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Khajuraho Group of Monuments

The Khajuraho Group of Monuments are a group of Hindu and Jain temples in Chhatarpur district, Madhya Pradesh, India. They are about 175 kilometres (109 mi) southeast of Jhansi, 10 kilometres (6.2 mi) from Khajwa, 9 kilometres (5.6 mi) from Rajnagar, and 49 kilometres (30 mi) from district headquarter Chhatarpur. The temples are famous for their Nagara-style architectural symbolism and a few erotic sculptures.[1]

Khajuraho Group of Monuments
UNESCO World Heritage Site
LocationChhatarpur, Madhya Pradesh, India
CriteriaCultural: i, iii
Reference240
Inscription1986 (10th Session)
Coordinates24°51′16″N 79°55′17″E / 24.854422°N 79.921427°E / 24.854422; 79.921427
Location in Madhya Pradesh state of India
Khajuraho Group of Monuments (Madhya Pradesh)

Most Khajuraho temples were built between 885 CE and 1000 CE by the Chandela dynasty.[2][3] Historical records note that the Khajuraho temple site had 85 temples by the 12th century, spread over 20 square kilometres (7.7 sq mi). Of these, only about 25 temples have survived, spread over six square kilometres (2.3 sq mi).[3] Of the surviving temples, the Kandariya Mahadeva Temple is decorated with a profusion of sculptures with intricate details, symbolism, and expressiveness of ancient Indian art.[4] The temple complex was forgotten and overgrown by the jungle until 1838 when Captain T.S. Burt, a British engineer, visited the complex and reported his findings in the Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal.[5]

When these monuments were built, the boys in the place lived in hermitages, by being brahmacharyas (bachelors) until they attained manhood and these sculptures helped them to learn about the worldly role of 'householder'.[6] The Khajuraho group of temples were built together but were dedicated to two religions, Hinduism and Jainism, suggesting a tradition of acceptance and respect for diverse religious views among Hindus and Jains in the region.[7] Because of their outstanding architecture, diversity of temple forms, and testimony to the Chandela civilization, the monuments at Khajuraho were inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List in 1986.[8][3]

Etymology edit

The name Khajuraho, or Kharjuravāhaka, is derived from ancient Sanskrit (kharjura, खर्जूर means date palm,[9] and vāhaka, वाहक means "one who carries" or bearer[10]). Local legends state that the temples had two golden date-palm trees as their gate (missing when they were rediscovered). Desai states that Kharjuravāhaka also means scorpion bearer, which is another symbolic name for deity Shiva (who wears snakes and scorpion garlands in his fierce form).[11]

Cunningham's nomenclature and systematic documentation work in 1850s and 1860s have been widely adopted and continue to be in use.[12] He grouped the temples into the Western group around Lakshmana, Eastern group around Javeri, and Southern group around Duladeva.[13]

Location edit

The Khajuraho monuments are located in the Indian state of Madhya Pradesh, in Chatarpur district, about 620 kilometres (385 mi) southeast of New Delhi. The temples are located near a small town also known as Khajuraho,[14] with a population of about 24,481 people (2011 Census).

Khajuraho is served by Civil Aerodrome Khajuraho (IATA Code: HJR), with services to Delhi, Agra, Varanasi and Mumbai.[15] The site is also linked by the Indian Railways service, with the railway station located approximately six kilometres from the entrance to the monuments.

The monuments are about ten kilometres off the east-west National Highway 75, and about 50 kilometres from the city of Chhatarpur, which is connected to the state capital Bhopal by the SW-NE running National Highway 86.

The 10th-century Bhand Deva Temple in Rajasthan was built in the style of the Khajuraho monuments and is often referred to as 'Little Khajuraho'.

History edit

The Khajuraho group of monuments was built during the rule of the Chandela dynasty. The building activity started almost immediately after the rise of their power, throughout their kingdom to be later known as Bundelkhand.[16] Most temples were built during the reigns of the Hindu kings Yashovarman and Dhanga. Yashovarman's legacy is best exhibited by the Lakshmana Temple. Vishvanatha temple best highlights King Dhanga's reign.[17]: 22  The largest and currently most famous surviving temple is Kandariya Mahadeva built in the reign of King Vidyadhara.[18] The temple inscriptions suggest many of the currently surviving temples were complete between 970 and 1030 AD, with further temples completed during the following decades.[7]

The Khajuraho temples were built about 35 miles from the medieval city of Mahoba,[19] the capital of the Chandela dynasty, in the Kalinjar region. In ancient and medieval literature, their kingdom has been referred to as Jijhoti, Jejahoti, Chih-chi-to and Jejakabhukti.[20]

The first documented mention of Khajuraho was made in 641 by Xuanzang, a Chinese pilgrim who described encountering several dozen inactive Buddhist monasteries and a dozen Hindu temples with a thousand worshipping brahmins.[21] In 1022 CE, Khajuraho was mentioned by Abu Rihan-al-Biruni, the Persian historian who accompanied Mahmud of Ghazni in his raid of Kalinjar; he mentions Khajuraho as the capital of Jajahuti.[22] The raid was unsuccessful, and a peace accord was reached when the Hindu king agreed to pay a ransom to Mahmud of Ghazni to end the attack and leave.[20]

Khajuraho temples were in active use through the end of the 12th century. This changed in the 13th century; after the army of Delhi Sultanate, under the command of the Muslim Sultan Qutb-ud-din Aibak, attacked and seized the Chandela kingdom. About a century later, Ibn Battuta, the Moroccan traveller in his memoirs about his stay in India from 1335 to 1342 AD, mentioned visiting Khajuraho temples, calling them "Kajarra"[23][24] as follows:

 
Until the 12th century, Khajuraho was under Hindu kings and featured 85 temples. Central India was seized by Delhi Sultanate in the 13th century. Under Muslim rule, many temples were destroyed and the rest left in neglect. Ruins of some old temples (Ghantai temple above) are still visible.

...near (Khajuraho) temples, which contain idols that have been mutilated by the Moslems, live a number of yogis whose matted locks have grown as long as their bodies. And on account of extreme asceticism they are all yellow in colour. Many Moslems attend these men in order to take lessons (yoga) from them.

— Ibn Battuta, about 1335 CE, Riḥlat Ibn Baṭūṭah, Translated by Arthur Cotterell[25]

The central Indian region, where Khajuraho temples are, was controlled by various Muslim dynasties from the 13th century through the 18th century. In this period, some temples were desecrated, followed by a long period when they were left in neglect.[7][16] In 1495 CE, for example, Sikandar Lodi's campaign of temple destruction included Khajuraho.[26] The remoteness and isolation of Khajuraho protected the Hindu and Jain temples from continued destruction by Muslims.[27][28] Over the centuries, vegetation and forests overgrew the temples.

In the 1830s, local Hindus guided a British surveyor, T.S. Burt, to the temples and they were thus rediscovered by the global audience.[29] Alexander Cunningham later reported, few years after the rediscovery, that the temples were secretly in use by yogis and thousands of Hindus would arrive for pilgrimage during Shivaratri celebrated annually in February or March based on a lunar calendar. In 1852, F.C. Maisey prepared earliest drawings of the Khajuraho temples.[12]

Description edit

 
Sections and orientation of Khajuraho temples.

The temple site is within Vindhya mountain range in central India. An ancient local legend held that Hindu deity Shiva and other gods enjoyed visiting the dramatic hill formation in Kalinjar area.[13] The center of this region is Khajuraho, set midst local hills and rivers. The temple complex reflects the ancient Hindu tradition of building temples where gods love to pray.[13][30]

The temples are clustered near water, another typical feature of Hindu temples. The current water bodies include Sib Sagar, Khajur Sagar (also called Ninora Tal) and Khudar Nadi (river).[31] Local legends state that the temple complex had 64 water bodies, of which 56 have been physically identified by archeologists so far.[13][32]

All temples, except[13] one (Chaturbhuja) face the sunrise – another symbolic feature that is predominant in Hindu temples. The relative layout of temples integrate masculine and feminine deities and symbols highlight the interdependence.[33] The artworks symbolically highlight the four goals of life considered necessary and proper in Hinduism – dharma, kama, artha and moksha.

Of the surviving temples, six are dedicated to Shiva, eight to Vishnu and his affinities, one to Ganesha, one to Sun god, three to Jain Tirthankars.[13] For some ruins, there is insufficient evidence to assign the temple to specific deities with confidence.

An overall examination of site suggests that the Hindu symbolic mandala design principle of square and circles is present each temple plan and design.[34] Further, the territory is laid out in three triangles that converge to form a pentagon. Scholars suggest that this reflects the Hindu symbolism for three realms or trilokinatha, and five cosmic substances or panchbhuteshvara.[13] The temple site highlights Shiva, the one who destroys and recycles life, thereby controlling the cosmic dance of time, evolution and dissolution.[33]

The temples have a rich display of intricately carved statues. While they are famous for their erotic sculpture, sexual themes cover less than 10% of the temple sculpture.[35] Further, most erotic scene panels are neither prominent nor emphasized at the expense of the rest, rather they are in proportional balance with the non-sexual images.[36] The viewer has to look closely to find them, or be directed by a guide.[37] The arts cover numerous aspects of human life and values considered important in the Hindu pantheon. Further, the images are arranged in a configuration to express central ideas of Hinduism. All three ideas from Āgamas are richly expressed in Khajuraho temples – Avyakta, Vyaktavyakta and Vyakta.[38]

The Beejamandal temple is under excavation. It has been identified with the Vaidyanath temple mentioned in the Grahpati Kokalla inscription.[39]

Of all temples, the Matangeshvara temple remains an active site of worship.[33] It is another square grid temple, with a large 2.5 metres (8.2 ft) high and 1.1 metres (3.6 ft) diameter lingam, placed on a 7.6 metres (25 ft) diameter platform.[13]

The most visited temple, Kandariya Mahadev, has an area of about 6,500 square feet and a shikhara (spire) that rises 116 feet.[16][13]

Jain temples edit

The Jain temples are located on east-southeast region of Khajuraho monuments.[40] Chausath yogini temple features 64 yogini, while Ghantai temple features bells sculptured on its pillars.

Architecture of the temples edit

 
The layout plan of Kandariya Mahadeva Temple. It uses the 64 pada grid design. Smaller Khajuraho temples use the 9, 16, 36 or 49 grid mandala plan.[41]

Khajuraho temples, almost all Hindu temple designs, follow a grid geometrical design called vastu-purusha-mandala.[42] This design plan has three important components – Mandala means circle, Purusha is universal essence at the core of Hindu tradition, while Vastu means the dwelling structure.[43]

The design lays out a Hindu temple in a symmetrical, concentrically layered, self-repeating structure around the core of the temple called garbhagriya, where the abstract principle Purusha and the primary deity of the temple dwell. The shikhara, or spire, of the temple rises above the garbhagriya. This symmetry and structure in design is derived from central beliefs, myths, cardinality and mathematical principles.[44]

The circle of mandala circumscribe the square. The square is considered divine for its perfection and as a symbolic product of knowledge and human thought, while circle is considered earthly, human and observed in everyday life (moon, sun, horizon, water drop, rainbow). Each supports the other.[30] The square is divided into perfect 64 sub-squares called padas.[42]

Most Khajuraho temples deploy the 8x8 (64) padas grid Manduka Vastupurushamandala, with pitha mandala the square grid incorporated in the design of the spires.[41] The primary deity or lingas are located in the grid's Brahma padas.

 
 
Khajuraho temples use the 8×8 (64) Vastupurusamandala Manduka grid layout plan (left) found in Hindu temples. Above the temple’s brahma padas is a Shikhara (Vimana or Spire) that rises symmetrically above the central core, typically in a circles and turning-squares concentric layering design (right) that flows from one to the other as it rises towards the sky.[30][45]

The architecture is symbolic and reflects the central Hindu beliefs through its form, structure, and arrangement of its parts.[46] The mandapas, as well as the arts, are arranged in the Khajuraho temples in a symmetric repeating patterns, even though each image or sculpture is distinctive in its own way. The relative placement of the images are not random but together they express ideas, just like connected words form sentences and paragraphs to compose ideas.[47] This fractal pattern that is common in Hindu temples.[48] Various statues and panels have inscriptions. Many of the inscriptions on the temple walls are poems with double meanings, something that the complex structure of Sanskrit allows in creative compositions.[11]

All Khajuraho temples, except one, face sunrise, and the entrance for the devotee is this east side.

 
 
An illustration of Khajuraho temple Spires (Shikhara, Vimana) built using concentric circle and rotating-squares principle. Four spires (left) are shown above, while the inside view of one Shikara ceiling (right) shows the symmetric layout.

Above the vastu-purusha-mandala of each temple is a superstructure with a dome called Shikhara (or Vimana, Spire).[43] Variations in spire design come from variation in degrees turned for the squares. The temple Shikhara, in some literature, is linked to mount Kailash or Meru, the mythical abode of the gods.[30]

In each temple, the central space typically is surrounded by an ambulatory for the pilgrim to walk around and ritually circumambulate the Purusa and the main deity.[30] The pillars, walls, and ceilings around the space, as well as outside have highly ornate carvings or images of the four just and necessary pursuits of life – kama, artha, dharma, and moksa. This clockwise walk around is called pradakshina.[43]

Larger Khajuraho temples also have pillared halls called mandapa. One near the entrance, on the east side, serves as the waiting room for pilgrims and devotees. The mandapas are also arranged by principles of symmetry, grids, and mathematical precision. This use of same underlying architectural principle is common in Hindu temples found all over India.[49] Each Khajuraho temple is distinctly carved yet also repeating the central common principles in almost all Hindu temples, one which Susan Lewandowski refers to as "an organism of repeating cells".[50]

Construction edit

The temples are grouped into three geographical divisions: western, eastern and southern.

The Khajuraho temples are made of sandstone, with a granite foundation that is almost concealed from view.[51] The builders didn't use mortar: the stones were put together with mortise and tenon joints and they were held in place by gravity. This form of construction requires very precise joints. The columns and architraves were built with megaliths that weighed up to 20 tons.[52] Some repair work in the 19th Century was done with brick and mortar; however, these have aged faster than original materials and darkened with time, thereby seeming out of place.

The Khajuraho and Kalinjar region is home to superior quality of sandstone, which can be carved precisely. The surviving sculpture reflect fine details such as strands of hair, manicured nails, and intricate jewelry.

While recording the television show Lost Worlds (History Channel) at Khajuraho, Alex Evans recreated a stone sculpture under four feet that took about 60 days to carve in an attempt to develop a rough idea of how much work must have been involved.[53] Roger Hopkins and Mark Lehner also conducted experiments to quarry limestone which took 12 quarrymen 22 days to quarry about 400 tons of stone.[54] They concluded that these temples would have required hundreds of highly trained sculptors.

 
Western side.

Chronology edit

The Khajuraho group of temples belong to Vaishnavism school of Hinduism, Saivism school of Hinduism and Jainism – nearly a third each. Archaeological studies suggest all three types of temples were under construction at about the same time in the late 10th century, and in use simultaneously. Will Durant states that this aspect of Khajuraho temples illustrates the tolerance and respect for different religious viewpoints in the Hindu and Jain traditions.[55] In each group of Khajuraho temples, there were major temples surrounded by smaller temples – a grid style that is observed to varying degrees in Hindu temples in Angkor Wat, Parambaran and South India.

The largest surviving Shiva temple is Khandarya Mahadeva, while the largest surviving Vaishnava group includes Chaturbhuja and Ramachandra.

Kandariya Mahadeva Temple plan is 109 ft in length by 60 ft, and rises 116 ft above ground and 88 ft above its own floor. The central padas are surrounded by three rows of sculptured figures, with over 870 statues, most being half life size (2.5 to 3 feet). The spire is a self-repeating fractal structure.

Temples, religious affiliations and consecration years
Sequence Modern temple name Religion Deity Completed by
(CE)[13][56]
Image
1 Chausath Yogini Hinduism Devi, 64 Yoginis 885  
2 Lalguan Mahadev Hinduism Shiva 900  
3 Brahma Temple Hinduism Shiva 925  
4 Lakshmana Hinduism Vaikuntha Vishnu 939  
5 Varaha Hinduism Varaha 950  
6 Parshvanatha Jainism Parshvanatha 954  
7 Ghantai Jainism Adinatha 960  
8 Mahishasuramardini Hinduism Parvati 995
9 Vishvanatha Hinduism Shiva 999  
10 Matangeshwar Hinduism Shiva 1000  
11 Vishnu-Garuda Hinduism Vishnu 1000
12 Beejamandal Temple ruins Hinduism Shiva 1000
13 Ganesha Hinduism Shiva 1000
14 Jagadambi Hinduism Devi Jagadambi 1023  
15 Chitragupta Hinduism Chitragupta 1023  
16 Adinath Temple Jainism Adinatha 1027  
17 Shantinatha temple Jainism Shantinatha 1027  
18 Kandariya Mahadeva (the largest temple) Hinduism Shiva 1029  
19 Vamana Hinduism Vamana 1062  
20 Javeri Hinduism Shiva 1090  
21 Chaturbhuja Hinduism Vishnu 1110  
22 Duladeo (Duladeva) Hinduism Shiva 1125  

Arts and sculpture edit

 
 
 
Khajuraho temples are famous for their erotic arts. These constitute about 10% of total art displayed at the monuments.
 
Erotic sculptures
 
Erotic depiction of two men

The Khajuraho temples feature a variety of artwork, of which 10% is sexual or erotic art outside and inside the temples. Some of the temples that have two layers of walls have small erotic carvings on the outside of the inner wall. Some scholars suggest these to be tantric sexual practices.[57] Other scholars state that the erotic arts are part of the Hindu tradition of treating kama as an essential and proper part of human life, and its symbolic or explicit display is common in Hindu temples.[4][58] James McConnachie, in his history of the Kamasutra, describes the sexual-themed Khajuraho sculptures as "the apogee of erotic art":

Twisting, broad-hipped and high breasted nymphs display their generously contoured and bejewelled bodies on exquisitely worked exterior wall panels. These fleshy apsaras run riot across the surface of the stone, putting on make-up, washing their hair, playing games, dancing, and endlessly knotting and unknotting their girdles. ... Beside the heavenly nymphs are serried ranks of griffins, guardian deities and, most notoriously, extravagantly interlocked maithunas, or lovemaking couples.

 
 
Over 90% of the artwork at the temple is about daily life and symbolic values in ancient Indian culture.

The temples have several thousand statues and artworks, with Kandarya Mahadeva Temple alone decorated with over 870. Some 10% of these iconographic carvings contain sexual themes and various sexual poses. A common misconception is that, since the old structures with carvings in Khajuraho are temples, the carvings depict sex between deities;[59] however, the kama arts represent diverse sexual expressions of different human beings.[60] The vast majority of arts depict various aspects the everyday life, mythical stories as well as symbolic display of various secular and spiritual values important in Hindu tradition.[3][4] For example, depictions show women putting on makeup, musicians making music, potters, farmers, and other folks in their daily life during the medieval era.[61] These scenes are in the outer padas as is typical in Hindu temples.

There is iconographic symbolism embedded in the arts displayed in Khajuraho temples.[4] Core Hindu values are expressed in multitude of ways. Even the Kama scenes, when seen in combination of sculptures that precede and follow, depict the spiritual themes such as moksha. In the words of Stella Kramrisch,

This state which is "like a man and woman in close embrace" is a symbol of moksa, final release or reunion of two principles, the essence (Purusha) and nature (Prakriti).

— Stella Kramrisch, 1976[30]

The Khajuraho temples represent one expression of many forms of arts that flourished in Rajput kingdoms of India from 8th through 10th century CE. For example, contemporary with Khajuraho were the publications of poems and drama such as Prabodhacandrodaya, Karpuramanjari, Viddhasalabhanjika and Kavyamimansa.[62] Some of the themes expressed in these literary works are carved as sculpture in Khajuraho temples.[11][63] Some sculptures at the Khajuraho monuments dedicated to Vishnu include the Vyalas, which are hybrid imaginary animals with lions' bodies, and are found in other Indian temples.[64] Some of these hybrid mythical artwork include Vrik Vyala (hybrid of wolf and lion) and Gaja Vyala (hybrid of elephant and lion). These Vyalas may represent syncretic, creative combination of powers innate in the two.[65]

Tourism and cultural events edit

 
Temples layout map – Khajuraho Group of Monuments.

The temples in Khajuraho are broadly divided into three parts: the Eastern group, the Southern Group and the Western group of temples of which the Western group alone has the facility of an audio-guided tour wherein the tourists are guided through the seven-eight temples. There is also an audio guided tour developed by the Archaeological Survey of India which includes a narration of the temple history and architecture.[66]

The Khajuraho Dance Festival is held every year in February.[67] It features various classical Indian dances set against the backdrop of the Chitragupta or Vishwanath Temples.

The Khajuraho temple complex offers a son et lumière (sound and light) show every evening. The first show is in English language and the second, in Hindi. It is held in the open lawns in the temple complex, and has received mixed reviews.[citation needed]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Philip Wilkinson (2008), India: People, Place, Culture and History, ISBN 978-1405329040, pp 352-353
  2. ^ Gopal, Madan (1990). K.S. Gautam (ed.). India through the ages. Publication Division, Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Government of India. p. 179.
  3. ^ a b c d "Khajuraho Group of Monuments". UNESCO World Heritage Centre. United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization. Retrieved 25 June 2023.
  4. ^ a b c d Devangana Desai (2005), Khajuraho, Oxford University Press, Sixth Print, ISBN 978-0-19-565643-5
  5. ^ Slaczka, Anna. “Temples, Inscriptions and Misconceptions: Charles-Louis Fábri and the Khajuraho ‘Apsaras.’” The Rijksmuseum Bulletin 60, no. 3 (2012): 212–33. See p. 217.
  6. ^ Frontline, Volume 24, Issues 6-12. S. Rangarajan for Kasturi & Sons. 2007. p. 93.
  7. ^ a b c James Fergusson, Northern or Indo-Aryan Style - Khajuraho History of Indian and Eastern Architecture, Updated by James Burgess and R. Phene Spiers (1910), Volume II, John Murray, London
  8. ^ . 18 April 2015. Archived from the original on 19 April 2015.
  9. ^ kharjUra Sanskrit English Dictionary, Koeln University, Germany
  10. ^ vAhaka Sanskrit English Dictionary, Koeln University, Germany
  11. ^ a b c Devangana Desai (1996), Chapter 7 - Puns and Enigmatic Language in Sculpture 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine in The Religious Imagery of Khajuraho, Project for Indian Cultural Studies, Columbia University Archives
  12. ^ a b Krishna Deva (1990), Temples of Khajuraho, 2 Volumes, Archaeological Survey of India, New Delhi
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Rana Singh (2007), Landscape of sacred territory of Khajuraho, in City Society and Planning (Editors: Thakur, Pomeroy, et al), Volume 2, ISBN 978-8180694585, Chapter 18
  14. ^ . Census Commission of India. Archived from the original on 16 June 2004. Retrieved 1 November 2008.
  15. ^ Khajuraho airport 8 July 2015 at the Wayback Machine AAI, Govt of India
  16. ^ a b c G.S. Ghurye, Rajput Architecture, ISBN 978-8171544462, Reprint Year: 2005, pp 19-24
  17. ^ Sen, Sailendra (2013). A Textbook of Medieval Indian History. Primus Books. ISBN 9789380607344.
  18. ^ Devangana Desai 2005, p. 10.
  19. ^ also called Erakana
  20. ^ a b Mitra (1977), The early rulers of Khajuraho, ISBN 978-8120819979
  21. ^ Hioco, Christophe; Poggi, Luca (2017). Khajuraho: Indian Temples and Sensuous Sculptures. 5 Continents Editions. p. 9. ISBN 978-88-7439-778-5.
  22. ^ J. Banerjea (1960), Khajuraho, Journal of the Asiatic Society, Vol. 2-3, pp 43-47
  23. ^ phonetically translated from Arabic sometimes as "Kajwara"
  24. ^ Director General of Archaeology in India (1959), Archaeological Survey of India, Ancient India, Issues 15-19, pp 45-46 (Archived: University of Michigan)
  25. ^ Arthur Cotterell (2011), Asia: A Concise History, Wiley, ISBN 978-0470825044, pp 184-185
  26. ^ Michael D. Willis, An Introduction to the Historical Geography of Gopakṣetra, Daśārṇa, and Jejākadeśa, Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, Vol. 51, No. 2 (1988), pp. 271-278; See also K.R. Qanungo (1965), Sher Shah and his times, Orient Longmans, OCLC 175212, pp 423-427
  27. ^ Trudy King et al., Asia and Oceania: International Dictionary of Historic Places, ISBN 978-1884964046, Routledge, pp 468-470
  28. ^ Alain Daniélou (2011), A Brief History of India, ISBN 978-1594770296, pp 221-227
  29. ^ Louise Nicholson (2007), India, National Geographic Society, ISBN 978-1426201448, see Chapter on Khajuraho
  30. ^ a b c d e f Stella Kramrisch, The Hindu Temple, Vol 1, Motilal Banarsidass, ISBN 978-81-208-0222-3
  31. ^ Ibn Battuta in his 1335 CE memoirs on Delhi Sultanate mentioned the temples to be near a mile-long lake, modern water bodies are much smaller and separate lagoons; Director General of Archaeology in India (1959), Archaeological Survey of India, Ancient India, Issues 15-19, pp 45-46 (Archived: University of Michigan)
  32. ^ The number 64 is considered sacred in Hindu temple design and very common design basis; it is symbolic as it is both a square of 8 and a cube of 4.
  33. ^ a b c Shobita Punja (1992), Divine Ecstasy - The Story of Khajuraho, Viking, New Delhi, ISBN 978-0670840274
  34. ^ Brahma temple is 19 feet square; Kandariya Mahadev has a four fused square grid; Matangeshvara temple is a 64 grid square; etc. See G.S. Ghurye, Rajput Architecture, ISBN 978-8171544462, Reprint Year: 2005, pp 19-25; and V.A. Smith (1879), "Observations on some Chandel Antiquities", Asiatic Society of Bengal, Vol. 48, Part 1, pp 291-297
  35. ^ D Desai (1996), The religious imagery of Khajuraho, Project for Indian Cultural Studies, ISBN 978-8190018418
  36. ^ Desai states that Khajuraho and Orissa Hindu temples are distinctive in giving erotic kama images the same weight as others and by assigning important architectural position; in contrast, surviving sculpture from temples of Gujarat, Maharashtra, and Mysore show that their kama and sexual images were assigned to insignificant parts of the temple; Meister suggests that this aspect of eroticism in temple design and equal weight reflects evolution of design ideas among Hindu artisans, with temples built in later medieval centuries placing equal weight and balance to kama; see Meister, Michael (1979). "Juncture and Conjunction: Punning and Temple Architecture". Artibus Asiae. 41 (2–3): 226–234. doi:10.2307/3249517. JSTOR 3249517.
  37. ^ Edmund Leach, The Harvey Lecture Series. The Gatekeepers of Heaven: Anthropological Aspects of Grandiose Architecture, Journal of Anthropological Research, Vol. 39, No. 3 (Autumn, 1983), pp 243-264
  38. ^ Bettina Bäumer, A review, Artibus Asiae, Vol. 59, No. 1/2 (1999), pp. 138-140
  39. ^ Cunningham, Alexander (1880). Report of Tours in Bundelkhand and Malwa in 1874-75 and 1876-77. 8 Hastings Street, Calcutta: Office of the Superintendent of Government Printing. p. 22. Retrieved 8 May 2017.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  40. ^ James Fergusson, Jaina Architecture - Khajuraho History of Indian and Eastern Architecture, Updated by James Burgess and R. Phene Spiers (1910), Volume II, John Murray, London
  41. ^ a b Meister, Michael W. (April–June 1979). "Maṇḍala and Practice in Nāgara Architecture in North India". Journal of the American Oriental Society. 99 (2): 204–219. doi:10.2307/602657. JSTOR 602657.
  42. ^ a b Meister, Michael (1983). "Geometry and Measure in Indian Temple Plans: Rectangular Temples". Artibus Asiae. 44 (4): 266–296. doi:10.2307/3249613. JSTOR 3249613.
  43. ^ a b c Susan Lewandowski, The Hindu Temple in South India, in Buildings and Society: Essays on the Social Development of the Built Environment, Anthony D. King (Editor), ISBN 978-0710202345, Routledge, pp 68-69
  44. ^ Stella Kramrisch (1976), The Hindu Temple Volume 1, ISBN 81-208-0223-3
  45. ^ Meister, Michael W. (March 2006). "Mountain Temples and Temple-Mountains: Masrur". Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians. 65 (1): 26–49. doi:10.2307/25068237. JSTOR 25068237.
  46. ^ Meister, Michael W. (Autumn 1986). "On the Development of a Morphology for a Symbolic Architecture: India". RES: Anthropology and Aesthetics. 12 (12). Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology: 33–50. doi:10.1086/RESv12n1ms20166752. JSTOR 20166752. S2CID 132490349.
  47. ^ Devangana Desai, Khajuraho, Oxford University Press Paperback (Sixth impression 2005) ISBN 978-0-19-565643-5
  48. ^ Rian et al (2007), Fractal geometry as the synthesis of Hindu cosmology in Kandariya Mahadev Temple, Khajuraho, Building and Environment, Vol 42, Issue 12, pp 4093-4107, doi:10.1016/j.buildenv.2007.01.028
  49. ^ Trivedi, K. (1989). Hindu temples: models of a fractal universe. The Visual Computer, 5(4), 243-258
  50. ^ Susan Lewandowski, The Hindu Temple in South India, in Buildings and Society: Essays on the Social Development of the Built Environment, Anthony D. King (Editor), ISBN 978-0710202345, Routledge, Chapter 4
  51. ^ V.A. Smith, "Observations on some Chandel Antiquities", Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal, Volume 48, pp 290-291
  52. ^ "Lost Worlds of the Kama Sutra" History channel
  53. ^ "Lost Worlds of the Kama Sutra," History Channel
  54. ^ Lehner, Mark (1997) The Complete Pyramids, London: Thames and Hudson. ISBN 0-500-05084-8. pp. 202–225
  55. ^ Will Durant (1976), Our Oriental Heritage: The Story of Civilization, ISBN 978-0671548001, Simon & Schuster
  56. ^ From inscription or estimated from other evidence
  57. ^ Rabe (2000), Secret Yantras and Erotic Display for Hindu Temples, Tantra in Practice (Editor: David White), ISBN 978-8120817784, Chapter 25, pp 434-446
  58. ^ See:
    • Heather Elgood (2000), Hinduism and the Religious Arts, ISBN 978-0304707393, Bloomsbury;
    • Stella Kramrisch, The Hindu Temple, Volume 1, ISBN 81-208-0223-3, pp 92-96;
    • Alain Danielou (2001), The Hindu Temple: Deification of Eroticism, ISBN 978-0892818549, pp 101-119
  59. ^ "Khajuraho". Liveindia.com. Retrieved 14 July 2014.
  60. ^ Alain Danielou (2001), The Hindu Temple: Deification of Eroticism, ISBN 978-0892818549
  61. ^ George Michell, The Hindu Temple: An Introduction to Its Meaning and Forms, University of Chicago Press, ISBN 978-0226532301, pp 117-123 and pp 56–58
  62. ^ L. H. Gray, Journal of American Society, Vol. 27
  63. ^ H. W. Woodward (1989), "The Lakṣmaṇa Temple, Khajuraho, and Its Meanings", Ars Orientalis, Vol. 19, pp. 27–48
  64. ^ Smith, David (1 January 2013). "Monstrous Animals on Hindu Temples, with Special Reference to Khajuraho". Religions of South Asia. 7 (1–3): 27–43. doi:10.1558/rosa.v7i1-3.27.
  65. ^ Hiram W. Woodward, Jr., "The Lakṣmaṇa Temple, Khajuraho, and Its Meanings", Ars Orientalis, Vol. 19, (1989), pp. 27–48
  66. ^ Tourists to Khajuraho will now have an audio compass The Times of India (25 August 2011)
  67. ^ . Archived from the original on 8 September 2021. Retrieved 17 August 2014.

Further reading edit

  • Project Love Temple (Machines, Myths, and Miracles): a sci-fi book based on Temples of Khajuraho
  • M.R. Anand and Stella Kramrisch, Homage to Khajuraho, OCLC 562891704
  • Alain Daniélou, The Hindu Temple: Deification of Eroticism, ISBN 978-0892818549
  • Prasenjit Dasgupta, Khajuraho, Patralekha, Kolkata, 2014
  • Devangana Desai, The Religious Imagery of Khajuraho, Franco-Indian Research P. Ltd. (1996) ISBN 81-900184-1-8
  • Devangana Desai (2005). Khajuraho (Sixth impression ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-565391-5.
  • Phani Kant Mishra, Khajuraho: With Latest Discoveries, Sundeep Prakashan (2001) ISBN 81-7574-101-5
  • L. A. Narain, Khajuraho: Temples of Ecstasy. New Delhi: Lustre Press (1986)

External links edit

  Khajuraho travel guide from Wikivoyage

  • Khajuraho Group of Monuments UNESCO
  • Archaeological Survey of India, Bhopal Division
  • R. Nath Mughal Architecture Image Collection, Images of Khajuraho - University of Washington Digital Collection
  • Chatr ko putr Chitragupta temple at Khujraho in 1882
  • Project Love Temple : a sci-fi book based on Temples of Khajuraho

khajuraho, group, monuments, group, hindu, jain, temples, chhatarpur, district, madhya, pradesh, india, they, about, kilometres, southeast, jhansi, kilometres, from, khajwa, kilometres, from, rajnagar, kilometres, from, district, headquarter, chhatarpur, templ. The Khajuraho Group of Monuments are a group of Hindu and Jain temples in Chhatarpur district Madhya Pradesh India They are about 175 kilometres 109 mi southeast of Jhansi 10 kilometres 6 2 mi from Khajwa 9 kilometres 5 6 mi from Rajnagar and 49 kilometres 30 mi from district headquarter Chhatarpur The temples are famous for their Nagara style architectural symbolism and a few erotic sculptures 1 Khajuraho Group of MonumentsUNESCO World Heritage SiteLocationChhatarpur Madhya Pradesh IndiaCriteriaCultural i iiiReference240Inscription1986 10th Session Coordinates24 51 16 N 79 55 17 E 24 854422 N 79 921427 E 24 854422 79 921427Location in Madhya Pradesh state of IndiaShow map of IndiaKhajuraho Group of Monuments Madhya Pradesh Show map of Madhya Pradesh Most Khajuraho temples were built between 885 CE and 1000 CE by the Chandela dynasty 2 3 Historical records note that the Khajuraho temple site had 85 temples by the 12th century spread over 20 square kilometres 7 7 sq mi Of these only about 25 temples have survived spread over six square kilometres 2 3 sq mi 3 Of the surviving temples the Kandariya Mahadeva Temple is decorated with a profusion of sculptures with intricate details symbolism and expressiveness of ancient Indian art 4 The temple complex was forgotten and overgrown by the jungle until 1838 when Captain T S Burt a British engineer visited the complex and reported his findings in the Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal 5 When these monuments were built the boys in the place lived in hermitages by being brahmacharyas bachelors until they attained manhood and these sculptures helped them to learn about the worldly role of householder 6 The Khajuraho group of temples were built together but were dedicated to two religions Hinduism and Jainism suggesting a tradition of acceptance and respect for diverse religious views among Hindus and Jains in the region 7 Because of their outstanding architecture diversity of temple forms and testimony to the Chandela civilization the monuments at Khajuraho were inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List in 1986 8 3 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Location 3 History 4 Description 4 1 Jain temples 4 2 Architecture of the temples 5 Construction 6 Chronology 7 Arts and sculpture 8 Tourism and cultural events 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksEtymology editThe name Khajuraho or Kharjuravahaka is derived from ancient Sanskrit kharjura खर ज र means date palm 9 and vahaka व हक means one who carries or bearer 10 Local legends state that the temples had two golden date palm trees as their gate missing when they were rediscovered Desai states that Kharjuravahaka also means scorpion bearer which is another symbolic name for deity Shiva who wears snakes and scorpion garlands in his fierce form 11 Cunningham s nomenclature and systematic documentation work in 1850s and 1860s have been widely adopted and continue to be in use 12 He grouped the temples into the Western group around Lakshmana Eastern group around Javeri and Southern group around Duladeva 13 Location editThe Khajuraho monuments are located in the Indian state of Madhya Pradesh in Chatarpur district about 620 kilometres 385 mi southeast of New Delhi The temples are located near a small town also known as Khajuraho 14 with a population of about 24 481 people 2011 Census Khajuraho is served by Civil Aerodrome Khajuraho IATA Code HJR with services to Delhi Agra Varanasi and Mumbai 15 The site is also linked by the Indian Railways service with the railway station located approximately six kilometres from the entrance to the monuments The monuments are about ten kilometres off the east west National Highway 75 and about 50 kilometres from the city of Chhatarpur which is connected to the state capital Bhopal by the SW NE running National Highway 86 The 10th century Bhand Deva Temple in Rajasthan was built in the style of the Khajuraho monuments and is often referred to as Little Khajuraho History editThe Khajuraho group of monuments was built during the rule of the Chandela dynasty The building activity started almost immediately after the rise of their power throughout their kingdom to be later known as Bundelkhand 16 Most temples were built during the reigns of the Hindu kings Yashovarman and Dhanga Yashovarman s legacy is best exhibited by the Lakshmana Temple Vishvanatha temple best highlights King Dhanga s reign 17 22 The largest and currently most famous surviving temple is Kandariya Mahadeva built in the reign of King Vidyadhara 18 The temple inscriptions suggest many of the currently surviving temples were complete between 970 and 1030 AD with further temples completed during the following decades 7 The Khajuraho temples were built about 35 miles from the medieval city of Mahoba 19 the capital of the Chandela dynasty in the Kalinjar region In ancient and medieval literature their kingdom has been referred to as Jijhoti Jejahoti Chih chi to and Jejakabhukti 20 The first documented mention of Khajuraho was made in 641 by Xuanzang a Chinese pilgrim who described encountering several dozen inactive Buddhist monasteries and a dozen Hindu temples with a thousand worshipping brahmins 21 In 1022 CE Khajuraho was mentioned by Abu Rihan al Biruni the Persian historian who accompanied Mahmud of Ghazni in his raid of Kalinjar he mentions Khajuraho as the capital of Jajahuti 22 The raid was unsuccessful and a peace accord was reached when the Hindu king agreed to pay a ransom to Mahmud of Ghazni to end the attack and leave 20 Khajuraho temples were in active use through the end of the 12th century This changed in the 13th century after the army of Delhi Sultanate under the command of the Muslim Sultan Qutb ud din Aibak attacked and seized the Chandela kingdom About a century later Ibn Battuta the Moroccan traveller in his memoirs about his stay in India from 1335 to 1342 AD mentioned visiting Khajuraho temples calling them Kajarra 23 24 as follows nbsp Until the 12th century Khajuraho was under Hindu kings and featured 85 temples Central India was seized by Delhi Sultanate in the 13th century Under Muslim rule many temples were destroyed and the rest left in neglect Ruins of some old temples Ghantai temple above are still visible near Khajuraho temples which contain idols that have been mutilated by the Moslems live a number of yogis whose matted locks have grown as long as their bodies And on account of extreme asceticism they are all yellow in colour Many Moslems attend these men in order to take lessons yoga from them Ibn Battuta about 1335 CE Riḥlat Ibn Baṭuṭah Translated by Arthur Cotterell 25 The central Indian region where Khajuraho temples are was controlled by various Muslim dynasties from the 13th century through the 18th century In this period some temples were desecrated followed by a long period when they were left in neglect 7 16 In 1495 CE for example Sikandar Lodi s campaign of temple destruction included Khajuraho 26 The remoteness and isolation of Khajuraho protected the Hindu and Jain temples from continued destruction by Muslims 27 28 Over the centuries vegetation and forests overgrew the temples In the 1830s local Hindus guided a British surveyor T S Burt to the temples and they were thus rediscovered by the global audience 29 Alexander Cunningham later reported few years after the rediscovery that the temples were secretly in use by yogis and thousands of Hindus would arrive for pilgrimage during Shivaratri celebrated annually in February or March based on a lunar calendar In 1852 F C Maisey prepared earliest drawings of the Khajuraho temples 12 Description edit nbsp Sections and orientation of Khajuraho temples The temple site is within Vindhya mountain range in central India An ancient local legend held that Hindu deity Shiva and other gods enjoyed visiting the dramatic hill formation in Kalinjar area 13 The center of this region is Khajuraho set midst local hills and rivers The temple complex reflects the ancient Hindu tradition of building temples where gods love to pray 13 30 The temples are clustered near water another typical feature of Hindu temples The current water bodies include Sib Sagar Khajur Sagar also called Ninora Tal and Khudar Nadi river 31 Local legends state that the temple complex had 64 water bodies of which 56 have been physically identified by archeologists so far 13 32 All temples except 13 one Chaturbhuja face the sunrise another symbolic feature that is predominant in Hindu temples The relative layout of temples integrate masculine and feminine deities and symbols highlight the interdependence 33 The artworks symbolically highlight the four goals of life considered necessary and proper in Hinduism dharma kama artha and moksha Of the surviving temples six are dedicated to Shiva eight to Vishnu and his affinities one to Ganesha one to Sun god three to Jain Tirthankars 13 For some ruins there is insufficient evidence to assign the temple to specific deities with confidence An overall examination of site suggests that the Hindu symbolic mandala design principle of square and circles is present each temple plan and design 34 Further the territory is laid out in three triangles that converge to form a pentagon Scholars suggest that this reflects the Hindu symbolism for three realms or trilokinatha and five cosmic substances or panchbhuteshvara 13 The temple site highlights Shiva the one who destroys and recycles life thereby controlling the cosmic dance of time evolution and dissolution 33 The temples have a rich display of intricately carved statues While they are famous for their erotic sculpture sexual themes cover less than 10 of the temple sculpture 35 Further most erotic scene panels are neither prominent nor emphasized at the expense of the rest rather they are in proportional balance with the non sexual images 36 The viewer has to look closely to find them or be directed by a guide 37 The arts cover numerous aspects of human life and values considered important in the Hindu pantheon Further the images are arranged in a configuration to express central ideas of Hinduism All three ideas from Agamas are richly expressed in Khajuraho temples Avyakta Vyaktavyakta and Vyakta 38 The Beejamandal temple is under excavation It has been identified with the Vaidyanath temple mentioned in the Grahpati Kokalla inscription 39 Of all temples the Matangeshvara temple remains an active site of worship 33 It is another square grid temple with a large 2 5 metres 8 2 ft high and 1 1 metres 3 6 ft diameter lingam placed on a 7 6 metres 25 ft diameter platform 13 The most visited temple Kandariya Mahadev has an area of about 6 500 square feet and a shikhara spire that rises 116 feet 16 13 Jain temples edit Main article Jain temples of Khajuraho The Jain temples are located on east southeast region of Khajuraho monuments 40 Chausath yogini temple features 64 yogini while Ghantai temple features bells sculptured on its pillars Architecture of the temples edit nbsp The layout plan of Kandariya Mahadeva Temple It uses the 64 pada grid design Smaller Khajuraho temples use the 9 16 36 or 49 grid mandala plan 41 Khajuraho temples almost all Hindu temple designs follow a grid geometrical design called vastu purusha mandala 42 This design plan has three important components Mandala means circle Purusha is universal essence at the core of Hindu tradition while Vastu means the dwelling structure 43 The design lays out a Hindu temple in a symmetrical concentrically layered self repeating structure around the core of the temple called garbhagriya where the abstract principle Purusha and the primary deity of the temple dwell The shikhara or spire of the temple rises above the garbhagriya This symmetry and structure in design is derived from central beliefs myths cardinality and mathematical principles 44 The circle of mandala circumscribe the square The square is considered divine for its perfection and as a symbolic product of knowledge and human thought while circle is considered earthly human and observed in everyday life moon sun horizon water drop rainbow Each supports the other 30 The square is divided into perfect 64 sub squares called padas 42 Most Khajuraho temples deploy the 8x8 64 padas grid Manduka Vastupurushamandala with pitha mandala the square grid incorporated in the design of the spires 41 The primary deity or lingas are located in the grid s Brahma padas nbsp nbsp Khajuraho temples use the 8 8 64 Vastupurusamandala Manduka grid layout plan left found in Hindu temples Above the temple s brahma padas is a Shikhara Vimana or Spire that rises symmetrically above the central core typically in a circles and turning squares concentric layering design right that flows from one to the other as it rises towards the sky 30 45 The architecture is symbolic and reflects the central Hindu beliefs through its form structure and arrangement of its parts 46 The mandapas as well as the arts are arranged in the Khajuraho temples in a symmetric repeating patterns even though each image or sculpture is distinctive in its own way The relative placement of the images are not random but together they express ideas just like connected words form sentences and paragraphs to compose ideas 47 This fractal pattern that is common in Hindu temples 48 Various statues and panels have inscriptions Many of the inscriptions on the temple walls are poems with double meanings something that the complex structure of Sanskrit allows in creative compositions 11 All Khajuraho temples except one face sunrise and the entrance for the devotee is this east side nbsp nbsp An illustration of Khajuraho temple Spires Shikhara Vimana built using concentric circle and rotating squares principle Four spires left are shown above while the inside view of one Shikara ceiling right shows the symmetric layout Above the vastu purusha mandala of each temple is a superstructure with a dome called Shikhara or Vimana Spire 43 Variations in spire design come from variation in degrees turned for the squares The temple Shikhara in some literature is linked to mount Kailash or Meru the mythical abode of the gods 30 In each temple the central space typically is surrounded by an ambulatory for the pilgrim to walk around and ritually circumambulate the Purusa and the main deity 30 The pillars walls and ceilings around the space as well as outside have highly ornate carvings or images of the four just and necessary pursuits of life kama artha dharma and moksa This clockwise walk around is called pradakshina 43 Larger Khajuraho temples also have pillared halls called mandapa One near the entrance on the east side serves as the waiting room for pilgrims and devotees The mandapas are also arranged by principles of symmetry grids and mathematical precision This use of same underlying architectural principle is common in Hindu temples found all over India 49 Each Khajuraho temple is distinctly carved yet also repeating the central common principles in almost all Hindu temples one which Susan Lewandowski refers to as an organism of repeating cells 50 Construction editThe temples are grouped into three geographical divisions western eastern and southern The Khajuraho temples are made of sandstone with a granite foundation that is almost concealed from view 51 The builders didn t use mortar the stones were put together with mortise and tenon joints and they were held in place by gravity This form of construction requires very precise joints The columns and architraves were built with megaliths that weighed up to 20 tons 52 Some repair work in the 19th Century was done with brick and mortar however these have aged faster than original materials and darkened with time thereby seeming out of place The Khajuraho and Kalinjar region is home to superior quality of sandstone which can be carved precisely The surviving sculpture reflect fine details such as strands of hair manicured nails and intricate jewelry While recording the television show Lost Worlds History Channel at Khajuraho Alex Evans recreated a stone sculpture under four feet that took about 60 days to carve in an attempt to develop a rough idea of how much work must have been involved 53 Roger Hopkins and Mark Lehner also conducted experiments to quarry limestone which took 12 quarrymen 22 days to quarry about 400 tons of stone 54 They concluded that these temples would have required hundreds of highly trained sculptors nbsp Western side Chronology editThe Khajuraho group of temples belong to Vaishnavism school of Hinduism Saivism school of Hinduism and Jainism nearly a third each Archaeological studies suggest all three types of temples were under construction at about the same time in the late 10th century and in use simultaneously Will Durant states that this aspect of Khajuraho temples illustrates the tolerance and respect for different religious viewpoints in the Hindu and Jain traditions 55 In each group of Khajuraho temples there were major temples surrounded by smaller temples a grid style that is observed to varying degrees in Hindu temples in Angkor Wat Parambaran and South India The largest surviving Shiva temple is Khandarya Mahadeva while the largest surviving Vaishnava group includes Chaturbhuja and Ramachandra Kandariya Mahadeva Temple plan is 109 ft in length by 60 ft and rises 116 ft above ground and 88 ft above its own floor The central padas are surrounded by three rows of sculptured figures with over 870 statues most being half life size 2 5 to 3 feet The spire is a self repeating fractal structure Temples religious affiliations and consecration years Sequence Modern temple name Religion Deity Completed by CE 13 56 Image 1 Chausath Yogini Hinduism Devi 64 Yoginis 885 nbsp 2 Lalguan Mahadev Hinduism Shiva 900 nbsp 3 Brahma Temple Hinduism Shiva 925 nbsp 4 Lakshmana Hinduism Vaikuntha Vishnu 939 nbsp 5 Varaha Hinduism Varaha 950 nbsp 6 Parshvanatha Jainism Parshvanatha 954 nbsp 7 Ghantai Jainism Adinatha 960 nbsp 8 Mahishasuramardini Hinduism Parvati 995 9 Vishvanatha Hinduism Shiva 999 nbsp 10 Matangeshwar Hinduism Shiva 1000 nbsp 11 Vishnu Garuda Hinduism Vishnu 1000 12 Beejamandal Temple ruins Hinduism Shiva 1000 13 Ganesha Hinduism Shiva 1000 14 Jagadambi Hinduism Devi Jagadambi 1023 nbsp 15 Chitragupta Hinduism Chitragupta 1023 nbsp 16 Adinath Temple Jainism Adinatha 1027 nbsp 17 Shantinatha temple Jainism Shantinatha 1027 nbsp 18 Kandariya Mahadeva the largest temple Hinduism Shiva 1029 nbsp 19 Vamana Hinduism Vamana 1062 nbsp 20 Javeri Hinduism Shiva 1090 nbsp 21 Chaturbhuja Hinduism Vishnu 1110 nbsp 22 Duladeo Duladeva Hinduism Shiva 1125 nbsp Arts and sculpture edit nbsp nbsp nbsp Khajuraho temples are famous for their erotic arts These constitute about 10 of total art displayed at the monuments nbsp Erotic sculptures nbsp Erotic depiction of two men The Khajuraho temples feature a variety of artwork of which 10 is sexual or erotic art outside and inside the temples Some of the temples that have two layers of walls have small erotic carvings on the outside of the inner wall Some scholars suggest these to be tantric sexual practices 57 Other scholars state that the erotic arts are part of the Hindu tradition of treating kama as an essential and proper part of human life and its symbolic or explicit display is common in Hindu temples 4 58 James McConnachie in his history of the Kamasutra describes the sexual themed Khajuraho sculptures as the apogee of erotic art Twisting broad hipped and high breasted nymphs display their generously contoured and bejewelled bodies on exquisitely worked exterior wall panels These fleshy apsaras run riot across the surface of the stone putting on make up washing their hair playing games dancing and endlessly knotting and unknotting their girdles Beside the heavenly nymphs are serried ranks of griffins guardian deities and most notoriously extravagantly interlocked maithunas or lovemaking couples nbsp nbsp Over 90 of the artwork at the temple is about daily life and symbolic values in ancient Indian culture The temples have several thousand statues and artworks with Kandarya Mahadeva Temple alone decorated with over 870 Some 10 of these iconographic carvings contain sexual themes and various sexual poses A common misconception is that since the old structures with carvings in Khajuraho are temples the carvings depict sex between deities 59 however the kama arts represent diverse sexual expressions of different human beings 60 The vast majority of arts depict various aspects the everyday life mythical stories as well as symbolic display of various secular and spiritual values important in Hindu tradition 3 4 For example depictions show women putting on makeup musicians making music potters farmers and other folks in their daily life during the medieval era 61 These scenes are in the outer padas as is typical in Hindu temples There is iconographic symbolism embedded in the arts displayed in Khajuraho temples 4 Core Hindu values are expressed in multitude of ways Even the Kama scenes when seen in combination of sculptures that precede and follow depict the spiritual themes such as moksha In the words of Stella Kramrisch This state which is like a man and woman in close embrace is a symbol of moksa final release or reunion of two principles the essence Purusha and nature Prakriti Stella Kramrisch 1976 30 The Khajuraho temples represent one expression of many forms of arts that flourished in Rajput kingdoms of India from 8th through 10th century CE For example contemporary with Khajuraho were the publications of poems and drama such as Prabodhacandrodaya Karpuramanjari Viddhasalabhanjika and Kavyamimansa 62 Some of the themes expressed in these literary works are carved as sculpture in Khajuraho temples 11 63 Some sculptures at the Khajuraho monuments dedicated to Vishnu include the Vyalas which are hybrid imaginary animals with lions bodies and are found in other Indian temples 64 Some of these hybrid mythical artwork include Vrik Vyala hybrid of wolf and lion and Gaja Vyala hybrid of elephant and lion These Vyalas may represent syncretic creative combination of powers innate in the two 65 Tourism and cultural events edit nbsp Temples layout map Khajuraho Group of Monuments The temples in Khajuraho are broadly divided into three parts the Eastern group the Southern Group and the Western group of temples of which the Western group alone has the facility of an audio guided tour wherein the tourists are guided through the seven eight temples There is also an audio guided tour developed by the Archaeological Survey of India which includes a narration of the temple history and architecture 66 The Khajuraho Dance Festival is held every year in February 67 It features various classical Indian dances set against the backdrop of the Chitragupta or Vishwanath Temples The Khajuraho temple complex offers a son et lumiere sound and light show every evening The first show is in English language and the second in Hindi It is held in the open lawns in the temple complex and has received mixed reviews citation needed See also editList of megalithic sites Jain temples of Khajuraho Ajanta Caves Bhand Deva Temple called the Little Khajuraho due to similar architecture Badami Chalukya architecture Western Chalukya architecture Hindu temple Madan Kamdev Hemvati Kama Sutra Kamashastra nbsp Khajuraho travel guide from WikivoyageReferences edit Philip Wilkinson 2008 India People Place Culture and History ISBN 978 1405329040 pp 352 353 Gopal Madan 1990 K S Gautam ed India through the ages Publication Division Ministry of Information and Broadcasting Government of India p 179 a b c d Khajuraho Group of Monuments UNESCO World Heritage Centre United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization Retrieved 25 June 2023 a b c d Devangana Desai 2005 Khajuraho Oxford University Press Sixth Print ISBN 978 0 19 565643 5 Slaczka Anna Temples Inscriptions and Misconceptions Charles Louis Fabri and the Khajuraho Apsaras The Rijksmuseum Bulletin 60 no 3 2012 212 33 See p 217 Frontline Volume 24 Issues 6 12 S Rangarajan for Kasturi amp Sons 2007 p 93 a b c James Fergusson Northern or Indo Aryan Style Khajuraho History of Indian and Eastern Architecture Updated by James Burgess and R Phene Spiers 1910 Volume II John Murray London World Heritage Day Five must visit sites in India 18 April 2015 Archived from the original on 19 April 2015 kharjUra Sanskrit English Dictionary Koeln University Germany vAhaka Sanskrit English Dictionary Koeln University Germany a b c Devangana Desai 1996 Chapter 7 Puns and Enigmatic Language in Sculpture Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine in The Religious Imagery of Khajuraho Project for Indian Cultural Studies Columbia University Archives a b Krishna Deva 1990 Temples of Khajuraho 2 Volumes Archaeological Survey of India New Delhi a b c d e f g h i j Rana Singh 2007 Landscape of sacred territory of Khajuraho in City Society and Planning Editors Thakur Pomeroy et al Volume 2 ISBN 978 8180694585 Chapter 18 Census of India 2001 Data from the 2001 Census including cities villages and towns Provisional Census Commission of India Archived from the original on 16 June 2004 Retrieved 1 November 2008 Khajuraho airport Archived 8 July 2015 at the Wayback Machine AAI Govt of India a b c G S Ghurye Rajput Architecture ISBN 978 8171544462 Reprint Year 2005 pp 19 24 Sen Sailendra 2013 A Textbook of Medieval Indian History Primus Books ISBN 9789380607344 Devangana Desai 2005 p 10 also called Erakana a b Mitra 1977 The early rulers of Khajuraho ISBN 978 8120819979 Hioco Christophe Poggi Luca 2017 Khajuraho Indian Temples and Sensuous Sculptures 5 Continents Editions p 9 ISBN 978 88 7439 778 5 J Banerjea 1960 Khajuraho Journal of the Asiatic Society Vol 2 3 pp 43 47 phonetically translated from Arabic sometimes as Kajwara Director General of Archaeology in India 1959 Archaeological Survey of India Ancient India Issues 15 19 pp 45 46 Archived University of Michigan Arthur Cotterell 2011 Asia A Concise History Wiley ISBN 978 0470825044 pp 184 185 Michael D Willis An Introduction to the Historical Geography of Gopakṣetra Dasarṇa and Jejakadesa Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies University of London Vol 51 No 2 1988 pp 271 278 See also K R Qanungo 1965 Sher Shah and his times Orient Longmans OCLC 175212 pp 423 427 Trudy King et al Asia and Oceania International Dictionary of Historic Places ISBN 978 1884964046 Routledge pp 468 470 Alain Danielou 2011 A Brief History of India ISBN 978 1594770296 pp 221 227 Louise Nicholson 2007 India National Geographic Society ISBN 978 1426201448 see Chapter on Khajuraho a b c d e f Stella Kramrisch The Hindu Temple Vol 1 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 0222 3 Ibn Battuta in his 1335 CE memoirs on Delhi Sultanate mentioned the temples to be near a mile long lake modern water bodies are much smaller and separate lagoons Director General of Archaeology in India 1959 Archaeological Survey of India Ancient India Issues 15 19 pp 45 46 Archived University of Michigan The number 64 is considered sacred in Hindu temple design and very common design basis it is symbolic as it is both a square of 8 and a cube of 4 a b c Shobita Punja 1992 Divine Ecstasy The Story of Khajuraho Viking New Delhi ISBN 978 0670840274 Brahma temple is 19 feet square Kandariya Mahadev has a four fused square grid Matangeshvara temple is a 64 grid square etc See G S Ghurye Rajput Architecture ISBN 978 8171544462 Reprint Year 2005 pp 19 25 and V A Smith 1879 Observations on some Chandel Antiquities Asiatic Society of Bengal Vol 48 Part 1 pp 291 297 D Desai 1996 The religious imagery of Khajuraho Project for Indian Cultural Studies ISBN 978 8190018418 Desai states that Khajuraho and Orissa Hindu temples are distinctive in giving erotic kama images the same weight as others and by assigning important architectural position in contrast surviving sculpture from temples of Gujarat Maharashtra and Mysore show that their kama and sexual images were assigned to insignificant parts of the temple Meister suggests that this aspect of eroticism in temple design and equal weight reflects evolution of design ideas among Hindu artisans with temples built in later medieval centuries placing equal weight and balance to kama see Meister Michael 1979 Juncture and Conjunction Punning and Temple Architecture Artibus Asiae 41 2 3 226 234 doi 10 2307 3249517 JSTOR 3249517 Edmund Leach The Harvey Lecture Series The Gatekeepers of Heaven Anthropological Aspects of Grandiose Architecture Journal of Anthropological Research Vol 39 No 3 Autumn 1983 pp 243 264 Bettina Baumer A review Artibus Asiae Vol 59 No 1 2 1999 pp 138 140 Cunningham Alexander 1880 Report of Tours in Bundelkhand and Malwa in 1874 75 and 1876 77 8 Hastings Street Calcutta Office of the Superintendent of Government Printing p 22 Retrieved 8 May 2017 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link James Fergusson Jaina Architecture Khajuraho History of Indian and Eastern Architecture Updated by James Burgess and R Phene Spiers 1910 Volume II John Murray London a b Meister Michael W April June 1979 Maṇḍala and Practice in Nagara Architecture in North India Journal of the American Oriental Society 99 2 204 219 doi 10 2307 602657 JSTOR 602657 a b Meister Michael 1983 Geometry and Measure in Indian Temple Plans Rectangular Temples Artibus Asiae 44 4 266 296 doi 10 2307 3249613 JSTOR 3249613 a b c Susan Lewandowski The Hindu Temple in South India in Buildings and Society Essays on the Social Development of the Built Environment Anthony D King Editor ISBN 978 0710202345 Routledge pp 68 69 Stella Kramrisch 1976 The Hindu Temple Volume 1 ISBN 81 208 0223 3 Meister Michael W March 2006 Mountain Temples and Temple Mountains Masrur Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 65 1 26 49 doi 10 2307 25068237 JSTOR 25068237 Meister Michael W Autumn 1986 On the Development of a Morphology for a Symbolic Architecture India RES Anthropology and Aesthetics 12 12 Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology 33 50 doi 10 1086 RESv12n1ms20166752 JSTOR 20166752 S2CID 132490349 Devangana Desai Khajuraho Oxford University Press Paperback Sixth impression 2005 ISBN 978 0 19 565643 5 Rian et al 2007 Fractal geometry as the synthesis of Hindu cosmology in Kandariya Mahadev Temple Khajuraho Building and Environment Vol 42 Issue 12 pp 4093 4107 doi 10 1016 j buildenv 2007 01 028 Trivedi K 1989 Hindu temples models of a fractal universe The Visual Computer 5 4 243 258 Susan Lewandowski The Hindu Temple in South India in Buildings and Society Essays on the Social Development of the Built Environment Anthony D King Editor ISBN 978 0710202345 Routledge Chapter 4 V A Smith Observations on some Chandel Antiquities Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal Volume 48 pp 290 291 Lost Worlds of the Kama Sutra History channel Lost Worlds of the Kama Sutra History Channel Lehner Mark 1997 The Complete Pyramids London Thames and Hudson ISBN 0 500 05084 8 pp 202 225 Will Durant 1976 Our Oriental Heritage The Story of Civilization ISBN 978 0671548001 Simon amp Schuster From inscription or estimated from other evidence Rabe 2000 Secret Yantras and Erotic Display for Hindu Temples Tantra in Practice Editor David White ISBN 978 8120817784 Chapter 25 pp 434 446 See Heather Elgood 2000 Hinduism and the Religious Arts ISBN 978 0304707393 Bloomsbury Stella Kramrisch The Hindu Temple Volume 1 ISBN 81 208 0223 3 pp 92 96 Alain Danielou 2001 The Hindu Temple Deification of Eroticism ISBN 978 0892818549 pp 101 119 Khajuraho Liveindia com Retrieved 14 July 2014 Alain Danielou 2001 The Hindu Temple Deification of Eroticism ISBN 978 0892818549 George Michell The Hindu Temple An Introduction to Its Meaning and Forms University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0226532301 pp 117 123 and pp 56 58 L H Gray Journal of American Society Vol 27 H W Woodward 1989 The Lakṣmaṇa Temple Khajuraho and Its Meanings Ars Orientalis Vol 19 pp 27 48 Smith David 1 January 2013 Monstrous Animals on Hindu Temples with Special Reference to Khajuraho Religions of South Asia 7 1 3 27 43 doi 10 1558 rosa v7i1 3 27 Hiram W Woodward Jr The Lakṣmaṇa Temple Khajuraho and Its Meanings Ars Orientalis Vol 19 1989 pp 27 48 Tourists to Khajuraho will now have an audio compass The Times of India 25 August 2011 Khajuraho Festival of Dances Archived from the original on 8 September 2021 Retrieved 17 August 2014 Further reading editProject Love Temple Machines Myths and Miracles a sci fi book based on Temples of Khajuraho M R Anand and Stella Kramrisch Homage to Khajuraho OCLC 562891704 Alain Danielou The Hindu Temple Deification of Eroticism ISBN 978 0892818549 Prasenjit Dasgupta Khajuraho Patralekha Kolkata 2014 Devangana Desai The Religious Imagery of Khajuraho Franco Indian Research P Ltd 1996 ISBN 81 900184 1 8 Devangana Desai 2005 Khajuraho Sixth impression ed Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 565391 5 Phani Kant Mishra Khajuraho With Latest Discoveries Sundeep Prakashan 2001 ISBN 81 7574 101 5 L A Narain Khajuraho Temples of Ecstasy New Delhi Lustre Press 1986 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Khajuraho group of monuments nbsp Khajuraho travel guide from Wikivoyage Khajuraho Group of Monuments UNESCO Archaeological Survey of India Bhopal Division R Nath Mughal Architecture Image Collection Images of Khajuraho University of Washington Digital Collection Chatr ko putr Chitragupta temple at Khujraho in 1882 Project Love Temple a sci fi book based on Temples of Khajuraho Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Khajuraho Group of Monuments amp oldid 1185848246, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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