at Ellora. Brill Academic. ISBN 978-9004206298.
  • Pandit, Suraj (2013). Ellora Caves. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/obo/9780195393521-0118.
  • P. R. Srinivasan (2007). Ellora. Archaeological Survey of India. ISBN 978-81-87780-43-4. OCLC 420558130.
  • Walter M. Spink (1967a). Ajanta to Ellora. Marg Publications. OCLC 648366740.
  • Walter M. Spink (1967b). Ellora's Earliest Phase. American Academy. OCLC 54831981.

External links Edit

ellora, caves, ellora, redirects, here, other, uses, ellora, disambiguation, multi, religious, rock, cave, complex, with, inscriptions, dating, from, period, century, onwards, located, aurangabad, district, maharashtra, india, they, also, called, verul, caves,. Ellora redirects here For other uses see Ellora disambiguation Ellora Caves are a multi religious rock cut cave complex with inscriptions dating from the period 6th century CE onwards located in the Aurangabad District of Maharashtra India 1 They are also called verul caves Ellora CavesCave 16 of the Kailasa Temple InteriorTypeMonolithic cavesLocationAurangabad District Maharashtra IndiaCoordinates20 01 36 N 75 10 38 E 20 0268 N 75 1771 E 20 0268 75 1771AreaIndianUNESCO World Heritage SiteTypeCulturalCriteriai iii viDesignated1983 12th session Reference no 243UNESCO RegionAsia PacificLocation of Ellora Caves in IndiaShow map of IndiaEllora Caves Maharashtra Show map of MaharashtraEllora Caves South Asia Show map of South AsiaThere are over 100 caves at the site all excavated from the basalt cliffs in the Charanandri Hills 34 of which are open to public 2 These consist of 17 Hindu caves 13 29 12 Buddhist caves 1 12 and 5 Jain caves 30 34 caves 3 4 Each group represents deities and mythologies prevalent in the 1st millennium CE as well as monasteries of each respective religion 3 They were built close to one another and illustrate the religious harmony that existed in ancient India 5 6 Because of their exceptional architecture of ancient India the Ellora Caves were inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List in 1983 5 All of the Ellora monuments were built during the Satavahana period which constructed part of the Vedic Dynasty and much later Buddhist caves and the Jain caves were named 2 7 Although the caves served as temples and a rest stop for pilgrims 4 the site s location on an ancient South Asian trade route also made it an important commercial centre in the Deccan region 8 Ellora Caves are situated 29 kilometres 18 miles north west of Aurangabad and about 300 kilometres 190 miles east northeast of Mumbai Today the Ellora Caves along with the nearby Ajanta Caves are a major tourist attraction in the Marathwada region of Maharashtra and a are a protected monument under the Archaeological Survey of India ASI 9 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Location 3 Chronology 4 The Hindu monuments Caves 13 29 4 1 Early Hindu temples Dhumar Lena Cave 29 4 2 Rameshwar temple Cave 21 4 3 The Kailasa temple Cave 16 4 4 The Dashavatara Cave 15 4 5 Other Hindu caves 5 The Buddhist monuments Caves 1 12 6 The Vishvakarma Cave 7 The Jain monuments Caves 30 34 7 1 Chhota Kailasha Cave 30 7 2 Cave 31 7 3 The Indra Sabha Cave 32 7 4 The Jagannatha Sabha Cave 33 7 5 Cave 34 7 6 Rock carved image of Lord Parshvanath 8 Visitors desecration and damage 9 Ellora inscriptions 10 Painted carvings and paintings 11 In popular culture 12 In Art and Literature 13 See also 14 References 14 1 Bibliography 15 External linksEtymology EditEllora also called Verul or Elura is the short form of the ancient name Elloorpuram 10 The older form of the name has been found in ancient references such as the Baroda inscription of 812 CE which mentions the greatness of this edifice and that this great edifice was built on a hill by Krishnaraja at Elapura the edifice in the inscription being the Kailasa temple 2 In the Indian tradition each cave is named and has a suffix Guha Sanskrit Lena or Leni Marathi meaning cave 2 11 It is also thought to be derived from Ilvalapuram named after the asura Ilvala who ruled this region who was vanquished by Sage Agastya 12 Location Edit nbsp Ellora Caves general map the rock is depicted as dark green The Ellora caves are situated in state of Maharashtra about 29 kilometres 18 miles northwest of the city of Sambhaji Nagar 300 kilometres 190 miles east northeast of Mumbai 235 kilometres 146 miles from Pune and about 100 kilometres 62 miles west of the Ajanta Caves 2 3 kilometres 1 42 miles from Grishneshwar Temple India Ellora occupies a relatively flat rocky region of the Western Ghats where ancient volcanic activity had created multilayered basalt formations known as the Deccan Traps The volcanic activity that formed the west facing cliff that houses the Ellora caves occurred during the Cretaceous period The resulting vertical face made access to many layers of rock formations easier enabling architects to pick basalt with finer grains for more detailed sculpting 13 Chronology Edit nbsp Excavations at Ellora Caves Aurangabad District of Maharashtra India 1823The construction at Ellora has been studied since British colonial rule However the overlapping styles between the Buddhist Hindu and Jain caves has made it difficult to establish agreement concerning the chronology of their construction 14 The disputes generally concern one whether the Buddhist or Hindu caves were carved first and two the relative dating of caves within a particular tradition The broad consensus that has emerged is based on comparing the carving styles at Ellora to other cave temples in the Deccan region that have been dated textual records of various dynasties and epigraphical evidence found at various archaeological sites near Ellora and elsewhere in Maharashtra Madhya Pradesh and Karnataka 15 16 Geri Hockfield Malandra and other scholars who have stated that the Ellora caves had three important building periods an early Hindu period 550 to 600 CE a Buddhist phase 600 to 730 CE and a later Hindu and Jain phase 730 to 950 CE 15 17 18 The earliest caves may have been built during the Traikutakas and Vakataka dynasties the latter being known for sponsoring the Ajanta caves However it is considered likely that some of the earliest caves such as Cave 29 Hindu were built by the Shiva inspired Kalachuri dynasty while the Buddhist caves were built by the Chalukya dynasty 15 The later Hindu caves and early Jain caves were built by the Rashtrakuta dynasty while the last Jain caves were built by the Yadava dynasty which had also sponsored other Jain cave temples 19 20 21 The Hindu monuments Caves 13 29 Edit nbsp nbsp Parvati and Dancing Shiva right in an Ellora cave The Hindu caves were constructed during the Kalachuri period from the mid 6th century to the end of the 8th century in two phases Nine cave temples were excavated early in the 6th century 22 23 followed by a further four caves caves 17 29 Work first started in order on Caves 28 27 and 19 then Caves 29 and 21 which were excavated concurrently with Caves 20 and 26 Caves 17 and 28 were the last ones to be started 24 25 The later caves 14 15 and 16 were constructed during the Rashtrakuta period some being dated to between the 8th to 10th centuries 26 Work first began in Caves 14 and 15 with Cave 16 the world s largest monolith citation needed being the last of the three to be constructed 24 These caves were completed in the 8th century with the support of king Krishna I 27 28 Early Hindu temples Dhumar Lena Cave 29 Edit nbsp View from Cave 29 nbsp Stone Pillar at the Kailashanatha Temple Cave 16 Construction in the early Hindu caves commenced before any of the Buddhist or Jain caves These early caves were generally dedicated to the Hindu god Shiva although the iconography suggests that the artisans gave other gods and goddesses of Hinduism prominent and equal reverence A common feature of these cave temples was a rock cut linga yoni within the core of the shrine with each being surrounded by a space for circumambulation parikrama Cave 29 also called Dhumar Lena is one of earliest excavations in Ellora and among the largest 29 Early Hindu temple building in the cave centred around the Vale Ganga a natural waterfall that was integrated into the monument 30 25 The waterfall is visible from a rock carved balcony to the south and has been described as falling over great Shiva s brow particularly during monsoon season 30 The carvings in this cave are larger than life size but according to author Dhavalikar they are corpulent stumpy with disproportionate limbs compared to those found in other Ellora caves 31 Rameshwar temple Cave 21 Edit nbsp Goddess Ganga at the entrance of Cave 21Cave 21 also called Rameshwar Lena is another early excavation 32 33 whose construction has been credited to the Kalachuri dynasty The cave was completed prior to the ascension of Rashtrakuta dynasty which went on to expand the caves at Ellora 2 Although the cave features similar works to those in other Ellora caves it also has a number of unique pieces such as those depicting the story of goddess Parvati s pursuit of Shiva Carvings depicting Parvati and Shiva at leisure Parvati s wedding to Shiva Shiva dancing and Kartikeya Skanda have been found in other caves 34 The cave also features a large display of the Sapta Matrika the seven mother goddesses of the Shakti tradition of Hinduism flanked on either side by Ganesha and Shiva 34 Inside the temple are other goddesses important to Shakti tradition for example the Durga The entrance to Cave 21 is flanked by large sculptures of the goddesses Ganga and Yamuna representing the two major Himalayan rivers and their significance to the Indian culture 35 The cave is laid out symmetrically according to the mandapa square principle and has embedded geometric patterns repeated throughout the cave 36 The Shiva linga at the sanctum sanctorum of the temple is equidistant from the major statues of goddesses Ganga and Yamuna with all three set in an equilateral triangle 37 According to Carmel Berkson this layout likely symbolizes the Brahman Prakriti relationship the interdependence of the masculine and the feminine energies that is central to Hindu theology 35 The Kailasa temple Cave 16 Edit Main article Kailasa temple Ellora nbsp nbsp Kailash temple at Ellora Right James Fergusson s 19th century drawing of the temple Cave 16 known as the Kailasa temple is a particularly notable cave temple in India as a result of its size architecture and having been entirely carved out of a single rock 38 39 The Kailasha temple inspired by Mount Kailasha is dedicated to Shiva 40 It is modeled along similar lines to other Hindu temples with a gateway an assembly hall a multi storey main temple surrounded by numerous shrines laid out according to the square principle 41 an integrated space for circumambulation a garbha grihya sanctum sanctorum wherein resides the linga yoni and a spire shaped like Mount Kailash all carved from one rock 39 42 Other shrines carved from the same rock are dedicated to Ganga Yamuna Saraswati the ten avatars of Vishnu Vedic gods and goddesses including Indra Agni Vayu Surya and Usha as well as non Vedic deities like Ganesha Ardhanarishvara half Shiva half Parvati Harihara half Shiva half Vishnu Annapurna Durga and others 38 39 43 The basement level of the temple features numerous Shaiva Vaishnava and Shakti works a notable set of carvings include the twelve episodes from the childhood of Krishna an important element of Vaishnavism 44 nbsp Kailasanatha temple remarkably carved out of one single rock was built by Rashtrakuta king Krishna I r 756 773 CE 45 nbsp The Ramayana panel The structure is a freestanding multi level temple complex covering an area twice the size of the Parthenon in Athens 46 It is estimated that the artists removed three million cubic feet of stone weighing approximately 200 000 tonnes 40 to excavate the temple 39 The construction of the temple has been attributed to the Rashtrakuta king Krishna I r 756 773 CE 47 but elements of Pallava architecture have also been noted 48 The dimensions of the courtyard are 82 meters by 46 meters at the base and 30 meters high 280 160 106 feet 42 The entrance features a low gopuram The central shrine housing the lingam features a flat roofed mandapa supported by 16 pillars and a Dravidian shikhara An image of Shiva s mount Nandi the sacred bull stands on a porch in front of the temple 38 Two of the walls in the main temple house rows of carvings depicting the Mahabharata along the north side and the Ramayana on the south side 49 The Kailasha temple is considered a highly notable example of temple construction from 1st millennium Indian history 50 51 40 and was called by Carmel Berkson a wonder of the world among rock cut monuments 52 The Dashavatara Cave 15 Edit nbsp Vishnu at the Dashavatara Ellora templeThe Dashavatara temple or Cave 15 is another significant excavation that was completed sometime after Cave 14 Ravan ki Khai Hindu Cave 15 has cells and a layout plan that are similar to Buddhist Caves 11 and 12 which suggests this cave was intended to be a Buddhist cave however the presence of non Buddhist features such as a Nrtya Mandapa an Indian classical dance pavilion at its entrance indicated otherwise According to James Harle Hindu images have been found in Buddhist Cave 11 while many Hindu deities have been incorporated in Buddhist caves of the region This overlap in disparate designs between Buddhist and Hindu caves may be due to the sites being worked on by the same architects and workers or perhaps a planned Buddhist cave was adapted into a Hindu monument 53 54 According to Geri Malandra all the Buddhist caves at Ellora were an intrusion in a place that was already an established Brahmanical Tirtha Hindu pilgrimage site and not the other way around Furthermore given that both the Hindu and Buddhist caves were predominantly anonymous with no donative inscriptions having been discovered for the Buddhist Ellora caves other than those of Hindu dynasties that built them the original intent and nature of these cave temples is speculative 55 nbsp An early 19th century painting of Cave 15The Hindu temple housed in Cave 15 has an open court with a free standing monolithic mandapa at the middle and a two storeyed excavated temple at the rear Large sculptural panels between the wall columns on the upper floor illustrate a wide range of themes including the ten avatars of Vishnu An inscription of Dantidurga critical to establishing the age of the temple is on the back wall of the front mandapa According to Coomaraswamy the finest relief of this cave is the one depicting the death of Hiranyakashipu where Vishnu in man lion Narasimha form emerges from a pillar to lay a fatal hand upon his shoulder It is a Rastrakoot dynasty sculpture 56 Other reliefs in Cave 15 include the Gangadhara marriage of Shiva and Parvati Tripurantika of Shakti tradition Markendeya Garuda aspects of life Nandi in mandapa dancing Shiva Andhakasura Govardhanadhari Gajendravarada and others 57 The panels are arranged in dyads which states Carmel Berkson reinforce each other by displaying cooperative but also antagonistic energy with a mutuality of power transference 58 Other Hindu caves Edit Other notable Hindu caves are the Ravan ki Khai Cave 14 and the Nilkantha Cave 22 both of which house numerous sculptures Cave 25 in particular features a carving of Surya in its ceiling The Buddhist monuments Caves 1 12 Edit nbsp Caves 11 above and 12 are three storey monasteries cut out of a rock with Vajrayana iconography inside 59 These caves are located on the southern side and were built either between 630 and 700 CE 60 or 600 730 CE 61 It was initially thought that the Buddhist caves were the earliest structures that were created between the fifth and eighth centuries with caves 1 5 in the first phase 400 600 and 6 12 in the later phase 650 750 but modern scholars now consider the construction of Hindu caves to have been before the Buddhist caves 61 62 The earliest Buddhist cave is Cave 6 then 5 2 3 5 right wing 4 7 8 10 and 9 60 with caves 11 and 12 also known as Do Thal and Tin Thal respectively being the last 63 nbsp Plan of Cave No 5 Mahawara Cave Eleven out of the twelve Buddhist caves consist of viharas 61 or monasteries with prayer halls large multi storeyed buildings carved into the mountain face including living quarters sleeping quarters kitchens and other rooms The monastery caves have shrines including carvings of Gautama Buddha bodhisattvas and saints In some of these caves sculptors have endeavoured to give the stone the look of wood Caves 5 10 11 and 12 are architecturally important Buddhist caves Cave 5 is unique among the Ellora caves as it was designed as a hall with a pair of parallel refectory benches in the centre and a Buddha statue in the rear 64 This cave and Cave 11 of the Kanheri Caves are the only two Buddhist caves in India arranged in such a way 8 Caves 1 through 9 are all monasteries while Cave 10 the Visvakarma Cave is a major Buddhist prayer hall 8 nbsp Numerous tantric Buddhist goddesses are carved in Cave 12 Caves 11 and 12 are three storied Mahayana monastery caves with idols mandalas carved into the walls and numerous goddesses and Bodhisattva related iconography belonging to Vajrayana Buddhism These are compelling evidence to suggest that Vajrayana and Tantra ideas of Buddhism were well established in South Asia by the 8th century CE 8 65 The Vishvakarma Cave EditNotable among the Buddhist caves is Cave 10 a chaitya worship hall called the Vishvakarma cave built around 650 CE 66 67 It is also known as the Carpenter s Cave because the rock has been given a finish that has the appearance of wooden beams Beyond its multi storeyed entry is a cathedral like stupa hall also known as chaitya griha prayer house At the heart of this cave is a 15 foot statue of Buddha seated in a preaching pose nbsp Part of the Carpenter s cave Buddhist Cave 10 Cave 10 combines a vihara with a chapel like worship hall that has eight subsidiary cells four in the back wall and four in the right 68 as well as a portico in the front 60 It is the only dedicated chaitya griha amongst the Buddhist caves and is constructed along similar lines to Caves 19 and 26 of Ajanta Cave 10 also features a gavaksha or chandrashala arched window and a side connection to Cave 9 of Ellora 66 The main hall of the Visvakarma cave is apsidal in plan and is divided into a central nave and side aisles by 28 octagonal columns with plain bracket capitals In the apsidal end of the chaitya hall is a stupa on the face of which a colossal high seated Buddha in vyakhyana mudra teaching posture A large Bodhi tree is carved at his back The hall has a vaulted roof in which ribs known as triforium have been carved in the rock imitating the wooden ones 69 The friezes above the pillars are Naga queens and the extensive relief artwork shows characters such as entertainers dancers and musicians The front of the prayer hall is a rock cut court entered via a flight of steps The entrance of the Cave has a carved facade decorated with numerous Indian motifs including apsaras and meditating monks 68 On either side of the upper level are pillared porticos with small rooms in their back walls The pillared verandah of the chaitya has a small shrine at either end and a single cell in the far end of the back wall The corridor columns have massive squared shafts and ghata pallava vase and foliage capitals The various levels of Cave 10 also feature idols of male and female deities such as Maitreya Tara Avalokitesvara Vajradhamma Manjusri Bhrkuti and Mahamayuri carved in the Pala dynasty style found in eastern regions of India 70 Some southern Indian influences can also be found in various works in this cave 71 The Jain monuments Caves 30 34 Edit nbsp Lord Mahavira nbsp Lord Bahubali At the north end of Ellora are the five Jain caves belonging to the Digambara sect which were excavated in the ninth and early tenth centuries 72 73 These caves are smaller than the Buddhist and Hindu caves but nonetheless feature highly detailed carvings They and the later era Hindu caves were built at a similar time and both share architectural and devotional ideas such as a pillared veranda symmetric mandapa and puja worship 74 However unlike the Hindu temples emphasis is placed on the depiction of the twenty four Jinas spiritual conquerors who have gained liberation from the endless cycle of rebirths 75 In addition to these Jinas the works at the Jain temples include carvings of gods and goddesses yaksa male nature deity yaksi female nature deity and human devotees prevalent in Jain mythology of 1st millennium CE 76 nbsp Shikhar of Indra SabhaAccording to Jose Pereira the five caves were actually 23 distinct excavations over different periods A 13 of these are in Indra Sabha 6 in Jagannatha Sabha and rest in the Chhota Kailash 75 Pareira used numerous sources to conclude that the Jain caves at Ellora likely began in the late 8th century 77 with construction and excavation activity extending beyond the 10th century and into the 13th century before coming to a halt with the invasion of the region by the Delhi Sultanate 78 This is evidenced by votive inscriptions dated to 1235 CE where the donor states to have converted Charanadri into a holy tirtha for Jains by gifting the excavation of lordly Jinas 79 Particularly important Jain shrines are the Chhota Kailash cave 30 4 excavations the Indra Sabha cave 32 13 excavations and the Jagannath Sabha cave 33 4 excavations 75 cave 31 is an unfinished four pillared hall and shrine 80 Cave 34 is a small cave which can be accessed through an opening in the left side of Cave 33 81 The Jain caves contain some of the earliest Samavasarana images among its devotional carvings The Samavasarana is of particular importance to Jains being the hall where the Tirthankara preaches after attaining Kevala Jnana liberating omniscience 82 Another interesting feature found in these caves is the pairing of sacred figures in Jainism specifically Parsvanatha and Bahubali which appear 19 times 83 Other artworks of significance include those of deities Sarasvati Sri Saudharmendra Sarvanubhuti Gomukha Ambika Cakresvari Padmavati Ksetrapala and Hanuman 84 Chhota Kailasha Cave 30 Edit nbsp Chhota KailashaThe Chhota Kailasha or the little Kailasha is so named due to the similarity of the carvings to those in the Kailasha temple This temple was likely built in the early 9th century concurrent with the construction of the lower level of the Indra Sabha some decades after the completion of the Kailasha Temple 85 It features two larger than life size reliefs of dancing Indra one with eight arms and another with twelve both adorned with ornaments and a crown Indra s arms are shown in various mudra reminiscent of the dancing Shiva artworks found in nearby Hindu caves 86 However the iconography has several differences that indicate this cave shows a dancing Indra and not a dancing Shiva The Indra panels at the entrance also feature other deities celestials musicians and dancers 87 Art historian Lisa Owen has raised questions concerning whether music and dance were part of 9th century Jainism given that Jain theology focuses on meditative asceticism Rajan for example has proposed that Cave 30 May have originally been a Hindu monument that was later converted into a Jain temple However Owen suggests that the celebration filled artwork in this temple is better understood as part of the Samavasarana doctrine in Jainism 87 The overlap between Jain and Hindu mythologies has caused confusion given Book Three of the Hindu Mahabharata describes Indra s abode as one filled with a variety of heroes courtesans and artisans within a paradise like setting 88 This imagery is repeated throughout Cave 30 similar to the Hindu caves setting the context of the temple 88 However the symbolism closer to the centre of the temple is more aligned with the core ideas of Jainism a greater prevalence of meditating images and Jinas the place where the Jain devotee would perform his or her ritual abhisheka worship 89 Cave 31 Edit nbsp Mahavira with yaksha Matanga and yakshi SiddhaikiCave 31 consisting of four pillars a small shrine a number of carvings was not completed Carvings of Parshvanatha guarded by yaksha Dharanendra with his 7 hoods and Gommateshvara were made into the left and right walls of the hall respectively while within the shrine resides an idol of Vardhamana Mahavir Swami The idol is seated in a padmasan position on a lion throne and a chakra is seen in the middle panel of the throne The figure of yaksha Matanga on an elephant is on the left side of shrine while one of yakshi Siddhaiki seated in savya lalitasana on a lion with a child on her lap is on the right 90 91 The Indra Sabha Cave 32 Edit nbsp Indra Sabha is the largest of the Jain series and dates from the 9th century Rashtrakuta patronage A simple gateway leads to a courtyard in which there is a monolithic shrine with a pyramidal roof The double storey temple is excavated in the rear of the courtyard The interior of the cave has a columned mandapa or hall with niches on the three sides and the sanctuary in the middle of the back wall Carved figures of the Jain Tirthankharas decorate the walls The Indra Sabha Cave 32 excavated in the 9th century is a two storey cave with a monolithic shrine in its court 19th century historians confused the Jain Yaksas for alternate images of Indra that were found in Buddhist and Hindu artworks thus leading to the temple being given the misnomer Indra Sabha 92 Indra is an important deity in all three major religions but is of particular importance in Jainism as not only is he one of 64 deities who reign over the heavens he is specifically the king of the first Jain heaven Saudharmakalpa and the chief architect of the celestial assembly hall according to the Adipurana a Jain holy text 93 The Indra Sabha Jain temple is historically significant as it contains evidence in the form of layered deposits and textual records of active worship inside by the Jain community In particular rituals were known to have been held in the upper level where the artwork may have played a central role 94 As with many caves in Ellora numerous carvings adorn the temple such as those of the lotus flower on the ceiling On the upper level of the shrine excavated at the rear of the court is an image of Ambika the yakshini of Neminath seated on her lion under a mango tree laden with fruit The centre of the shrine presents Sarvatobhadra where four Tirthankaras of Jainism Rshibha 1st Neminatha 22nd Parsvanatha 23rd and Mahavira 24th are aligned to the cardinal directions forming a place of worship for devotees 95 nbsp Ellaborate carving on cave entrance nbsp Painting nbsp Mural painting nbsp Goddess Sidaika nbsp Matanga YakshaThe Jagannatha Sabha Cave 33 Edit nbsp Seated JinasThe Jagannatha Sabha Cave 33 is the second largest Jain cave at Ellora and dates to the 9th century according to the inscriptions on the pillars It is a two storeyed cave with twelve massive pillars and elephant heads projecting towards a porch all carved from a single rock The hall has two heavy square pillars in front four in the middle area and a pillared interior square principal hall with fluted shafts all intricately carved with capitals ridges and brackets Inside the major idols are of Parshvanatha and Mahavira the last two Tirthankaras in Jainism 96 Cave 34 Edit nbsp Goddess Ambika sitting on a lion Cave 34Certain inscriptions in Cave 34 or J26 according to historian Jose Pereira 75 97 are not deciphered as yet but were likely to have been executed between 800 and 850 CE Other inscriptions such as the one by Sri Nagavarma are thought to date from the 9th or 10th century 98 This cave features a large seated Parshvanatha Jina with four camara attendants two of whom hold fly whisks and seemingly emerge from the back of the Jina s throne 99 As with many other Jain excavations a large pair of yaksa yaksi is also found in this cave near the Jina 100 In the back of the cave is a bearded figure with a bowl containing round sacrificial offerings which have shapes reminiscent of pindas rice balls or laddus sweetmeat This suggests the scene may be related to Jain devotional worship possibly a shraddha ceremony 101 The Parshvanatha in the cave is paired with a standing Gommateshvara 102 and accompanied by other carvings showing musicians playing a variety of instruments such as horns drums conchs trumpets and cymbals 103 A particularly notable feature of the cave is a giant open lotus carving on its ceiling and rooftop which is found in only one other Jain excavation and one Hindu Cave 25 in all of Ellora The placement of the lotus on the cave rather than a sculpture symbolizes that the temple is a divine place 104 Rock carved image of Lord Parshvanath Edit nbsp 16 feet 4 9 m rock carved image of Lord ParshvanathOn the hill to the northeast of the main complex of caves is a Jain temple containing a 16 foot 4 9 m rock carved image of Lord Parshvanath from the Rashtrakuta period with an inscription dated 1234 A D The well preserved image is flanked by Dharaiendra and Padmavati The inscription mentions the site as Charana Hill a holy site 105 It is still in active worship and thus not protected by the ASI Six hundred steps must be climbed to reach it It is managed by a Jain Gurukul in the village 106 Visitors desecration and damage EditThere have been several records written in the centuries following their completion indicating that these caves were visited regularly particularly as it was within sight of a trade route 107 for example Ellora was known to have been frequented by Buddhist monks in the 9th and 10th centuries 108 It is mistakenly referred to by the 10th century Baghdad resident Al Mas udi as Aladra site of a great temple a place of Indian pilgrimage and one with thousands of cells where devotees live 109 in 1352 CE the records of Ala ud Din Bahman Shah mention him camping at the site Other records were written by Firishta Thevenot 1633 67 Niccolao Manucci 1653 1708 Charles Warre Malet 1794 and Seely 1824 110 Some accounts acknowledge the importance of Ellora but make inaccurate statements regarding its construction for example a description of the caves by Venetian traveller Niccolao Manucci whose Mughal history was well received in France wrote that the Ellora caves were executed by the ancient Chinese based on his assessment of the workmanship and what he had been told 111 Ellora was a well known site in Mughal times the emperor Aurangzeb used to picnic there with his family as did other Mughal nobles Mustaid Khan a courtier of Aurangzeb stated that people visited the area in all seasons but especially during the monsoon He also spoke of many kinds of images with lifelike forms carved on all the ceilings and walls but noted that the monuments themselves were in a state of desolation in spite of its strong foundations 112 nbsp nbsp Typical damage to idols centres around the face nose breasts and limbs Desecrated statues in a Hindu Cave left and a Buddhist Cave The Lilacharitra a Marathi text dated to the late 13th century CE is the first report stating that active use of Ellora ceased in the 13th century 107 Islamic court records indicated that Deogiri the capital of the Yadava dynasty and about 10 kilometres from Ellora had come under sustained attack during this period and subsequently fell to the Delhi Sultanate in 1294 CE 113 According to Jose Pereira there is evidence that work in the Jain caves at Ellora had flourished under Singhana who ruled the Yadava dynasty between 1200 and 1247 CE and these caves were in use by Jain visitors and worshippers into the 13th century However Jain religious activity ceased after the region came under Islamic rule in the late 13th century 114 The Buddhist Hindu and Jain monuments at Ellora show substantial damage particularly to the idols whereas intricate carvings on the pillars and of natural objects on the walls remain intact The desecration of idols and images was traced to the 15th to 17th centuries when this region of the Deccan peninsula was subjected to iconoclasm by Muslim armies 115 According to Geri Malandra such devastation by Muslims stemmed from the perceived offense caused by the graphic anthropomorphic imagery of Hindu and Buddhist shrines 109 Muslim historians of the Islamic Sultanate period mention Ellora in their descriptions of the widespread damage and fanatical destruction of idols and artwork of the region with some Muslims of this era being known to have expressed concern regarding the wanton damage and deplored it as a violation of beauty according to Carl Ernst 116 Ellora inscriptions EditSeveral inscriptions at Ellora 117 date from the 6th century onwards the best known of which is an inscription by Rashtrakuta Dantidurga c 753 757 CE on the back wall of the front mandapa of Cave 15 stating that he had offered prayers at that temple Jagannatha Sabha Jain cave 33 has 3 inscriptions that give the names of monks and donors while a Parshvanath temple on the hill has a 1247 CE inscription that gives the name of a donor from Vardhanapura 118 The Great Kailasa temple Cave 16 is attributed to Krishna I c 757 783 CE the successor and uncle of Dantidurga A copper plate inscription found in Baroda Gujarat states that a great edifice was built on a hill by Krishnaraja at Elapura Ellora 119 was caused to be constructed a temple on the hill at Elapura of wonderful structure on seeing which the best of immortals who move in celestial cars struck with astonishment say This temple of Shiva is self existent in a thing made by art such beauty is not seen The architect builder of which was himself suddenly struck with astonishment saying Oh how was it that I built it Karkaraja II copper inscription 812 CE 120 Painted carvings and paintings EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Brahma at Kailasha temple of Ellora with painted decorations nbsp Cave 16 6 surviving plaster and painted artwork nbsp Painting Jain Ellora Caves nbsp Cave 32 The carvings at Ellora were at one time profusely painted The rock was covered with a lime plaster which was painted The plaster and the paint has survived in places In popular culture EditThe famous Bengali filmmaker and author Satyajit Ray wrote the crime thriller novel Kailashey Kelenkari in 1974 featuring fictional detective Feluda In the novel Feluda travels to the Ellora caves to uncover a smuggling racket involving illegal trade of historical artifacts from Indian temples including the largest cave at Ellora the Kailasa Temple Satyajit s son Sandip Ray adapted the novel into a movie of the same name in 2007 citation needed In Art and Literature EditFisher s Drawing Room Scrap Book 1832 contains a plate of Skeletal Group in the Ramedwur Caves of Ellora supposed to represent the nuptials of Siva and Parvati by George Cattermole engraved by W Kelsall accompanied by a poetical illustration by Letitia Elizabeth Landon paraphrased from a translation from the Siva Pooraun 121 This is from cave 21 nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Skeletal Group in the Rameswur Caves of Ellora a poetical illustration by L E L See also EditAjanta Caves 2nd century BCE to 6th century CE Buddhist cave monuments in Maharashtra India Badami cave temples 6th 8th century Hindu and Jain cave temples in Karnataka India Barabar Caves Ancient rock cut caves in India with Ashokan inscriptions Elephanta Caves Collection of cave temples in Maharashtra India Indian rock cut architecture The creation of structures buildings and sculptures by excavating solid rock List of colossal sculpture in situ Pitalkhora Caves Ancient Buddhist caves in India List of rock cut temples in India Tourism in India Tourism in Marathwada Overview of tourism in Marathwada India Udayagiri Caves Early 5th century Hindu cave temples in Madhya PradeshReferences Edit Aurangabad District Administration Government Of Maharashtra Ellora Leni and Ghrishneshwar Jyotirlinga Temple Verul Archived from the original on 2 April 2023 Retrieved 2 April 2023 a b c d e World Heritage Sites Ellora Caves Ellora Caves 1983 Maharashtra Archaeological Survey of India Archived from the original on 30 March 2014 a b Lisa Owen 2012 Carving Devotion in the Jain Caves at Ellora Brill Academic pp 1 10 ISBN 978 9004206298 a b Norbert C Brockman 2011 Encyclopedia of Sacred Places 2nd Edition ABC CLIO pp 155 156 ISBN 978 1 59884 655 3 a b Ellora Caves UNESCO World Heritage Convention United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization Retrieved 28 May 2023 Quote These 34 monasteries and temples extending over more than 2 km were dug side by side in the wall of a high basalt cliff not far from Aurangabad in Maharashtra Ellora with its uninterrupted sequence of monuments including Magnificent Indra Sabha with Indra Meditating Vedic Aajivikas Nataraja brings the civilization of ancient India to life Not only is the Ellora complex a unique artistic creation and a technological exploit but with its sanctuaries devoted to Vedic principles it illustrates the cosmological aspect that was characteristic of ancient India Time Life Lost Civilizations series Ancient India Land Of Mystery 1994 Gopal Madan 1990 K S Gautam ed India through the ages Publication Division Ministry of Information and Broadcasting Government of India p 178 a b c d Pandit 2013 Ellora Caves Retrieved 19 May 2012 World Heritage Series Ellora Archaeological Survey of India Government of India p 6 ISBN 81 87780 43 6 Printed by GoodEarth Publications Eicher GoodEarth Limited Thomson Press New Delhi Pia Brancaccio 2013 p 2 PrabhupadaBooks com Srila Prabhupada s Original Books prabhupadabooks com Retrieved 18 July 2022 Geology of Ellora ellora ind in Archived from the original on 9 December 2010 Walter M Spink 1967 Ajanta to Ellora Marg Publications pp 3 4 35 40 OCLC 648366740 a b c Geri Hockfield Malandra 1993 pp 5 7 Owen 2012 pp 109 110 Owen 2012 pp 7 9 Geri Malandra 1996 The Mandala at Ellora Ellora in the Mandala Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies 19 2 193 Jose Pereira 1977 pp 21 24 Owen 2012 pp 200 202 Close view of base of pillars in the upper floor of the Jain Cave XXXIII Jaganatha Sabha Ellora Retrieved 2 September 2013 Owen 2012 p 7 Walter M Spink 1967b a b Dhavalikar 2003 p 33 a b Walter M Spink 1967a Owen 2012 pp 8 9 Madhukar Keshav Dhavalikar 1983 Masterpieces of Rashtrakuta Art The Kailasa Stosius p 3 ISBN 978 0865902336 Owen 2012 pp 28 35 Dhavalikar 2003 pp 81 84 a b Owen 2012 pp 7 8 Dhavalikar 2003 pp 83 84 Dhavalikar 2003 pp 73 79 84 P R Srinivasan 2007 p 23 a b Berkson 1992 pp 86 87 134 135 a b Berkson 1992 p 124 Berkson 1992 pp 145 147 Berkson 1992 p 126 a b c Section II Periodic Report on the State of Conservation of Ellora Caves India 2003 PDF UNESCO Retrieved 6 March 2016 a b c d James G Lochtefeld 2002 The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hinduism A M The Rosen Publishing Group p 331 ISBN 978 0 8239 3179 8 a b c Charles Higham 2014 Encyclopedia of Ancient Asian Civilizations Infobase p 105 ISBN 978 1 4381 0996 1 Christopher Tadgell 2015 The East Buddhists Hindus and the Sons of Heaven Routledge pp 114 117 see figure 1 55a for the three storey sectional detail ISBN 978 1 136 75384 8 a b Goetz H 1952 The Kailasa of Ellora and the Chronology of Rashtrakuta Art Artibus Asiae 15 1 2 84 107 doi 10 2307 3248615 JSTOR 3248615 Dhavalikar 2003 pp 37 38 John Stratton Hawley 1981 Scenes from the Childhood of Kṛṣṇa on the Kailasanatha Temple Ellora Archives of Asian Art University of Hawaii Press Vol 34 1981 pp 74 90 Lisa Owen 2012 p 135 Sarina Singh Joe Bindloss James Bainbridge Lindsay Brown Mark Elliott Stuart Butler 2007 India Footscray Vic Lonely Planet p 810 ISBN 978 1 74104 308 2 Owen 2012 pp 135 136 Hermann Kulke Dietmar Rothermund 2004 A History of India Routledge p 120 ISBN 978 0 415 32920 0 Dhavalikar 2003 p 56 Susan L Huntington amp John C Huntington 2014 p 338 M K Dhavalikar 1982 Kailasa The Stylistic Development and Chronology Bulletin of the Deccan College Research Institute Vol 41 pp 33 45 Berkson 1992 p 30 James C Harle 1994 The Art and Architecture of the Indian Subcontinent Yale University Press pp 131 134 ISBN 978 0 300 06217 5 Owen 2012 p 135 Geri Malandra 1996 The Mandala at Ellora Ellora in the Mandala Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies 19 2 192 194 Coomaraswamy Ananda K 1999 Introduction to Indian Art New Delhi Munshiram Manoharlal ISBN 81 215 0389 2 p 5 Berkson 1992 pp 86 87 231 232 Berkson 1992 pp 231 232 Geri Hockfield Malandra 1993 pp 65 82 a b c Dhavalikar 2003 p 12 a b c Owen 2012 p 8 Dhavalikar 2003 pp 9 12 33 James C Harle 1994 The Art and Architecture of the Indian Subcontinent Yale University Press p 132 ISBN 978 0 300 06217 5 James Burgess 1880 pp 373 374 Damien Keown amp Charles S Prebish 2013 p 23 a b Geri Hockfield Malandra 1993 p 51 James Burgess 1880 pp 377 380 a b Christopher Tadgell 2015 The East Buddhists Hindus and the Sons of Heaven Routledge pp 78 82 ISBN 978 1 136 75384 8 Dhavalikar 2003 pp 20 3 Geri Hockfield Malandra 1993 pp 53 60 64 65 Geri Hockfield Malandra 1993 pp 61 62 Dhavalikar 2003 p 87 Geri Malandra 1996 The Mandala at Ellora Ellora in the Mandala Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies 19 2 192 Owen 2012 pp 2 3 179 185 a b c d Owen 2012 pp 2 3 Owen 2012 pp 9 12 81 103 119 129 Jose Pereira 1977 pp 25 28 48 49 Owen 2012 pp 13 14 189 199 Geri Malandra 1996 The Mandala at Ellora Ellora in the Mandala Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies 19 2 193 194 with footnote 33 Dhavalikar 2003 p 88 Dhavalikar 2003 p 96 Owen 2012 pp 15 16 Owen 2012 pp 6 7 Jose Pereira 1977 p 30 Jose Pereira 1977 p 28 Owen 2012 pp 28 29 a b Owen 2012 pp 28 32 a b Owen 2012 pp 32 35 Owen 2012 pp 168 169 184 195 Ellora Caves Verul Ellora PDF Aurangabad Circle ASI Archaeological Survey of India Aurangabad Circle Sambhaji Nagar Maharashtra Government of India Archived from the original PDF on 31 May 2022 Retrieved 7 May 2017 Javid Ali 2008 World Heritage Monuments and Related Edifices in India Volume 1 Algora Publishing New York p 164 ISBN 978 0 87586 483 9 Owen 2012 p 2 with footnote 2 Owen 2012 pp 25 29 Owen 2012 pp 13 World Heritage Sites Ellora Caves Jaina Group of Caves Archived 12 July 2016 at the Wayback Machine Archaeological Society of India 2011 Government of India a Jagannath Sabha Facade of Jain Cave XXXIII Jaganatha Sabha Ellora British Library Henry Cousens Photograph 1875 b Pillared interior of Jagannath Sabha Ellora British Library Anonymous sketch 1825 Jose Pereira 1977 p 90 Jose Pereira 1977 pp 25 90 Owen 2012 p 70 Owen 2012 p 82 with footnote 2 Owen 2012 pp 90 92 143 144 Owen 2012 p 167 with footnote 5 Owen 2012 p 76 Owen 2012 p 25 Lisa Nadine Owen Beyond Buddhist and Brahmanical Activity The Place of the Jain Rock Cut Excavations at Ellora PhD thesis 2006 University of Texas at Austin p 255 Ellora Jain Gurukul a b Geri Hockfield Malandra 1993 p 3 Geri Hockfield Malandra 1993 p 110 Although the art historical record of Buddhist activity here Ellora essentially ends in the sixth century epigraphic material documents renewed use of the site in the ninth and tenth centuries a b Geri Hockfield Malandra 1993 pp 1 4 World Heritage Sites Ellora Caves Archaeological Survey of India http asi nic in asi monu whs ellora asp Geri Hockfield Malandra 1993 p 4 In the next century Ellora s attraction to travelers did not diminish neither did understanding increase The Venetian Niccolao Manucci whose history of the Mughals reaches Paris in 1701 or 1702 attributed the excavations to the Chinese As they are so cleverly done and their appearance somewhat Chinese many say that they were executed by the ancient Chinese Abraham Eraly 2007 The Mughal World Life in India s Last Golden Age Penguin Books India pp 6 7 ISBN 978 0143102625 Matthew Bennett 1998 The Hutchinson Dictionary of Ancient amp Medieval Warfare Routledge pp 97 98 ISBN 978 1 57958 116 9 Jose Pereira 1977 pp 24 25 Trudy Ring Noelle Watson Paul Schellinger 2012 Asia and Oceania International Dictionary of Historic Places Routledge p 256 ISBN 978 1 136 63979 1 Quote Some had been desecrated by zealous Muslims during their occupation of Maharashtra in the fifteenth sixteenth and seventeenth centuries Carl Ernst 2000 David Gilmartin Bruce B Lawrence eds Beyond Turk and Hindu Rethinking Religious Identities in Islamicate South Asia University Press of Florida pp 106 110 ISBN 978 0 8130 3099 9 Jose Pereira 1977 p 87 Beyond Buddhist and Brahmanical Activity The Place of the Jain Rock Cut Excavations at Ellora Lisa nadine Owan PhD Dissertation University of Texas at Austin May 2006 pp 254 257 Geri Hockfield Malandra 1993 pp 7 10 Geri Hockfield Malandra 1993 p 10 Landon Letitia Elizabeth 1831 poetical illustration Fisher s Drawing Room Scrap Book 1832 Fisher Son amp Co Landon Letitia Elizabeth 1831 picture Fisher s Drawing Room Scrap Book 1832 Fisher Son amp Co Bibliography Edit Pia Brancaccio 2013 Helaine Selin ed Encyclopaedia of the History of Science Technology and Medicine in Non Western Cultures Springer Science doi 10 1007 978 94 007 3934 5 9848 1 ISBN 978 94 017 1416 7 James Burgess 1880 The Cave Temples of India Cambridge University Press Reprinted 2013 ISBN 978 1 108 05552 9 Jose Pereira 1977 Monolithic Jinas Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 2397 6 Dhavalikar Madhukar Keshav 2003 Ellora Oxford University Press New Delhi ISBN 0 19 565458 7 OCLC 47901386 Berkson Carmel 1992 Ellora Concept and Style Abhinav Publications ISBN 0 19 565458 7 Susan L Huntington John C Huntington 2014 The Art of Ancient India Buddhist Hindu Jain Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 3617 4 Damien Keown Charles S Prebish 2013 Encyclopedia of Buddhism Routledge ISBN 978 1 136 98588 1 Geri Hockfield Malandra 1993 Unfolding A Mandala The Buddhist Cave Temples at Ellora State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0 7914 1355 5 Owen Lisa 2012 Carving Devotion in the Jain Caves at Ellora Brill Academic ISBN 978 9004206298 Pandit Suraj 2013 Ellora Caves Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 obo 9780195393521 0118 P R Srinivasan 2007 Ellora Archaeological Survey of India ISBN 978 81 87780 43 4 OCLC 420558130 Walter M Spink 1967a Ajanta to Ellora Marg Publications OCLC 648366740 Walter M Spink 1967b Ellora s Earliest Phase American Academy OCLC 54831981 External links Edit nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Ellora nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ellora Caves nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Ellora Ellora Caves in UNESCO List Layout floor plan and description of each Ellora cave Deepanjana and Arno Klein Photographs of Ellora Getty Images Paintings of the caves as illustrations to nbsp The Zenana a poem by Letitia Elizabeth Landon Dus Awtar by George Cattermole engraved by William Woolnoth Dher Warra also by George Cattermole engraved by William Woolnoth Excavated Temple of Kylas by Samuel Prout engraved by E Challis Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ellora Caves amp oldid 1177529283, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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