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Pattadakal

Pattadakal, also called Raktapura, is a complex of 7th and 8th century CE Hindu and Jain temples in northern Karnataka, India. Located on the west bank of the Malaprabha River in Bagalkot district, this UNESCO World Heritage Site[1][2] is 23 kilometres (14 mi) from Badami and about 9.7 kilometres (6 mi) from Aihole, both of which are historically significant centres of Chalukya monuments.[3][4] The monument is a protected site under Indian law and is managed by the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI).[5]

Pattadakal
Pattadakallu
Temples of Pattadakal
Shown within Karnataka
Pattadakal (India)
LocationBagalkot district, Karnataka, India
Coordinates15°57′05″N 75°48′53″E / 15.95139°N 75.81472°E / 15.95139; 75.81472
TypeCultural
Criteriaiii, iv
Designated1987 (11th session)
Reference no.239
RegionAsia-Pacific

UNESCO has described Pattadakal as "a harmonious blend of architectural forms from northern and southern India" and an illustration of "eclectic art" at its height.[2] The Hindu temples are generally dedicated to Shiva, but elements of Vaishnavism and Shaktism theology and legends are also featured. The friezes in the Hindu temples display various Vedic and Puranic concepts, depict stories from the Ramayana, the Mahabharata, the Bhagavata Purana, as well as elements of other Hindu texts, such as the Panchatantra and the Kirātārjunīya.[2][6] The Jain temple is only dedicated to a single Jina.[7] The most sophisticated temples, with complex friezes and a fusion of Northern and Southern styles, are found in the Papanatha and Virupaksha temples.[8][9] The Virupaksha temple is an active house of Hindu worship.[10]

The Mallaprabha River, a tributary of the Krishna River cutting across the valley of mountains surrounded and the plains has great importance and place in this history of south India. The origin of this river is from Kanakumbi, Belagavi district, in the western ghats region flows towards the eastern side. Just one kilometre (0.62 mi) before reaching Pattadakal it starts flowing from south to north. As per the Hindu tradition, a river that flows in the north direction is also called Uttarvahini Ganga.

Location edit

The Pattadakal monuments are located in the Indian state of Karnataka, about 165 kilometres (103 mi) southeast of Belgaum, 265 kilometres (165 mi) northeast from Goa, 14 miles (23 km) from Badami, via Karnataka state highway SH14, and about 6 miles (9.7 km) from Aihole, set midst sandstone mountains and Malaprabha river valley. In total, there are over 150 Hindu, Jain, and Buddhist monuments, and archaeological discoveries, dating from the 4th to 10th century CE, in addition to pre-historic dolmens and cave paintings that are preserved at the Pattadakal-Badami-Aihole site.[11][12]

Nearby airports to Pattadakal

  • Sambra Belgaum Airport (IATA Code: IXG), a 3-hour drive to the west, which operates daily flights to Mumbai, Bangalore and Chennai.[13][14]
  • Hubballi airport is also 3 hrs drive from Pattadkal. Hubballi airport is well connected to Bengaluru, Mumbai, Chennai, Kochi, Delhi

Access to the site by train is also possible via an Indian Railways service that stops at Badami on the Hubballi-Solapur line.[3]

 
View of the main group at Pattadakal.

History edit

Pattadakal ("Stone of coronation") was considered a holy place, being where the Malaprabha river turned northwards towards the Himalayas and the Kailasha mountain (uttara-vahini). As its name implies, it was used during the Chalukya dynasty for coronation ceremonies, such as that of Vinayaditya in the 7th century CE.[3][4] Other names this place was known by were Kisuvolal meaning "valley of red soil", Raktapura meaning "city of red", and Pattada-Kisuvolal meaning "red soil valley for coronation".[3][15][16] The site, states Archaeological Survey of India, is mentioned in texts by Srivijaya and is referred to by Ptolemy as "Petirgal" in his Geography.[3]

The early rulers of the Chalukya during the 5th – 6th century were Vaishnavites (a community that believes and offers prayers to Lord Vishnu, followers of Vaishnavism) and then converted themselves into Shivaites (a community that believes and offer prayers to Lord Shiva and followers of Shivaism). Hence the temples in and around this compound are dedicated to Lord Shiva.

Pattadakal became, along with nearby Aihole and Badami, a major cultural centre and religious site for innovations in architecture and experimentation of ideas.[3] The rule of the Gupta Empire during the 5th century brought about a period of political stability, during which Aihole became a locus of scholarship. The experimentations in architecture extended into Badami over the course of the next two centuries. This culture of learning encompassed Pattadakal in the 7th century which became a nexus where ideas from northern and southern India fused.[3][17] It was during this latter period that the Chalukya empire constructed many of the temples in Aihole-Badami-Pattadakal region.[1][18]

After the fall of the Chalukya Empire, the region was annexed by the Rashtrakuta kingdom, who would rule over the region into the 10th century. In the 11th century, and into the 12th century, the region came under the rule of the Late Chalukyas (Western Chalukya Empire, Chalukyas of Kalyani), an offshoot of the Early Chalukya Empire.[19][20] Although the area was not a capital region, nor in proximity to one, numerous sources such as inscriptions, contemporaneous texts and the architectural style indicate that, from the 9th to 12th centuries, new Hindu, Jain and Buddhist temples and monasteries continued to be built in the Pattadakal region. Historian George Michell attributes this to the presence of a substantial population and its burgeoning wealth.[19]

In the advent of the 14th century, Pattadakal, the Malaprabha valley, as well as much of the Deccan region, was subject to raids and plunder by the Delhi Sultanate armies that devastated the region.[19][21] This period ended with the rise of the Vijayanagara Empire. It was responsible for the construction of forts for the protection of the monuments, as evidenced by inscriptions in the fort at Badami. Pattadakal was a part of the border region that witnessed wars between Vijayanagara and the Sultanates to its north. Following the collapse of Vijayanagara Empire in 1565, Pattadakal was annexed by the Sultanate of Bijapur, which was ruled by the Adil Shahi dynasty.[19] In the late 17th century, the Mughal Empire, under Aurangzeb, gained control of Pattadakal from the Sultanate. After the collapse of the Mughal Empire, Pattadakal came under the control of the Maratha Empire. It later changed hands, yet again, when Haider Ali and Tipu Sultan wrested control of it in late 18th century but would lose it when the British defeated Tipu Sultan and annexed the region.[19]

The monuments at Pattadakal are evidence of the existence, and the history, of interaction between the early northern and southern styles of Hindu arts.[22] According to T. Richard Blurton, the history of temple arts in northern India is unclear as the region was repeatedly sacked by invaders from Central Asia, particularly during the Muslim incursions from the 11th century onward. The subsequent "warfare has greatly reduced the quantity of surviving examples". The Pattadakal monuments completed in 7th and 8th century are among the earliest surviving examples of these early religious arts and ideas.[22][23]

Prehistoric Monuments

Based on some recent findings by Archeologist and pre-historian Prof. Ravi Korisettar published works for National Institutes of Advance studies, India, the Early Chalukyan artisans were not the first to build monuments in the Malaprabha Valley. At Bachinnagudda, just a couple of kilometres west of Pattadakallu, along the road leading to Badami, is a rough-looking monument believed to date back to the Iron Age (approximately 1200 BCE – 500 BCE). This monument, called a dolmen, belongs to a class of structures called megaliths, which were erected all over southern India mostly during the Iron Age and the succeeding Early Historic period.[24][25]

Description edit

Site layout edit

There are ten major temples at Pattadakal, nine Hindu and one Jain, along with numerous small shrines and plinths. Eight of the major temples are clustered together, a ninth one about half a kilometer south of this cluster, and the tenth, a Jain temple, located about a kilometer to the west of the main cluster. The Hindu temples are all connected by a walkway, while the Jain temple has road access.[3]

Style edit

The Pattadakal monuments reflect a fusion of two major Indian architectural styles, one from north India (Rekha-Nagara-Prasada) and the other from south India (Dravida-Vimana). Four temples were built in the Chalukya Dravida style, four in the Nagara style of Northern India, while the Papanatha temple is a fusion of the two. The nine Hindu temples are all dedicated to Shiva, and are on the banks of Malaprabha river. The oldest of these temples is Sangameshwara, which was built during the reign of Vijayaditya Satyashraya, between 697 and 733 CE. The largest of these temples in Pattadakal is the Virupaksha Temple, which was built between 740 and 745 CE.[3]

The last temple built in the Group of Monuments is the Jain temple, known locally as the Jain Narayana temple, which was likely built in the 9th century during the reign of Krishna II of Rashtrakutas.[1] Its style is patterned on the lines of the Kailasanatha temple at Kanchipuram.[1][26]

The temple structures were built using the sandstones found abundantly locally at Pattadakkal. Some of the sculptures are carved from polished black granite.

Kadasiddheshwara temple edit

 
Ardhanarishvara (left half Shiva, right half Parvati) at the Kadasiddheswara temple.

A relatively small temple, the Archaeological Survey of India has dated it to around the mid-7th century CE,[27] but George Michell dates it to the early 8th century.[28] The temple faces east and is built around a square garbha griha (sacrum sanctum).[27] It houses a linga on a peetha (platform); there is a mantapa around the sacrum center. Much of the temple has been eroded or was damaged in the following centuries. The Shikhara (spire) is a northern Nagara style (Rekhanagara) with a sukanasa projection on the east. The sukanasa has a damaged Nataraja accompanied by Parvati.[27]

The outer walls of the Kada Siddheshwara sanctum feature images of Ardhanarishvara (half Shiva, half Parvati) on its north, Harihara (half Shiva, half Vishnu) to its west and Lakulisha to the south.[27][28] Mounted on a lintel at the sanctum entrance is Shiva and Parvati flanked by Brahma and Vishnu on either side. The steps at the sanctum entrance are flanked by the river goddesses Ganga and Yamuna, with attendants.[27]

Jambulingeshwara temple edit

 
The Nataraja sukanasa on Jambulingeshwara temple spire.

Another small temple, the Jambulingeshwara temple, also called the Jambulinga temple, is variously estimated by ASI and Michell to have been complete between mid 7th and early 8th century, respectively.[29][28] The temple is built around a square garbha griha (sacrum sanctum),[27] whose outer walls feature intricate devakoshtha (linteled niches with decorated frames with Hamsa and mythical makaras). Inside the frames are images of Vishnu on its north, Surya (Sun god) to its west and Lakulisha to the south.[29] The temple also experiments with the idea of projecting sukanasa from the shikhara in front, over the mandapa. The temple still faces east, greeting the sunrise. The Nandi too is provided with a raised platform which is in ruins and the Nandi image shows signs of erosion.[29][28] The dancing Shiva Nataraja with Parvati and Nandi by his side on the frontal arch sukanasa is better preserved.[28]

The style of the temple is northern rekha-nagara with a curvilinear profile of squares diminishing as they rise towards the sky. The amalaka and kalasha of the northern style, however, are damaged and not in place. The entrance of the Jambulingeshwara mandapa is decorated with three shakhas, each with purnakumbhas below their capitals. A swan themed frieze covers the passageway with the faint remains of the carvings of swans, kutas and salas.[29]

Galaganatha Temple edit

 
 
Left: Galaganatha Temple's sabha mandapa floor and covered pradakshina patha; Right: Shiva carving.

The Galaganatha temple lies to the east of the Jambulingeshwara temple. Unlike the previous two temples, ASI estimates this temple to be from the mid-8th century,[29] whereas Michell states that it is likely from late 7th century.[30] The temple is a northern rekha-nagara style with a linga, and a vestibule (antarala) within the temple sanctum (garbha griha). Outside the temple is a seated Nandi that faces the sanctum.[29]

The sanctum has a covered circumambulatory path (pradakshina patha), indicating that this Hindu tradition was well established by 7th to 8th century. Various mandapas exist in this temple, such as a social or community hall (sabha mantapa), used for ceremonial functions, and a mukha mantapa, of which only the foundation remains.[29][30] The entrance to the mantapa is flanked by the river goddesses Ganga and Yamuna.[30]

The Galagatha temple is mostly in ruins, except for the southern part which contains a carved slab showing an eight-armed Shiva killing the demon Andhaka, while wearing a garland of skulls as a yajnopavita (sacred thread across the chest).[29][30]

According to Michell, the Galaganatha temple is notable for being almost an exact copy of the Svarga Brahma temple of Alampur in Andhra Pradesh, a temple that is dated to 689 CE. Given both Alampur and Pattadakal were a part of the Badami Chalukya kingdom, an exchange of ideas is likely.[30] The basement of the eastern moulding is notable for depicting friezes of Panchatantra fables, such as that of the mischievous monkey and the fable of two-headed bird.[29]

Chandrashekhara Temple edit

 
Chandrashekhara temple.

Chandrashekhara temple is a small east facing temple without a tower. It is situated on the south side of the Galaganatha temple.[31] This temple has been dated by Michell to the late 9th or early 10th century,[31] whereas the ASI dates it to the mid-8th century.[32]

The temple has a garbha griha with a Shiva linga and a closed hall; a Nandi sits on a platform to the east facing the linga.[31] It is laid out within a space 33.33 feet in length and 17.33 in breadth, on an adhishthana (platform based on certain design rules in Hindu texts).[32] Detailed Pilasters, yet lacking in ornamentation, decorate the exterior walls of the temple.[31] There is a devakostha (niche) in the walls on either side of the Chandrashekhara temple sanctum. The temple lacks a lintel, but features a dvarapala (guardian) on each side of the entrance; the door frames are carved with shakhas.[32]

Sangameshwara Temple edit

 
 
Left: Sangameshwara Temple's pillared entrance; Right: A side showing experimentation with window styles and wall carvings.

Sangameshwara temple, also called the Vijayeshvara temple, is a large, Dravida style east facing temple located on the south side of the Chandrashekhara temple.[31] Inscriptions at the temple, and other evidence, date it to between 720 CE and 733 CE. The death of its patron king, Vijayaditya, in 734 CE resulted in the temple being left unfinished, although work continued intermittently in later centuries.[33][34] During the Badami Chalukya reign, between 543 and 757 CE, other important Sangameshwara temples were built, such as the one at KuDavelli; in modern times, this temple was relocated to Alampur, after extensive restoration work.[35] The inscriptions found in this and other temples mention sponsor names from different centuries, including those of Hindu queens, suggesting they actively supported the temple architecture and arts.[36][37]

 
Incomplete Vishnu avatar Varaha relief on Sangameswara Shaiva temple wall.

Although the temple is not the largest among those at Pattadakal it is nonetheless of imposing proportions. [33] The temple has a square layout,[38] with an east facing sanctum. The sanctum, surrounded by a covered pradakshina patha (circumambulatory path) lit by three carved windows. Inside the sanctum is a Shiva Linga. In front of the sanctum is a vestibule that is flanked on each side by smaller shrines. These shrines once contained carvings of Ganesha and Durga, but the carvings have since gone missing.[33] Further east of the hall is a seated Nandi. Past the vestibule is a mandapa within which are sixteen massive pillars set in groups of four, which may have been added after construction of the temple was completed.[33][34]

The vimana superstructure above the temple and the outer walls of the temple are well preserved.[33] The vimana is a two tiered structure, crowned with a square kuta-sikhara and kalasha. The temple walls contain many devakostha (niches) carved with images of Vishnu and Shiva, some of which are in various stages of completion.[34] The temple is built on a raised moulded base, with decorative friezes of elephants, yali and makara mythical creatures.[33] Above the kapota (eaves) are detailed friezes of ganas (playful dwarfs), who are portrayed as if they are struggling to hold the weight of the temple structure. The parapet displays hara (various kinds of string in Hindu temple texts) of various styles, including karnakutas (square), and salas (oblong), which flow with the design below them and are decorated with kudus.[34][33]

Shaivism, Vaishnavism and Shaktism themes are presented in the carvings at the temple. The Shaiva iconography includes a dancing Nataraja, Ardhanarishvara (half Shiva, half Parvati as essential halves of each other), Shiva with Bhringi, Shiva spearing the demon Andhaka, and the yogi, Lakulisha. The Vaishnava iconography includes avatars of Vishnu such as Varaha lifting goddess earth (Bhudevi).[33]

Excavations into the foundations of its ruined hall, in 1969 and 1971, revealed the archaeologically significant discovery of a brick temple structure beneath the hall. This discovery led to the proposal that Sangameshwara had been built over an older temple, possibly dating to the 3rd century CE.[39]

Kashi Vishwanatha Temple edit

 
Kashi Vishwanatha temple with Nandi facing the sanctum.

Also known as Kashivishweswara, the Kashi Vishwanatha temple is another of the smaller temples at Pattadakal. The temple has been variously dated to the late 7th century, early 8th century or the mid-8th century.[40][41][42]

Much like the other temples, the core of the Kashi Vishwanatha temple is the square garbha griha (sanctum), which houses a linga. To the east of the garbha griha is the moulded platform of a Nandi-mantapa, featuring the image of a seated Nandi. The temple also features a pranala, a stone structure used to drain out water used during devotional activities, and an antarala, or foyer, connecting to a mantapa with a ruined entrance porch. The river goddesses Ganga and Yamuna are still visible at the entrance to the mantapa.[42][40] The temple sits on a raised platform, with five layers of mouldings, decorated with 8th-century carvings of horses, elephants, lions, peacocks, and flowery vine designs. The wall surfaces have pilaster pairs supporting chaitya-style arches.[42][40] The entrance door features a Shaiva dvarapala (guardian) on each side.[42]

Sculptures of Ardhanariswara (half-Shiva, half-Parvati) and Lakulisha are carved into the northern wall of the temple mantapa, but these have been damaged and defaced.[40] The kapota (cornice) are decorated with motifs and carved with ganas (playful dwarfs) carrying garlands; brackets show flying couples and kirtimukhas.[42][40]

The superstructure, displaying a well developed North Indian Rekha-Nagara style, is a rising five stage projection of centered squares with a complex pattern of interlocking gavakshas,[40] but the amalaka and kalasha are now missing.[42] The sukanasa, mounted on a spire in front of the temple, is of a dancing Uma-Maheshwara (Parvati-Shiva) set inside a chaitya-arch.[42][40]

Inside the temple are pillars and pilasters intricately carved with friezes depicting the Bhagavata Purana (Vaishnavism), the Shiva Purana (Shaivism) and the Ramayana. One frieze shows the demon Ravana lifting mount Kailasha, others show the playful pranks of Krishna, while another narrates the Kalyansundarmurti (marriage of Shiva and Parvati).[42][40] One relief in particular shows Shiva coming out of the cylindrical linga.[40] The mandapa ceiling has carvings of Shiva, Nandi and Parvati holding Kartikeya. This image is concentrically surrounded by the ashta-dikpalas (eight directional guardians).[42][40]

Trailokeshwara Temple edit

Trillokeshwara temple is a mid-8th-century Shiva temple sponsored by queen Trailokyamahadevi.[43] It is located south of the Kashi Vishwanatha temple, southwest of the Sangameshwara temple and in close proximity to Virupaksha.[44] The temple was built about the same time as the Virupaksha temple, with a similar design and layout, but is somewhat smaller and has a few important differences.[45]

 
 
Left: Mallikarjuna Temple walled entrance; Right: A wall carving.

The temple reflects a fully developed South Indian vimana style architecture. Its garbha griya (sanctum) has a Shiva linga, and features a circumambulatory path (pradakshina patha). In front of the sanctum is an antechamber (antarala) with small shrines for Durga as Mahishasuramardini killing the buffalo demon and another for Ganesha on each side, both currently empty. A Nandi-mantapa is included in the temple wherein Nandi faces the sanctum.[43] Access to the sanctum is through a pillared sabha-mantapa (community hall) with entrance porches, enclosures (prakara) and a gateway (pratoli).[43]

 
Lovers inside Mallikarjuna temple.

The temple, though similar to the Virupaksha temple, experiments with new architectural ideas that makes it distinct.[46] The depiction of a dancing Shiva, as Nataraja, in the Mallikarjuna temple is set in the shallow arch of the sukanasa. As another example, the topmost storey of the shikara superstructure of this temple lacks hara elements (threads), while its roof is hemispherical unlike the square roof of the Virupaksha temple.[43][46]

The use of stone carvings for storytelling is prevalent throughout the temple. The legends of Hindu epics and the Puranas are depicted on the temple pillars in the community hall. These stories span all major traditions within Hinduism, including Shaivism, Vaishnavism and Shaktism.[45] The rasa lila of Krishna, whose stories are found in the Bhagavata Purana, are shown on friezes as are Hindu fables from the Panchatantra.[45][47] Like other Hindu temples, the friezes of the Mallikarjuna temple show kama and mithuna scenes of amorous couples. In other places, artha scenes such as a worker walking with an elephant carrying a log and single women with different emotional expressions are carved into stone;[43][45] one of these women carries an 8th-century musical instrument.[46]

Virupaksha Temple edit

 
 
Left: Virupaksha Temple from southwest corner; Right: A Nandi shrine (active temple).

The Virupaksha temple, located to the immediate south of the Mallikarjuna temple, is the largest and most sophisticated of the monuments at Pattadakal.[48] In inscriptions, it is referred to as "Shri Lokeshvara Mahasila Prasada", after its sponsor Queen Lokmahadevi, and is dated to about 740 CE.[10] It was constructed after the successful military campaigns of King Vikramaditya II against the Pallavas (4th-9th centuries CE) and the inscription mentions grant to the "musicians of the temple" by the Queen and also disclosing the identity of the chief architect "Gunda Anivaritacharya" to the architect and by giving him honour of perijereppu patta by king Vikramaditya-II.[25][49][48][50] The temple is notable for its range, and quality, of construction exemplifying a well developed Dravidian architectural style, as well as the inscribed names of the artists beneath the panels they worked on.[10][51][52]

As is common with other temples at Pattadakal, the Virupaksha temple was built facing east centred around a square garbha griha (sanctum), with a Shiva Linga, surrounded by a covered circumabulatory path (pradakshina patha). In front of the sanctum is an antarala with two small shrines within which are facing images of Ganesha and Parvati, in her Durga aspect as Mahishasuramardini killing the buffalo demon.[10][51] The external Nandi pavilion is aligned on an east–west axis, as are the mantapa and antechamber.[53] The temple site forms a rectangle consisting of fused squares bounded by walls, which are decorated with carvings.[51] Within the compound are smaller shrines, of which there were once 32, based on the foundation footprint layout, but most have since been lost. The entrance leads to a mantapa with 18 columns (4-5-aisle-5-4, with a 4x4 set forming the inner mantapa and two leading to the darshana space).[51]

 
A relief at Virupaksha temple

The tower above the sanctum is a three-storey pyramidal structure, with each storey bearing motifs that reflect those in the sanctum below. However, for clarity of composition, the artisans had simplified the themes in the pilastered projections and intricate carvings.[54] The third storey is the simplest, having only parapet kutas, a kuta roof with each face decorated with kudus – a structure common in later Dravidian architecture Hindu temples. A kalasha-like pot, found in festivals, social ceremonies and personal rituals such as weddings, crowns the temple. The top of this pot is 17.5 metres (57 ft) above the temple pavement, the highest for any pre-9th century South Indian temple.[54] The sukanasa on the tower is large, exceeding half the height of the superstructure, to aid visibility from a distance.[55]

The sanctum walls, and also those of the nearby mantapa space, are decorated with intricately detailed carvings. These carvings depict images of Shaivism, Vaishnavism, and Shaktism deities, and themes, such as Narasimha and Varaha (Vaishaivism), Bhairava and Nataraja (Shaivism), Harihara (half Shiva-half Vishnu), Lakulisa (Shaivism), Brahma, Durga, Saraswati, Lakshmi, and others.[10][56][57] According to George Michell, the carvings on the walls and porch of the Virupaksha temple exterior are "vehicles for diverse sculptural compositions, by far the most numerous found on any Early Chalukya monument".[58] Other than Hindu gods and goddesses, numerous panels show depict people either as couples, in courtship and mithuna, or as individuals wearing jewellery or carrying work implements.[59]

 
A Virupaksha frieze showing two Panchatantra fables.

The temple has numerous friezes spanning a variety of topics such as, for example, two men wrestling, rishi with Vishnu, rishi with Shiva, Vishnu rescuing Gajendra elephant trapped by a crocodile in a lotus pond, scenes of hermitages, and sadhus seated in meditative yoga posture. Vedic deities such as Surya riding the chariot with Aruna, Indra on elephant and others are carved in stone.[60] A few depict scenes from the Ramayana such as those involving hanuman sitting on a high chair made of his own magic tail and higher than the height of the ravana's throne, golden deer, Hanuman, Sugriva, Vali, Ravana and Jatayu bird, Sita being abducted, the struggles of Rama and Lakshmana. Other friezes show scenes from the Mahabharata, Vasudeva jailed in by Kamsa and birth of Sr krishna, Krishna's playful life story in the Bhagavata Purana and the Harivamsa as well as fables from the Panchatantra and other Hindu texts.[61][62][63]

The temple contains historically significant inscriptions that provide hints about the society and culture of 8th-century India. For example, one inscription mentions a grant to the "musicians of the temple" by the queen.[59]

The famous Kailasha temple at Ellora Caves was modeled after this temple, although the Virupaksha temple was itself modeled after the Kailasanatha temple at Kanchipuram.[10][64]

Papanatha temple edit

 
Papanatha temple

The Papanatha temple is situated apart from the main cluster of eight monuments. It is about half kilometer to the south of Virupaksha and has been dated towards the end of the Early Chalukya rule period, approximately mid-8th century.[65][66] The temple is noted for its novel mixture of Dravida, and Nagara, Hindu temple styles.[66][67]

The unusual layout of the temple is possibly due to its construction, which occurred in three stages, but there is a lack of epigraphical evidence to support this hypothesis. Its architectural and sculptural details do show a consistent and unified theme, indicative of a plan. The temple is longer, incorporating two interconnected mantapas, one with 16 pillars and another with 4 pillars.[68] The decorations, parapets and some parts of the layout are Dravida in style, while the tower and pilastered niches are of the Nagara style.[68]

Like the other temples, the Papanatha temple faces east towards the sunrise and has a Shiva linga in its garbha griya (sanctum) except there is no Nandi-mandapa. Instead, there is an image of Nandi housed in the sabha mantapa facing the sanctum.[65][66] The temple walls are notable for the carved deities and themes of Shaivism and Vaishnavism; Durga is depicted in one of the niches. Intricately carved panels are displayed on the walls, depicting legends such as the Ramayana and excerpts of the Kiratarjuniya.[65][66]

The centre of the ceiling is decorated with an elaborate Shiva Nataraja, while other ceiling slabs show Vishnu; one panel shows him in a reclining Anantasayana pose.[69] Outside, in the mandapas, are images of single women and couples, in courtship and different stages of mithuna. Many panels show musicians with different types of musical instruments.[65][66]

Jain Narayana Temple edit

 
Jain Narayana temple

The Jaina temple at Pattadakal was built during the 9th century, possibly with sponsorship from the Rashtrakuta King Krishna II or the Kalyani Chalukyas. Unlike the other nine temples, the Narayana temple lacks Hindu deities and intricate panels of the other nine, but instead has a statue of a Jina carved into the north side kapota eave.[70][7]

Like the Hindu temples, this temple also features a square sanctum, a circumambulatory path, an antechamber, a mantapa and a porch. The mantapa is divided into seven bays at the north and south walls, with narrow niches containing seated Jinas. The bays are in the North Indian style, and the tower storey has a carved square shikhara.[70]

The mantapa has a row of lathe-turned sandstone pillars. The kakshasana are decorated with the figures of dancers, purna-ghata, nidhis, vyalas but some of the artwork is only partially finished. The entrance features carvings of a life-sized elephant torso with riders.[70][7] According to Adam Hardy, the niches of this Jain temple mantapa may have previously featured images.[71]

The Archaeological Survey of India has conducted excavations at the site yielding evidence of an older temple and Jaina presence. According to the ASI, the excavations uncovered "the remains of a large temple complex built in bricks and also a beautiful sculpture of Tirthankara standing in sama-bhanga indicating the existence of a temple, probably belonging to before or beginning of the early Chalukyan rule".[70]

Other monuments and inscriptions edit

 
Old Kannada inscription of Chalukya emperor Vikramaditya II on victory pillar, Virupaksha Temple, Pattadakal, c.733–745.
 
Old Kannada inscription describes the grant made for Sangameshwara temple by Chalukya King Vijayaditya c.1162

A number of inscriptions in the old Kannada language have been found at Pattadakal, notably in the Virupaksha, Sangameshwara and Papanatha temples. These inscriptions are an important source of information regarding the grants made by King Vikramaditya, and Vijayaditya, various queens, and others, for the construction and operation of the temple.[72][73] They have also provided valuable insight into the evolution of various written Indian scripts. As an example, one particular 8th century column is inscribed in two Sanskrit scripts, the northern Indian Siddhamatrika script[note 1] and the southern Indian Kannada script.[75]

 
Mahabharata frieze

Other notable monuments at Pattadakal include a monolithic stone pillar bearing numerous inscriptions, the Naganatha temple, the Mahakuteshwara temple, which also bears numerous inscriptions, as well as several small shrines dedicated to Shiva. Near the Virupaksha, Sangameshwara and Mallikarjuna temples is a Shaiva stone pillar, featuring a trident emblem. The pillar bears inscriptions stating it was erected by Jnana Shivacharya from Mrigathanikahara, located on the north bank of the Ganges, and that he had gifted a parcel of land to the Vijayeshwara.[citation needed]

In 2008, Upinder Singh wrote that S. Venkateshaiah, a senior archaeologist with the ASI had located the quarry where the stones were sourced some 5 kilometers away from the Pattadakal. The site is notable for sketches of Shiva, Nandi, Durga, Ganesh, trident, peacock, swastika, symbols and inscriptions. Some of these may be emblems of guilds (sanghata) that quarried and supplied the stones for temples.[76]

Significance edit

According to art historian Cathleen Cummings, the monuments at Pattadakal are a historically significant example of religion, society, and culture, particularly Hindu and Jain, in the Deccan region and is an expression of Hindu kingship and religious worldview of 8th-century India. She writes that the artisans express the conflicting concepts of Dharma (duty, virtue, righteousness) and Moksha (liberation) in Hindu theology, particularly Pashupata Shaivism. Furthermore, she states that the significance lies not just within individual images but also in their relative location and sequence as well how it expresses the historic tension in Hindu religious tradition between the stately life of the householder and the life of the renouncer monk.[77]

The expression of Dharma, particularly raja-dharma (royal authority and duty) as exemplified by Rama, and Moksha are seen throughout the various temples at Pattadakal. The former is depicted in various friezes using examples of the life story of Rama from the Ramayana, while the latter is expressed with images of Lakulisha, Nataraja, Yoga, and numerous ascetics.[78] Other imagery that is particularly prevalent at Pattadakal is that between Purusha and Prakriti, the soul and the matter, the masculine, and the feminine.[79]

The temples at Pattadakal are symbolic of the Chalukya inclination towards integration, and experimentation, resulting in a merging of the Northern and Southern Indian architectural styles. This is particularly evident when the architecture at Pattadakal, Aihole and Badami are viewed together. Aihole, in the 5th century, served as the incubator for the concepts that would lead to this integration of styles. These concepts were further refined in Badami during the 6th and 7th centuries. The culmination of this is, as described by UNESCO, "the apogee of an eclectic art which, in the 7th and 8th centuries, achieved a harmonious blend of architectural forms from the north and south of India".[2][80]

Early medieval era music and arts edit

Among the sculptures at Pattadakal is one of a long neck lute (Sitar-like) dated to the 10th century. The site also shows friezes with more conventional musical instruments, but the long neck lute suggests there was a tradition of musicians innovating with new instrument designs. Another example are the 7th-century stick zithers found carved in the bas-relief at Mahabalipuram in Tamil Nadu.[81]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The script is also called "early Nagari", "Kutila", "Vikata" and "acute angled"; it is referred to as Siddham script in East Asian Buddhist texts.[74]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d "World Heritage Sites – Pattadakal". Archaeological Survey of India. Retrieved 21 June 2016.
  2. ^ a b c d Group of Monuments at Pattadakal, UNESCO; See also Advisory Body Evaluation (ICOMOS), UNESCO
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i World Heritage Sites – Pattadakal – More Detail, Archaeological Survey of India, Government of India (2012)
  4. ^ a b Michell 2017, pp. 12–19, 110–114.
  5. ^ World Heritage Sites – Pattadakal; Group of Monuments at Pattadakal (1987), Karnataka; ASI, Government of India
  6. ^ Michell 2017, pp. 110–131.
  7. ^ a b c Michell 2017, p. 136.
  8. ^ Cathleen Cummings 2014, pp. 1–7.
  9. ^ Lippe 1967.
  10. ^ a b c d e f Virupaksha Temple 1 November 2017 at the Wayback Machine, ASI India (2011)
  11. ^ Michell 2017, pp. 12–41.
  12. ^ Gary Tarr (1970), Chronology and Development of the Chāḷukya Cave Temples, Ars Orientalis, The Smithsonian Institution and Department of the History of Art, University of Michigan, Vol. 8, pp. 155-184
  13. ^ Belgaum airport[permanent dead link] AAI, Govt of India; Official Website 1 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine, Belgaum
  14. ^ New terminal building at Belagavi airport, The Hindu (30 September 2017)
  15. ^ . National Informatics Center. Archived from the original on 11 September 2004. Retrieved 21 June 2016.
  16. ^ George Michell 2002, pp. 2–7.
  17. ^ Michell 2017, pp. 12–19, 110–124.
  18. ^ "Carved for eternity – Pattadakal". The Hindu. 6 April 2013. Retrieved 24 May 2013.
  19. ^ a b c d e Michell 2017, pp. 19–20.
  20. ^ Hermann Kulke; Dietmar Rothermund (1998). A History of India. Routledge. pp. 106–113. ISBN 978-0-415-15482-6.
  21. ^ George Childs Kohn (2013). Dictionary of Wars. Routledge. pp. 146–147. ISBN 978-1-135-95494-9.
  22. ^ a b T. Richard Blurton (1993). Hindu Art. Harvard University Press. pp. 53–55, 212–218. ISBN 978-0-674-39189-5.
  23. ^ Christopher Tadgell (2015). The East: Buddhists, Hindus and the Sons of Heaven. Routledge. pp. 90–95. ISBN 978-1-136-75384-8.
  24. ^ "Megaliths of Pattadakal". Deccan Herald. 26 September 2020. Retrieved 30 August 2021.
  25. ^ a b Munshi, K. m (1954). History And Culture Of The Indian People Vol.3 (classical Age).
  26. ^ "Group of Monuments at Pattadakal". UNESCO. Retrieved 1 September 2016.
  27. ^ a b c d e f Kadasiddheswara Temple 1 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine, ASI India (2011)
  28. ^ a b c d e Michell 2017, pp. 110–111.
  29. ^ a b c d e f g h i Jambulingeswara Temple 23 March 2018 at the Wayback Machine, ASI India (2011)
  30. ^ a b c d e Michell 2017, pp. 111–112.
  31. ^ a b c d e Michell 2017, p. 112.
  32. ^ a b c Chandrashekhara Temple 23 March 2018 at the Wayback Machine, ASI India (2011)
  33. ^ a b c d e f g h Michell 2017, p. 112-114.
  34. ^ a b c d Sangameshwara Temple 1 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine, ASI India (2011)
  35. ^ Carol Radcliffe Bolon (1985), The Durga Temple, Aihole, and the Saṅgameśvara Temple, KūḐavelli: A Sculptural Review, Ars Orientalis, The Smithsonian Institution and Department of the History of Art, University of Michigan, Vol. 15, pages 47-64
  36. ^ Michell 2017, p. 113-115.
  37. ^ Heather Elgood 2000, pp. 165–166.
  38. ^ Vinayak Bharne & Krupali Krusche 2014, pp. 65–66.
  39. ^ Norman Yoffee (2007). Negotiating the Past in the Past: Identity, Memory, and Landscape in Archaeological Research. University of Arizona Press. pp. 164–167. ISBN 978-0-8165-2670-3.
  40. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Michell 2017, pp. 130–131.
  41. ^ Vinayak Bharne & Krupali Krusche 2014, p. 63.
  42. ^ a b c d e f g h i Kasivisweswara Temple 22 April 2018 at the Wayback Machine, ASI India (2011)
  43. ^ a b c d e Mallikarjuna Temple 23 February 2017 at the Wayback Machine, ASI India (2011)
  44. ^ Michael W. Meister & Madhusudan A. Dhaky 1996, p. 24.
  45. ^ a b c d Michell 2017, pp. 128–130.
  46. ^ a b c Michell 2017, pp. 128–129.
  47. ^ Blackburn, Stuart (1996). "The Brahmin and the Mongoose: The Narrative Context of a Well-Travelled Tale". Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies. 59 (3). Cambridge University Press: 494–506. doi:10.1017/s0041977x00030615. S2CID 162672939.
  48. ^ a b Michell 2017, pp. 115–125.
  49. ^ "The Temples of Pattadakal". World History Encyclopedia. Retrieved 27 August 2021.
  50. ^ George Michell 2002, pp. 5, 36–44.
  51. ^ a b c d Michell 2017, pp. 115–116.
  52. ^ Kadambi, Hemanth (2015). "Cathleen Cummings, Decoding a Hindu Temple: Royalty and Religion in the Iconographic Program of the Virupaksha Temple, Pattadakal". South Asian Studies. 31 (2). Taylor & Francis: 266–268. doi:10.1080/02666030.2015.1094214. S2CID 194181431.
  53. ^ George Michell 1977, pp. 137–140.
  54. ^ a b Michell 2017, pp. 116–117.
  55. ^ Stella Kramrisch (1993). The Hindu Temple. Motilal Banarsidass. pp. 241–242 with footnotes. ISBN 978-81-208-0223-0.
  56. ^ Michell 2017, pp. 115–118.
  57. ^ Cathleen Cummings 2014, pp. 73–76, 121–123.
  58. ^ Michell 2017, p. 117.
  59. ^ a b Michell 2017, pp. 117–118.
  60. ^ Michell 2017, pp. 117–121.
  61. ^ Michell 2017, pp. 117–124.
  62. ^ Lippe 1967, pp. 5–24.
  63. ^ John Stratton Hawley (1987), Krishna and the Birds, Ars Orientalis, The Smithsonian Institution and Department of the History of Art, University of Michigan, Vol. 17, pp. 137-161
  64. ^ M. K. Dhavalikar (1982). "Kailasa — The Stylistic Development and Chronology". Bulletin of the Deccan College Research Institute. 41: 33–45. JSTOR 42931407.
  65. ^ a b c d Papanatha Temple, ASI India (2011)
  66. ^ a b c d e Michell 2017, pp. 132–135.
  67. ^ George Michell 2002, pp. 73–76.
  68. ^ a b Michell 2017, pp. 132–133.
  69. ^ Michell 2017, pp. 133–134.
  70. ^ a b c d Jaina Temple 1 December 2015 at the Wayback Machine, ASI India (2011)
  71. ^ Adam Hardy 1995, p. 153 note 30.
  72. ^ George Michell 2002, pp. 20, 35–36.
  73. ^ James Campbell (1884). Gazetteer of the Bombay Presidency: Bijápur. Government Central Press. pp. 669–673.
  74. ^ Richard Salomon (1998). Indian Epigraphy: A Guide to the Study of Inscriptions in Sanskrit, Prakrit, and the Other Indo-Aryan Languages. Oxford University Press. pp. 39 footnote 112. ISBN 978-0-19-509984-3.
  75. ^ Richard Salomon (1998). Indian Epigraphy: A Guide to the Study of Inscriptions in Sanskrit, Prakrit, and the Other Indo-Aryan Languages. Oxford University Press. pp. 39, 71. ISBN 978-0-19-509984-3.
  76. ^ Upinder Singh 2008, p. 631.
  77. ^ Cathleen Cummings 2014, pp. 2–5.
  78. ^ Cathleen Cummings 2014, pp. 5–9, 184, 236–268.
  79. ^ Cathleen Cummings 2014, pp. 236–245, 270–278.
  80. ^ George Michell 2002, pp. 6–17.
  81. ^ Stephen Slawek (1987). Sitār Technique in Nibaddh Forms. Motilal Banarsidass. pp. 6–7. ISBN 978-81-208-0200-1.

Bibliography edit

  • Vinayak Bharne; Krupali Krusche (2014). Rediscovering the Hindu Temple: The Sacred Architecture and Urbanism of India. Cambridge Scholars. ISBN 978-1-4438-6734-4.
  • Cathleen Cummings (2014). Decoding a Hindu Temple: Royalty and Religion in the Iconographic Program of the Virupaksha Temple, Pattadakal. South Asian Studies. ISBN 978-0-9834472-6-9.
  • Heather Elgood (2000). Hinduism and the Religious Arts. Bloomsbury Academic. ISBN 978-0-304-70739-3.
  • Adam Hardy (1995). Indian Temple Architecture: Form and Transformation : the Karṇāṭa Drāviḍa Tradition, 7th to 13th Centuries. Abhinav. ISBN 978-81-7017-312-0.
  • Stella Kramrisch (1993). The Hindu Temple. Motilal Banarsidass. ISBN 978-81-208-0224-7.
  • Lippe, Aschwin (1967). "Some Sculptural Motifs on Early Calukya Temples". Artibus Asiae. 29 (1): 5–24. doi:10.2307/3250288. JSTOR 3250288.
  • George Michell (1977). The Hindu Temple: An Introduction to Its Meaning and Forms. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-53230-1.
  • George Michell (2002). Pattadakal. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-565651-0.
  • Michell, George l (2014). Temple Architecture and Art of the Early Chalukyas: Badami, Mahakuta, Aihole, Pattadakal. Niyogi Books. ISBN 978-93-83098-33-0.
  • Michell, George (2017). Badami, Aihole, Pattadakal. Jaico (Reprinted, Orig Year: 2011). ISBN 978-81-8495-600-9.
  • Michael W. Meister; Madhusudan A. Dhaky (1996). Encyclopaedia of Indian Temple Architecture. American Institute of Indian Studies. ISBN 978-81-86526-00-2.
  • Upinder Singh (2008). A History of Ancient and Early Medieval India: From the Stone Age to the 12th Century. Pearson Education. ISBN 978-81-317-1677-9.

External links edit

  • Pattadakal World Heritage Site
  • Pattadakal Karnataka Government of Tourism

pattadakal, this, article, about, historical, site, modern, town, town, also, called, raktapura, complex, century, hindu, jain, temples, northern, karnataka, india, located, west, bank, malaprabha, river, bagalkot, district, this, unesco, world, heritage, site. This article is about the historical site For the modern town see Pattadakal town Pattadakal also called Raktapura is a complex of 7th and 8th century CE Hindu and Jain temples in northern Karnataka India Located on the west bank of the Malaprabha River in Bagalkot district this UNESCO World Heritage Site 1 2 is 23 kilometres 14 mi from Badami and about 9 7 kilometres 6 mi from Aihole both of which are historically significant centres of Chalukya monuments 3 4 The monument is a protected site under Indian law and is managed by the Archaeological Survey of India ASI 5 PattadakalPattadakalluTemples of PattadakalShown within KarnatakaShow map of KarnatakaPattadakal India Show map of IndiaLocationBagalkot district Karnataka IndiaCoordinates15 57 05 N 75 48 53 E 15 95139 N 75 81472 E 15 95139 75 81472UNESCO World Heritage SiteTypeCulturalCriteriaiii ivDesignated1987 11th session Reference no 239RegionAsia Pacific UNESCO has described Pattadakal as a harmonious blend of architectural forms from northern and southern India and an illustration of eclectic art at its height 2 The Hindu temples are generally dedicated to Shiva but elements of Vaishnavism and Shaktism theology and legends are also featured The friezes in the Hindu temples display various Vedic and Puranic concepts depict stories from the Ramayana the Mahabharata the Bhagavata Purana as well as elements of other Hindu texts such as the Panchatantra and the Kiratarjuniya 2 6 The Jain temple is only dedicated to a single Jina 7 The most sophisticated temples with complex friezes and a fusion of Northern and Southern styles are found in the Papanatha and Virupaksha temples 8 9 The Virupaksha temple is an active house of Hindu worship 10 The Mallaprabha River a tributary of the Krishna River cutting across the valley of mountains surrounded and the plains has great importance and place in this history of south India The origin of this river is from Kanakumbi Belagavi district in the western ghats region flows towards the eastern side Just one kilometre 0 62 mi before reaching Pattadakal it starts flowing from south to north As per the Hindu tradition a river that flows in the north direction is also called Uttarvahini Ganga Contents 1 Location 2 History 3 Description 3 1 Site layout 3 2 Style 3 3 Kadasiddheshwara temple 3 4 Jambulingeshwara temple 3 5 Galaganatha Temple 3 6 Chandrashekhara Temple 3 7 Sangameshwara Temple 3 8 Kashi Vishwanatha Temple 3 9 Trailokeshwara Temple 3 10 Virupaksha Temple 3 11 Papanatha temple 3 12 Jain Narayana Temple 3 13 Other monuments and inscriptions 4 Significance 4 1 Early medieval era music and arts 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 7 1 Bibliography 8 External linksLocation editThe Pattadakal monuments are located in the Indian state of Karnataka about 165 kilometres 103 mi southeast of Belgaum 265 kilometres 165 mi northeast from Goa 14 miles 23 km from Badami via Karnataka state highway SH14 and about 6 miles 9 7 km from Aihole set midst sandstone mountains and Malaprabha river valley In total there are over 150 Hindu Jain and Buddhist monuments and archaeological discoveries dating from the 4th to 10th century CE in addition to pre historic dolmens and cave paintings that are preserved at the Pattadakal Badami Aihole site 11 12 Nearby airports to Pattadakal Sambra Belgaum Airport IATA Code IXG a 3 hour drive to the west which operates daily flights to Mumbai Bangalore and Chennai 13 14 Hubballi airport is also 3 hrs drive from Pattadkal Hubballi airport is well connected to Bengaluru Mumbai Chennai Kochi Delhi Access to the site by train is also possible via an Indian Railways service that stops at Badami on the Hubballi Solapur line 3 nbsp View of the main group at Pattadakal History editPattadakal Stone of coronation was considered a holy place being where the Malaprabha river turned northwards towards the Himalayas and the Kailasha mountain uttara vahini As its name implies it was used during the Chalukya dynasty for coronation ceremonies such as that of Vinayaditya in the 7th century CE 3 4 Other names this place was known by were Kisuvolal meaning valley of red soil Raktapura meaning city of red and Pattada Kisuvolal meaning red soil valley for coronation 3 15 16 The site states Archaeological Survey of India is mentioned in texts by Srivijaya and is referred to by Ptolemy as Petirgal in his Geography 3 The early rulers of the Chalukya during the 5th 6th century were Vaishnavites a community that believes and offers prayers to Lord Vishnu followers of Vaishnavism and then converted themselves into Shivaites a community that believes and offer prayers to Lord Shiva and followers of Shivaism Hence the temples in and around this compound are dedicated to Lord Shiva Pattadakal became along with nearby Aihole and Badami a major cultural centre and religious site for innovations in architecture and experimentation of ideas 3 The rule of the Gupta Empire during the 5th century brought about a period of political stability during which Aihole became a locus of scholarship The experimentations in architecture extended into Badami over the course of the next two centuries This culture of learning encompassed Pattadakal in the 7th century which became a nexus where ideas from northern and southern India fused 3 17 It was during this latter period that the Chalukya empire constructed many of the temples in Aihole Badami Pattadakal region 1 18 After the fall of the Chalukya Empire the region was annexed by the Rashtrakuta kingdom who would rule over the region into the 10th century In the 11th century and into the 12th century the region came under the rule of the Late Chalukyas Western Chalukya Empire Chalukyas of Kalyani an offshoot of the Early Chalukya Empire 19 20 Although the area was not a capital region nor in proximity to one numerous sources such as inscriptions contemporaneous texts and the architectural style indicate that from the 9th to 12th centuries new Hindu Jain and Buddhist temples and monasteries continued to be built in the Pattadakal region Historian George Michell attributes this to the presence of a substantial population and its burgeoning wealth 19 In the advent of the 14th century Pattadakal the Malaprabha valley as well as much of the Deccan region was subject to raids and plunder by the Delhi Sultanate armies that devastated the region 19 21 This period ended with the rise of the Vijayanagara Empire It was responsible for the construction of forts for the protection of the monuments as evidenced by inscriptions in the fort at Badami Pattadakal was a part of the border region that witnessed wars between Vijayanagara and the Sultanates to its north Following the collapse of Vijayanagara Empire in 1565 Pattadakal was annexed by the Sultanate of Bijapur which was ruled by the Adil Shahi dynasty 19 In the late 17th century the Mughal Empire under Aurangzeb gained control of Pattadakal from the Sultanate After the collapse of the Mughal Empire Pattadakal came under the control of the Maratha Empire It later changed hands yet again when Haider Ali and Tipu Sultan wrested control of it in late 18th century but would lose it when the British defeated Tipu Sultan and annexed the region 19 The monuments at Pattadakal are evidence of the existence and the history of interaction between the early northern and southern styles of Hindu arts 22 According to T Richard Blurton the history of temple arts in northern India is unclear as the region was repeatedly sacked by invaders from Central Asia particularly during the Muslim incursions from the 11th century onward The subsequent warfare has greatly reduced the quantity of surviving examples The Pattadakal monuments completed in 7th and 8th century are among the earliest surviving examples of these early religious arts and ideas 22 23 Prehistoric MonumentsBased on some recent findings by Archeologist and pre historian Prof Ravi Korisettar published works for National Institutes of Advance studies India the Early Chalukyan artisans were not the first to build monuments in the Malaprabha Valley At Bachinnagudda just a couple of kilometres west of Pattadakallu along the road leading to Badami is a rough looking monument believed to date back to the Iron Age approximately 1200 BCE 500 BCE This monument called a dolmen belongs to a class of structures called megaliths which were erected all over southern India mostly during the Iron Age and the succeeding Early Historic period 24 25 Description editSite layout edit There are ten major temples at Pattadakal nine Hindu and one Jain along with numerous small shrines and plinths Eight of the major temples are clustered together a ninth one about half a kilometer south of this cluster and the tenth a Jain temple located about a kilometer to the west of the main cluster The Hindu temples are all connected by a walkway while the Jain temple has road access 3 Style edit The Pattadakal monuments reflect a fusion of two major Indian architectural styles one from north India Rekha Nagara Prasada and the other from south India Dravida Vimana Four temples were built in the Chalukya Dravida style four in the Nagara style of Northern India while the Papanatha temple is a fusion of the two The nine Hindu temples are all dedicated to Shiva and are on the banks of Malaprabha river The oldest of these temples is Sangameshwara which was built during the reign of Vijayaditya Satyashraya between 697 and 733 CE The largest of these temples in Pattadakal is the Virupaksha Temple which was built between 740 and 745 CE 3 The last temple built in the Group of Monuments is the Jain temple known locally as the Jain Narayana temple which was likely built in the 9th century during the reign of Krishna II of Rashtrakutas 1 Its style is patterned on the lines of the Kailasanatha temple at Kanchipuram 1 26 The temple structures were built using the sandstones found abundantly locally at Pattadakkal Some of the sculptures are carved from polished black granite Kadasiddheshwara temple edit nbsp Ardhanarishvara left half Shiva right half Parvati at the Kadasiddheswara temple A relatively small temple the Archaeological Survey of India has dated it to around the mid 7th century CE 27 but George Michell dates it to the early 8th century 28 The temple faces east and is built around a square garbha griha sacrum sanctum 27 It houses a linga on a peetha platform there is a mantapa around the sacrum center Much of the temple has been eroded or was damaged in the following centuries The Shikhara spire is a northern Nagara style Rekhanagara with a sukanasa projection on the east The sukanasa has a damaged Nataraja accompanied by Parvati 27 The outer walls of the Kada Siddheshwara sanctum feature images of Ardhanarishvara half Shiva half Parvati on its north Harihara half Shiva half Vishnu to its west and Lakulisha to the south 27 28 Mounted on a lintel at the sanctum entrance is Shiva and Parvati flanked by Brahma and Vishnu on either side The steps at the sanctum entrance are flanked by the river goddesses Ganga and Yamuna with attendants 27 Jambulingeshwara temple edit nbsp The Nataraja sukanasa on Jambulingeshwara temple spire Another small temple the Jambulingeshwara temple also called the Jambulinga temple is variously estimated by ASI and Michell to have been complete between mid 7th and early 8th century respectively 29 28 The temple is built around a square garbha griha sacrum sanctum 27 whose outer walls feature intricate devakoshtha linteled niches with decorated frames with Hamsa and mythical makaras Inside the frames are images of Vishnu on its north Surya Sun god to its west and Lakulisha to the south 29 The temple also experiments with the idea of projecting sukanasa from the shikhara in front over the mandapa The temple still faces east greeting the sunrise The Nandi too is provided with a raised platform which is in ruins and the Nandi image shows signs of erosion 29 28 The dancing Shiva Nataraja with Parvati and Nandi by his side on the frontal arch sukanasa is better preserved 28 The style of the temple is northern rekha nagara with a curvilinear profile of squares diminishing as they rise towards the sky The amalaka and kalasha of the northern style however are damaged and not in place The entrance of the Jambulingeshwara mandapa is decorated with three shakhas each with purnakumbhas below their capitals A swan themed frieze covers the passageway with the faint remains of the carvings of swans kutas and salas 29 Galaganatha Temple edit nbsp nbsp Left Galaganatha Temple s sabha mandapa floor and covered pradakshina patha Right Shiva carving The Galaganatha temple lies to the east of the Jambulingeshwara temple Unlike the previous two temples ASI estimates this temple to be from the mid 8th century 29 whereas Michell states that it is likely from late 7th century 30 The temple is a northern rekha nagara style with a linga and a vestibule antarala within the temple sanctum garbha griha Outside the temple is a seated Nandi that faces the sanctum 29 The sanctum has a covered circumambulatory path pradakshina patha indicating that this Hindu tradition was well established by 7th to 8th century Various mandapas exist in this temple such as a social or community hall sabha mantapa used for ceremonial functions and a mukha mantapa of which only the foundation remains 29 30 The entrance to the mantapa is flanked by the river goddesses Ganga and Yamuna 30 The Galagatha temple is mostly in ruins except for the southern part which contains a carved slab showing an eight armed Shiva killing the demon Andhaka while wearing a garland of skulls as a yajnopavita sacred thread across the chest 29 30 According to Michell the Galaganatha temple is notable for being almost an exact copy of the Svarga Brahma temple of Alampur in Andhra Pradesh a temple that is dated to 689 CE Given both Alampur and Pattadakal were a part of the Badami Chalukya kingdom an exchange of ideas is likely 30 The basement of the eastern moulding is notable for depicting friezes of Panchatantra fables such as that of the mischievous monkey and the fable of two headed bird 29 Chandrashekhara Temple edit nbsp Chandrashekhara temple Chandrashekhara temple is a small east facing temple without a tower It is situated on the south side of the Galaganatha temple 31 This temple has been dated by Michell to the late 9th or early 10th century 31 whereas the ASI dates it to the mid 8th century 32 The temple has a garbha griha with a Shiva linga and a closed hall a Nandi sits on a platform to the east facing the linga 31 It is laid out within a space 33 33 feet in length and 17 33 in breadth on an adhishthana platform based on certain design rules in Hindu texts 32 Detailed Pilasters yet lacking in ornamentation decorate the exterior walls of the temple 31 There is a devakostha niche in the walls on either side of the Chandrashekhara temple sanctum The temple lacks a lintel but features a dvarapala guardian on each side of the entrance the door frames are carved with shakhas 32 Sangameshwara Temple edit nbsp nbsp Left Sangameshwara Temple s pillared entrance Right A side showing experimentation with window styles and wall carvings Sangameshwara temple also called the Vijayeshvara temple is a large Dravida style east facing temple located on the south side of the Chandrashekhara temple 31 Inscriptions at the temple and other evidence date it to between 720 CE and 733 CE The death of its patron king Vijayaditya in 734 CE resulted in the temple being left unfinished although work continued intermittently in later centuries 33 34 During the Badami Chalukya reign between 543 and 757 CE other important Sangameshwara temples were built such as the one at KuDavelli in modern times this temple was relocated to Alampur after extensive restoration work 35 The inscriptions found in this and other temples mention sponsor names from different centuries including those of Hindu queens suggesting they actively supported the temple architecture and arts 36 37 nbsp Incomplete Vishnu avatar Varaha relief on Sangameswara Shaiva temple wall Although the temple is not the largest among those at Pattadakal it is nonetheless of imposing proportions 33 The temple has a square layout 38 with an east facing sanctum The sanctum surrounded by a covered pradakshina patha circumambulatory path lit by three carved windows Inside the sanctum is a Shiva Linga In front of the sanctum is a vestibule that is flanked on each side by smaller shrines These shrines once contained carvings of Ganesha and Durga but the carvings have since gone missing 33 Further east of the hall is a seated Nandi Past the vestibule is a mandapa within which are sixteen massive pillars set in groups of four which may have been added after construction of the temple was completed 33 34 The vimana superstructure above the temple and the outer walls of the temple are well preserved 33 The vimana is a two tiered structure crowned with a square kuta sikhara and kalasha The temple walls contain many devakostha niches carved with images of Vishnu and Shiva some of which are in various stages of completion 34 The temple is built on a raised moulded base with decorative friezes of elephants yali and makara mythical creatures 33 Above the kapota eaves are detailed friezes of ganas playful dwarfs who are portrayed as if they are struggling to hold the weight of the temple structure The parapet displays hara various kinds of string in Hindu temple texts of various styles including karnakutas square and salas oblong which flow with the design below them and are decorated with kudus 34 33 Shaivism Vaishnavism and Shaktism themes are presented in the carvings at the temple The Shaiva iconography includes a dancing Nataraja Ardhanarishvara half Shiva half Parvati as essential halves of each other Shiva with Bhringi Shiva spearing the demon Andhaka and the yogi Lakulisha The Vaishnava iconography includes avatars of Vishnu such as Varaha lifting goddess earth Bhudevi 33 Excavations into the foundations of its ruined hall in 1969 and 1971 revealed the archaeologically significant discovery of a brick temple structure beneath the hall This discovery led to the proposal that Sangameshwara had been built over an older temple possibly dating to the 3rd century CE 39 Kashi Vishwanatha Temple edit nbsp Kashi Vishwanatha temple with Nandi facing the sanctum Also known as Kashivishweswara the Kashi Vishwanatha temple is another of the smaller temples at Pattadakal The temple has been variously dated to the late 7th century early 8th century or the mid 8th century 40 41 42 Much like the other temples the core of the Kashi Vishwanatha temple is the square garbha griha sanctum which houses a linga To the east of the garbha griha is the moulded platform of a Nandi mantapa featuring the image of a seated Nandi The temple also features a pranala a stone structure used to drain out water used during devotional activities and an antarala or foyer connecting to a mantapa with a ruined entrance porch The river goddesses Ganga and Yamuna are still visible at the entrance to the mantapa 42 40 The temple sits on a raised platform with five layers of mouldings decorated with 8th century carvings of horses elephants lions peacocks and flowery vine designs The wall surfaces have pilaster pairs supporting chaitya style arches 42 40 The entrance door features a Shaiva dvarapala guardian on each side 42 Sculptures of Ardhanariswara half Shiva half Parvati and Lakulisha are carved into the northern wall of the temple mantapa but these have been damaged and defaced 40 The kapota cornice are decorated with motifs and carved with ganas playful dwarfs carrying garlands brackets show flying couples and kirtimukhas 42 40 The superstructure displaying a well developed North Indian Rekha Nagara style is a rising five stage projection of centered squares with a complex pattern of interlocking gavakshas 40 but the amalaka and kalasha are now missing 42 The sukanasa mounted on a spire in front of the temple is of a dancing Uma Maheshwara Parvati Shiva set inside a chaitya arch 42 40 Inside the temple are pillars and pilasters intricately carved with friezes depicting the Bhagavata Purana Vaishnavism the Shiva Purana Shaivism and the Ramayana One frieze shows the demon Ravana lifting mount Kailasha others show the playful pranks of Krishna while another narrates the Kalyansundarmurti marriage of Shiva and Parvati 42 40 One relief in particular shows Shiva coming out of the cylindrical linga 40 The mandapa ceiling has carvings of Shiva Nandi and Parvati holding Kartikeya This image is concentrically surrounded by the ashta dikpalas eight directional guardians 42 40 Trailokeshwara Temple edit Trillokeshwara temple is a mid 8th century Shiva temple sponsored by queen Trailokyamahadevi 43 It is located south of the Kashi Vishwanatha temple southwest of the Sangameshwara temple and in close proximity to Virupaksha 44 The temple was built about the same time as the Virupaksha temple with a similar design and layout but is somewhat smaller and has a few important differences 45 nbsp nbsp Left Mallikarjuna Temple walled entrance Right A wall carving The temple reflects a fully developed South Indian vimana style architecture Its garbha griya sanctum has a Shiva linga and features a circumambulatory path pradakshina patha In front of the sanctum is an antechamber antarala with small shrines for Durga as Mahishasuramardini killing the buffalo demon and another for Ganesha on each side both currently empty A Nandi mantapa is included in the temple wherein Nandi faces the sanctum 43 Access to the sanctum is through a pillared sabha mantapa community hall with entrance porches enclosures prakara and a gateway pratoli 43 nbsp Lovers inside Mallikarjuna temple The temple though similar to the Virupaksha temple experiments with new architectural ideas that makes it distinct 46 The depiction of a dancing Shiva as Nataraja in the Mallikarjuna temple is set in the shallow arch of the sukanasa As another example the topmost storey of the shikara superstructure of this temple lacks hara elements threads while its roof is hemispherical unlike the square roof of the Virupaksha temple 43 46 The use of stone carvings for storytelling is prevalent throughout the temple The legends of Hindu epics and the Puranas are depicted on the temple pillars in the community hall These stories span all major traditions within Hinduism including Shaivism Vaishnavism and Shaktism 45 The rasa lila of Krishna whose stories are found in the Bhagavata Purana are shown on friezes as are Hindu fables from the Panchatantra 45 47 Like other Hindu temples the friezes of the Mallikarjuna temple show kama and mithuna scenes of amorous couples In other places artha scenes such as a worker walking with an elephant carrying a log and single women with different emotional expressions are carved into stone 43 45 one of these women carries an 8th century musical instrument 46 Virupaksha Temple edit nbsp nbsp Left Virupaksha Temple from southwest corner Right A Nandi shrine active temple The Virupaksha temple located to the immediate south of the Mallikarjuna temple is the largest and most sophisticated of the monuments at Pattadakal 48 In inscriptions it is referred to as Shri Lokeshvara Mahasila Prasada after its sponsor Queen Lokmahadevi and is dated to about 740 CE 10 It was constructed after the successful military campaigns of King Vikramaditya II against the Pallavas 4th 9th centuries CE and the inscription mentions grant to the musicians of the temple by the Queen and also disclosing the identity of the chief architect Gunda Anivaritacharya to the architect and by giving him honour of perijereppu patta by king Vikramaditya II 25 49 48 50 The temple is notable for its range and quality of construction exemplifying a well developed Dravidian architectural style as well as the inscribed names of the artists beneath the panels they worked on 10 51 52 As is common with other temples at Pattadakal the Virupaksha temple was built facing east centred around a square garbha griha sanctum with a Shiva Linga surrounded by a covered circumabulatory path pradakshina patha In front of the sanctum is an antarala with two small shrines within which are facing images of Ganesha and Parvati in her Durga aspect as Mahishasuramardini killing the buffalo demon 10 51 The external Nandi pavilion is aligned on an east west axis as are the mantapa and antechamber 53 The temple site forms a rectangle consisting of fused squares bounded by walls which are decorated with carvings 51 Within the compound are smaller shrines of which there were once 32 based on the foundation footprint layout but most have since been lost The entrance leads to a mantapa with 18 columns 4 5 aisle 5 4 with a 4x4 set forming the inner mantapa and two leading to the darshana space 51 nbsp A relief at Virupaksha temple The tower above the sanctum is a three storey pyramidal structure with each storey bearing motifs that reflect those in the sanctum below However for clarity of composition the artisans had simplified the themes in the pilastered projections and intricate carvings 54 The third storey is the simplest having only parapet kutas a kuta roof with each face decorated with kudus a structure common in later Dravidian architecture Hindu temples A kalasha like pot found in festivals social ceremonies and personal rituals such as weddings crowns the temple The top of this pot is 17 5 metres 57 ft above the temple pavement the highest for any pre 9th century South Indian temple 54 The sukanasa on the tower is large exceeding half the height of the superstructure to aid visibility from a distance 55 The sanctum walls and also those of the nearby mantapa space are decorated with intricately detailed carvings These carvings depict images of Shaivism Vaishnavism and Shaktism deities and themes such as Narasimha and Varaha Vaishaivism Bhairava and Nataraja Shaivism Harihara half Shiva half Vishnu Lakulisa Shaivism Brahma Durga Saraswati Lakshmi and others 10 56 57 According to George Michell the carvings on the walls and porch of the Virupaksha temple exterior are vehicles for diverse sculptural compositions by far the most numerous found on any Early Chalukya monument 58 Other than Hindu gods and goddesses numerous panels show depict people either as couples in courtship and mithuna or as individuals wearing jewellery or carrying work implements 59 nbsp A Virupaksha frieze showing two Panchatantra fables The temple has numerous friezes spanning a variety of topics such as for example two men wrestling rishi with Vishnu rishi with Shiva Vishnu rescuing Gajendra elephant trapped by a crocodile in a lotus pond scenes of hermitages and sadhus seated in meditative yoga posture Vedic deities such as Surya riding the chariot with Aruna Indra on elephant and others are carved in stone 60 A few depict scenes from the Ramayana such as those involving hanuman sitting on a high chair made of his own magic tail and higher than the height of the ravana s throne golden deer Hanuman Sugriva Vali Ravana and Jatayu bird Sita being abducted the struggles of Rama and Lakshmana Other friezes show scenes from the Mahabharata Vasudeva jailed in by Kamsa and birth of Sr krishna Krishna s playful life story in the Bhagavata Purana and the Harivamsa as well as fables from the Panchatantra and other Hindu texts 61 62 63 The temple contains historically significant inscriptions that provide hints about the society and culture of 8th century India For example one inscription mentions a grant to the musicians of the temple by the queen 59 The famous Kailasha temple at Ellora Caves was modeled after this temple although the Virupaksha temple was itself modeled after the Kailasanatha temple at Kanchipuram 10 64 Papanatha temple edit nbsp Papanatha temple The Papanatha temple is situated apart from the main cluster of eight monuments It is about half kilometer to the south of Virupaksha and has been dated towards the end of the Early Chalukya rule period approximately mid 8th century 65 66 The temple is noted for its novel mixture of Dravida and Nagara Hindu temple styles 66 67 The unusual layout of the temple is possibly due to its construction which occurred in three stages but there is a lack of epigraphical evidence to support this hypothesis Its architectural and sculptural details do show a consistent and unified theme indicative of a plan The temple is longer incorporating two interconnected mantapas one with 16 pillars and another with 4 pillars 68 The decorations parapets and some parts of the layout are Dravida in style while the tower and pilastered niches are of the Nagara style 68 Like the other temples the Papanatha temple faces east towards the sunrise and has a Shiva linga in its garbha griya sanctum except there is no Nandi mandapa Instead there is an image of Nandi housed in the sabha mantapa facing the sanctum 65 66 The temple walls are notable for the carved deities and themes of Shaivism and Vaishnavism Durga is depicted in one of the niches Intricately carved panels are displayed on the walls depicting legends such as the Ramayana and excerpts of the Kiratarjuniya 65 66 The centre of the ceiling is decorated with an elaborate Shiva Nataraja while other ceiling slabs show Vishnu one panel shows him in a reclining Anantasayana pose 69 Outside in the mandapas are images of single women and couples in courtship and different stages of mithuna Many panels show musicians with different types of musical instruments 65 66 Jain Narayana Temple edit nbsp Jain Narayana temple The Jaina temple at Pattadakal was built during the 9th century possibly with sponsorship from the Rashtrakuta King Krishna II or the Kalyani Chalukyas Unlike the other nine temples the Narayana temple lacks Hindu deities and intricate panels of the other nine but instead has a statue of a Jina carved into the north side kapota eave 70 7 Like the Hindu temples this temple also features a square sanctum a circumambulatory path an antechamber a mantapa and a porch The mantapa is divided into seven bays at the north and south walls with narrow niches containing seated Jinas The bays are in the North Indian style and the tower storey has a carved square shikhara 70 The mantapa has a row of lathe turned sandstone pillars The kakshasana are decorated with the figures of dancers purna ghata nidhis vyalas but some of the artwork is only partially finished The entrance features carvings of a life sized elephant torso with riders 70 7 According to Adam Hardy the niches of this Jain temple mantapa may have previously featured images 71 The Archaeological Survey of India has conducted excavations at the site yielding evidence of an older temple and Jaina presence According to the ASI the excavations uncovered the remains of a large temple complex built in bricks and also a beautiful sculpture of Tirthankara standing in sama bhanga indicating the existence of a temple probably belonging to before or beginning of the early Chalukyan rule 70 Other monuments and inscriptions edit nbsp Old Kannada inscription of Chalukya emperor Vikramaditya II on victory pillar Virupaksha Temple Pattadakal c 733 745 nbsp Old Kannada inscription describes the grant made for Sangameshwara temple by Chalukya King Vijayaditya c 1162 A number of inscriptions in the old Kannada language have been found at Pattadakal notably in the Virupaksha Sangameshwara and Papanatha temples These inscriptions are an important source of information regarding the grants made by King Vikramaditya and Vijayaditya various queens and others for the construction and operation of the temple 72 73 They have also provided valuable insight into the evolution of various written Indian scripts As an example one particular 8th century column is inscribed in two Sanskrit scripts the northern Indian Siddhamatrika script note 1 and the southern Indian Kannada script 75 nbsp Mahabharata frieze Other notable monuments at Pattadakal include a monolithic stone pillar bearing numerous inscriptions the Naganatha temple the Mahakuteshwara temple which also bears numerous inscriptions as well as several small shrines dedicated to Shiva Near the Virupaksha Sangameshwara and Mallikarjuna temples is a Shaiva stone pillar featuring a trident emblem The pillar bears inscriptions stating it was erected by Jnana Shivacharya from Mrigathanikahara located on the north bank of the Ganges and that he had gifted a parcel of land to the Vijayeshwara citation needed In 2008 Upinder Singh wrote that S Venkateshaiah a senior archaeologist with the ASI had located the quarry where the stones were sourced some 5 kilometers away from the Pattadakal The site is notable for sketches of Shiva Nandi Durga Ganesh trident peacock swastika symbols and inscriptions Some of these may be emblems of guilds sanghata that quarried and supplied the stones for temples 76 Significance editAccording to art historian Cathleen Cummings the monuments at Pattadakal are a historically significant example of religion society and culture particularly Hindu and Jain in the Deccan region and is an expression of Hindu kingship and religious worldview of 8th century India She writes that the artisans express the conflicting concepts of Dharma duty virtue righteousness and Moksha liberation in Hindu theology particularly Pashupata Shaivism Furthermore she states that the significance lies not just within individual images but also in their relative location and sequence as well how it expresses the historic tension in Hindu religious tradition between the stately life of the householder and the life of the renouncer monk 77 The expression of Dharma particularly raja dharma royal authority and duty as exemplified by Rama and Moksha are seen throughout the various temples at Pattadakal The former is depicted in various friezes using examples of the life story of Rama from the Ramayana while the latter is expressed with images of Lakulisha Nataraja Yoga and numerous ascetics 78 Other imagery that is particularly prevalent at Pattadakal is that between Purusha and Prakriti the soul and the matter the masculine and the feminine 79 The temples at Pattadakal are symbolic of the Chalukya inclination towards integration and experimentation resulting in a merging of the Northern and Southern Indian architectural styles This is particularly evident when the architecture at Pattadakal Aihole and Badami are viewed together Aihole in the 5th century served as the incubator for the concepts that would lead to this integration of styles These concepts were further refined in Badami during the 6th and 7th centuries The culmination of this is as described by UNESCO the apogee of an eclectic art which in the 7th and 8th centuries achieved a harmonious blend of architectural forms from the north and south of India 2 80 Early medieval era music and arts edit Among the sculptures at Pattadakal is one of a long neck lute Sitar like dated to the 10th century The site also shows friezes with more conventional musical instruments but the long neck lute suggests there was a tradition of musicians innovating with new instrument designs Another example are the 7th century stick zithers found carved in the bas relief at Mahabalipuram in Tamil Nadu 81 See also editAihole Alampur group of temples Telangana Badami cave temples Ellora Caves Gajendragad Lakkundi List of State Protected Monuments in Karnataka Mahadeva Temple Itagi Mahakuta group of temples Sirpur Group of Monuments SudiNotes edit The script is also called early Nagari Kutila Vikata and acute angled it is referred to as Siddham script in East Asian Buddhist texts 74 References edit a b c d World Heritage Sites Pattadakal Archaeological Survey of India Retrieved 21 June 2016 a b c d Group of Monuments at Pattadakal UNESCO See also Advisory Body Evaluation ICOMOS UNESCO a b c d e f g h i World Heritage Sites Pattadakal More Detail Archaeological Survey of India Government of India 2012 a b Michell 2017 pp 12 19 110 114 World Heritage Sites Pattadakal Group of Monuments at Pattadakal 1987 Karnataka ASI Government of India Michell 2017 pp 110 131 a b c Michell 2017 p 136 Cathleen Cummings 2014 pp 1 7 Lippe 1967 a b c d e f Virupaksha Temple Archived 1 November 2017 at the Wayback Machine ASI India 2011 Michell 2017 pp 12 41 Gary Tarr 1970 Chronology and Development of the Chaḷukya Cave Temples Ars Orientalis The Smithsonian Institution and Department of the History of Art University of Michigan Vol 8 pp 155 184 Belgaum airport permanent dead link AAI Govt of India Official Website Archived 1 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine Belgaum New terminal building at Belagavi airport The Hindu 30 September 2017 Pattadakal National Informatics Center Archived from the original on 11 September 2004 Retrieved 21 June 2016 George Michell 2002 pp 2 7 Michell 2017 pp 12 19 110 124 Carved for eternity Pattadakal The Hindu 6 April 2013 Retrieved 24 May 2013 a b c d e Michell 2017 pp 19 20 Hermann Kulke Dietmar Rothermund 1998 A History of India Routledge pp 106 113 ISBN 978 0 415 15482 6 George Childs Kohn 2013 Dictionary of Wars Routledge pp 146 147 ISBN 978 1 135 95494 9 a b T Richard Blurton 1993 Hindu Art Harvard University Press pp 53 55 212 218 ISBN 978 0 674 39189 5 Christopher Tadgell 2015 The East Buddhists Hindus and the Sons of Heaven Routledge pp 90 95 ISBN 978 1 136 75384 8 Megaliths of Pattadakal Deccan Herald 26 September 2020 Retrieved 30 August 2021 a b Munshi K m 1954 History And Culture Of The Indian People Vol 3 classical Age Group of Monuments at Pattadakal UNESCO Retrieved 1 September 2016 a b c d e f Kadasiddheswara Temple Archived 1 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine ASI India 2011 a b c d e Michell 2017 pp 110 111 a b c d e f g h i Jambulingeswara Temple Archived 23 March 2018 at the Wayback Machine ASI India 2011 a b c d e Michell 2017 pp 111 112 a b c d e Michell 2017 p 112 a b c Chandrashekhara Temple Archived 23 March 2018 at the Wayback Machine ASI India 2011 a b c d e f g h Michell 2017 p 112 114 a b c d Sangameshwara Temple Archived 1 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine ASI India 2011 Carol Radcliffe Bolon 1985 The Durga Temple Aihole and the Saṅgamesvara Temple KuḐavelli A Sculptural Review Ars Orientalis The Smithsonian Institution and Department of the History of Art University of Michigan Vol 15 pages 47 64 Michell 2017 p 113 115 Heather Elgood 2000 pp 165 166 Vinayak Bharne amp Krupali Krusche 2014 pp 65 66 Norman Yoffee 2007 Negotiating the Past in the Past Identity Memory and Landscape in Archaeological Research University of Arizona Press pp 164 167 ISBN 978 0 8165 2670 3 a b c d e f g h i j Michell 2017 pp 130 131 Vinayak Bharne amp Krupali Krusche 2014 p 63 a b c d e f g h i Kasivisweswara Temple Archived 22 April 2018 at the Wayback Machine ASI India 2011 a b c d e Mallikarjuna Temple Archived 23 February 2017 at the Wayback Machine ASI India 2011 Michael W Meister amp Madhusudan A Dhaky 1996 p 24 a b c d Michell 2017 pp 128 130 a b c Michell 2017 pp 128 129 Blackburn Stuart 1996 The Brahmin and the Mongoose The Narrative Context of a Well Travelled Tale Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 59 3 Cambridge University Press 494 506 doi 10 1017 s0041977x00030615 S2CID 162672939 a b Michell 2017 pp 115 125 The Temples of Pattadakal World History Encyclopedia Retrieved 27 August 2021 George Michell 2002 pp 5 36 44 a b c d Michell 2017 pp 115 116 Kadambi Hemanth 2015 Cathleen Cummings Decoding a Hindu Temple Royalty and Religion in the Iconographic Program of the Virupaksha Temple Pattadakal South Asian Studies 31 2 Taylor amp Francis 266 268 doi 10 1080 02666030 2015 1094214 S2CID 194181431 George Michell 1977 pp 137 140 a b Michell 2017 pp 116 117 Stella Kramrisch 1993 The Hindu Temple Motilal Banarsidass pp 241 242 with footnotes ISBN 978 81 208 0223 0 Michell 2017 pp 115 118 Cathleen Cummings 2014 pp 73 76 121 123 Michell 2017 p 117 a b Michell 2017 pp 117 118 Michell 2017 pp 117 121 Michell 2017 pp 117 124 Lippe 1967 pp 5 24 John Stratton Hawley 1987 Krishna and the Birds Ars Orientalis The Smithsonian Institution and Department of the History of Art University of Michigan Vol 17 pp 137 161 M K Dhavalikar 1982 Kailasa The Stylistic Development and Chronology Bulletin of the Deccan College Research Institute 41 33 45 JSTOR 42931407 a b c d Papanatha Temple ASI India 2011 a b c d e Michell 2017 pp 132 135 George Michell 2002 pp 73 76 a b Michell 2017 pp 132 133 Michell 2017 pp 133 134 a b c d Jaina Temple Archived 1 December 2015 at the Wayback Machine ASI India 2011 Adam Hardy 1995 p 153 note 30 George Michell 2002 pp 20 35 36 James Campbell 1884 Gazetteer of the Bombay Presidency Bijapur Government Central Press pp 669 673 Richard Salomon 1998 Indian Epigraphy A Guide to the Study of Inscriptions in Sanskrit Prakrit and the Other Indo Aryan Languages Oxford University Press pp 39 footnote 112 ISBN 978 0 19 509984 3 Richard Salomon 1998 Indian Epigraphy A Guide to the Study of Inscriptions in Sanskrit Prakrit and the Other Indo Aryan Languages Oxford University Press pp 39 71 ISBN 978 0 19 509984 3 Upinder Singh 2008 p 631 Cathleen Cummings 2014 pp 2 5 Cathleen Cummings 2014 pp 5 9 184 236 268 Cathleen Cummings 2014 pp 236 245 270 278 George Michell 2002 pp 6 17 Stephen Slawek 1987 Sitar Technique in Nibaddh Forms Motilal Banarsidass pp 6 7 ISBN 978 81 208 0200 1 Bibliography edit Vinayak Bharne Krupali Krusche 2014 Rediscovering the Hindu Temple The Sacred Architecture and Urbanism of India Cambridge Scholars ISBN 978 1 4438 6734 4 Cathleen Cummings 2014 Decoding a Hindu Temple Royalty and Religion in the Iconographic Program of the Virupaksha Temple Pattadakal South Asian Studies ISBN 978 0 9834472 6 9 Heather Elgood 2000 Hinduism and the Religious Arts Bloomsbury Academic ISBN 978 0 304 70739 3 Adam Hardy 1995 Indian Temple Architecture Form and Transformation the Karṇaṭa Draviḍa Tradition 7th to 13th Centuries Abhinav ISBN 978 81 7017 312 0 Stella Kramrisch 1993 The Hindu Temple Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 0224 7 Lippe Aschwin 1967 Some Sculptural Motifs on Early Calukya Temples Artibus Asiae 29 1 5 24 doi 10 2307 3250288 JSTOR 3250288 George Michell 1977 The Hindu Temple An Introduction to Its Meaning and Forms University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 53230 1 George Michell 2002 Pattadakal Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 565651 0 Michell George l 2014 Temple Architecture and Art of the Early Chalukyas Badami Mahakuta Aihole Pattadakal Niyogi Books ISBN 978 93 83098 33 0 Michell George 2017 Badami Aihole Pattadakal Jaico Reprinted Orig Year 2011 ISBN 978 81 8495 600 9 Michael W Meister Madhusudan A Dhaky 1996 Encyclopaedia of Indian Temple Architecture American Institute of Indian Studies ISBN 978 81 86526 00 2 Upinder Singh 2008 A History of Ancient and Early Medieval India From the Stone Age to the 12th Century Pearson Education ISBN 978 81 317 1677 9 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pattadakal Pattadakal World Heritage Site Pattadakal Photo gallery Pattadakal Karnataka Government of Tourism Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pattadakal amp oldid 1194011728, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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