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NCERT Notes Chapter 6 Temple Architecture and Sculpture Part-1 notes pdf free download (An Introduction to Indian Art Part-I) || Class 11 fine art notes || Class 11 painting notes || class 11 ncert notes || CBSE Notes || UPSE Notes || finenotes4u

CH 6 TEMPLE ARCHITECTURE AND SCULPTURE (Part-1)



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⭐Mind Map





  • " Today when we say 'temple' in English we generally mean a devalaya, devkula, mandir, kovil, deol, devasthanam or prasada depending on which part of India we are in "

  • Most of the art and architectural remains that survive from Ancient and Medieval India are religious in nature.
  • That does not mean that people did not have art in their homes at those times, but domestic dwellings and the things in them were mostly made from materials like wood and clay which have perished.
  • This chapter introduces us to many types of temples from India.
  • Although we have focused mostly on Hindu temples, at the end of the chapter you will find some information on major Buddhist and Jain temples too.
  • However, at all times, we must keep in mind that religious shrines were also made for many local cults in villages and forest areas, but again, not being of stone the ancient or medieval shrines in those areas have also vanished.

⭐EARLY TEMPLES

  • While construction of stupas continued, Brahmanical temples and images of gods also started getting constructed. Often temples were decorated with the images of gods.
  • Myths mentioned in the Puranas became part of narrative representation of the Brahmanical religion.
  • Each temple had a principal image of a god.

The shrines of the temples were of three kinds:

  • (i) sandhara type (without pradikshinapatha)
  • (ii) nirandhara type (with pradakshinapatha)
  • (iii) sarvatobhadra (which can be accessed from all sides)

Some of the important temple sites of this period are:

  • (i) Deogarh in Uttar Pradesh
  • (ii) Eran, Nachna-Kuthara and Udaygiri near Vidisha in Madhya Pradesh
  • These temples are simple structures consisting of a veranda, a hall and a shrine at the rear.



    ⭐THE BASIC FORM OF THE HINDU TEMPLE

    • The basic form of the Hindu temple comprises the following:
    • (i) sanctum (garbhagriha literally ‘womb-house’), which was a small cubicle with a single entrance and grew into a larger chamber in time. The garbhagriha is made to house the main icon which is itself the focus of much ritual attention;
    • (ii) the entrance to the temple which may be a portico or colonnaded hall that incorporates space for a large number of worshippers and is known as a mandapa;
    • (iii) freestanding temples tend to have a mountain-like spire, which can take the shape of a curving shikhar in North India and a pyramidal tower, called a vimana, in South India;
    • (iv) the vahan, i.e., the mount or vehicle of the temple’s main deity along with a standard pillar or dhvaj is placed axially before the sanctum.
    • Two broad orders of temples in the country are known — Nagara in the north and Dravida in the south.
    • At times, the Vesar style of temples as an independent style created through the selective mixing of the Nagara and Dravida orders is mentioned by some scholars.
    • Elaborate studies are available on the various sub-styles within these orders. We will look into the differences in the forms further on in this chapter.
    • As temples grew more complex, more surfaces were created for sculpture through additive geometry, i.e., by adding more and more rhythmically projecting, symmetrical walls and niches, without breaking away from the fundamental plan of the shrine.

    ⭐SCULPTURE, ICONOGRAPHY AND ORNAMENTATION

    • The study of images of deities falls within a branch of art history called ‘iconography’, which consists of identification of images based on certain symbols and mythologies associated with them.
    • And very often, while the fundamental myth and meaning of the deity may remain the same for centuries, its specific usage at a spot can be a response to its local or immediate social, political or geographical context.
    • Every region and period produced its own distinct style of images with its regional variations in iconography.
    • The temple is covered with elaborate sculpture and ornament that form a fundamental part of its conception.
    • The placement of an image in a temple is carefully planned: for instance, river goddesses (Ganga and Yamuna) are usually found at the entrance of a garbhagriha in a Nagara temple, dvarapalas (doorkeepers) are usually found on the gateways or gopurams of Dravida temples, similarly, mithunas (erotic images), navagrahas (the nine auspicious planets) and yakshas are also placed at entrances to guard them.
    • Various forms or aspects of the main divinity are to be found on the outer walls of the sanctum.
    • The deities of directions, i.e., the ashtadikpalas face the eight key directions on the outer walls of the sanctum and/or on the outer walls of a temple.
    • Subsidiary shrines around the main temple are dedicated to the family or incarnations of the main deity.
    • Finally, various elements of ornamentation such as gavaksha, vyala/yali, kalpa-lata, amalaka, kalasha, etc. are used in distinct ways and places in a temple.

    ⭐THE NAGARA OR NORTH INDIAN TEMPLE STYLE

    • The style of temple architecture that became popular in northern India is known as nagara.
    • In North India it is common for an entire temple to be built on a stone platform with steps leading up to it.
    • Further, unlike in South India it does not usually have elaborate boundary walls or gateways.
    • While the earliest temples had just one tower, or shikhara, later temples had several.
    • The garbhagriha is always located directly under the tallest tower.
    • There are many subdivisions of nagara temples depending on the shape of the shikhara.
    • There are different names for the various parts of the temple in different parts of India; however, the most common name for the simple shikhara which is square at the base and whose walls curve or slope inward to a point on top is called the 'latina' or the rekha-prasada type of shikara.
    • The second major type of architectural form in the nagara order is the phamsana.
    • Phamsana buildings tend to be broader and shorter than latina ones.
    • Their roofs are composed of several slabs that gently rise to a single point over the centre of the building, unlike the latina ones which look like sharply rising tall towers.
    • Phamsana roofs do not curve inward, instead they slope upwards on a straight incline.
    • In many North Indian temples you will notice that the phamsana design is used for the mandapas while the main garbhagriha is housed in a latina building.
    • Later on, the latina buildings grew complex, and instead of appearing like a single tall tower, the temple began to support many smaller towers, which were clustered together like rising mountain-peaks with the tallest one being in the centre, and this was the one which was always above the garbhagriha.

    • The third main sub-type of the nagara building is what is generally called the valabhi type.
    • These are rectangular buildings with a roof that rises into a vaulted chamber.
    • The edge of this vaulted chamber is rounded, like the bamboo or wooden wagons that would have been drawn by bullocks in ancient times.
    • They are usually called ‘wagonvaulted buildings’.
    • As mentioned above, the form of the temple is influenced by ancient building forms that were already in existence before the fifth century CE.
    • The valabhi type of building was one of them.
    • For instance, if you study the ground-plan of many of the Buddhist rock-cut chaitya caves, you will notice that they are shaped as long halls which end in a curved back.
    • From the inside, the roof of this portion also looks like a wagon-vaulted roof.
    • Ancient temples of Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan share many traits.
    • The most visible is that they are made of sandstone.
    • Some of the oldest surviving structural temples from the Gupta Period are in Madhya Pradesh.
    • These are relatively modest-looking shrines each having four pillars that support a small mandapa which looks like a simple square porch-like extension before an equally small room that served as the garbhagriha.
    • Importantly, of the two such temples that survive, one is at Udaigiri, which is on the outskirts of Vidisha and is part of a larger Hindu complex of cave shrines, while the other one is at Sanchi, near the stupa. This is the first temple having a flat roof.
    • This means that similar developments were being incorporated in the architecture of temples of both the religions.
    • Deogarh (in Lalitpur District, Uttar Pradesh) was built in the early sixth century CE.
    • That is, about a hundred years or so after the small temples we just learnt about in Sanchi and Udaigiri.
    • This makes it a classic example of a late Gupta Period type of temple.
    • This temple is in the panchayatana style of architecture where the main shrine is built on a rectangular plinth with four smaller subsidiary shrines at the four corners (making it a total number of five shrines, hence the name, panchayatana).
    • The tall and curvilinear shikhara also corroborates this date.
    • The presence of this curving latina or rekha-prasada type of shikhara also makes it clear that this is an early example of a classic nagara style of temple.
    • This west-facing temple has a grand doorway with standing sculptures of female figures representing the Ganga on the left side and the Yamuna on the right side.
    • The temple depicts Vishnu in various forms, due to which it was assumed that the four subsidiary shrines must also have housed Vishnu’s avatars and the temple was mistaken for a dasavatara temple.

    • In fact, it is not actually known to whom the four subsidiary shrines were originally dedicated.
    • There are three main reliefs of Vishnu on the temple walls: Sheshashayana on the south, Nara-Narayan on the east and Gajendramoksha on the west.
    • The temple is west-facing, which is less common, as most temples are east- or north-facing.
    • Numerous temples of smaller dimensions have been constructed over a period of time.
    • By contrast, if we study the temples of Khajuraho made by the Chandela Kings in the tenth century, i.e., about four hundred years after the temple at Deogarh, we can see how dramatically the shape and style of the nagara temple architecture had developed.
    • The Lakshmana temple of Khajuraho, dedicated to Vishnu, was built in 954 by the Chandela king, Dhanga.
    • A nagara temple, it is placed on a high platform accessed by stairs.
    • There are four smaller temples in the corners, and all the towers or shikharas rise high, upward in a curved pyramidal fashion, emphasising the temple’s vertical thrust ending in a horizontal fluted disc called an amalak topped with a kalash or vase.
    • The crowning elements: amalak and kalash, are to be found on all nagara temples of this period.
    • The temple also has projecting balconies and verandahs, thus very different from Deogarh.
    • Kandariya Mahadeo temple at Khajuraho is the epitome of temple architecture in Central India.
    • In the architecture and the sculptures of this temple, which is a massive structure, we see all features of central Indian temples of the medival period for which they are known and appreciated all over.
    • Khajuraho’s temples are also known for their extensive erotic sculptures; the erotic expression is given equal importance in human experience as spiritual pursuit, and it is seen as part of a larger cosmic whole.
    • Many Hindu temples, therefore, feature mithun (embracing couple) sculptures, considered auspicious.
    • Usually, they are placed at the entrance of the temple or on an exterior wall or they may also be placed on the walls between the mandapa and the main shrine.
    • Khajuraho’s sculptures are highly stylised with typical features: they are in almost full relief, cut away from the surrounding stone, with sharp noses, prominent chins, long slanting eyes and eyebrows.
    • There are many temples at Khajuraho, most of them devoted to Hindu gods.
    • There are some Jain temples as well as a Chausanth Yogini temple, which is of interest.
    • Predating the tenth century, this is a temple of small, square shrines of roughly-hewn granite blocks, each dedicated to devis or goddesses associated with the rise of Tantric worship after the seventh century.
    • Several such temples were dedicated to the cult of the yoginis across Madhya Pradesh, Odisha and even as far south as Tamil Nadu.
    • They were built between the seventh and tenth centuries, but few have survived.
    • The temples in the north-western parts of India including Gujarat and Rajasthan, and stylistically extendable, at times, to western Madhya Pradesh are too numerous to include here in any comprehensive way.
    • The stone used to build the temples ranges in colour and type.
    • While sandstone is the commonest, a grey to black basalt can be seen in some of the tenth to twelveth century temple sculptures.
    • The most exuberant and famed is the manipulatable soft white marble which is also seen in some of the tenth to twelveth century Jain temples in Mount Abu and the fifteenth century temple at Ranakpur.
    • Among the most important art-historical sites in the region is Samlaji in Gujarat which shows how earlier artistic traditions of the region mixed with a post-Gupta style and gave rise to a distinct style of sculpture.
    • A large number of sculptures made of grey schist have been found in this region which can be dated between the sixth and eighth centuries CE.
    • While the patronage of these is debated, the date is established on the basis of the style.
    • The Sun temple at Modhera dates back to early eleventh century and was built by Raja Bhimdev I of the Solanki Dynasty in 1026.
    • There is a massive rectangular stepped tank called the surya kund in front of it.
    • Proximity of sacred architecture to a water body such as a tank, a river or a pond has been noticed right from the earliest times.
    • By the early eleventh century they had become a part of many temples.
    • This hundred-square-metre rectangular pond is perhaps the grandest temple tank in India.
    • A hundred and eight miniature shrines are carved in between the steps inside the tank.
    • A huge ornamental arch-torana leads one to the sabha mandapa (the assembly hall) which is open on all sides, as was the fashion of the times in western and central Indian temples.
    • The influence of the woodcarving tradition of Gujarat is evident in the lavish carving and sculpture work.
    • However, the walls of the central small shrine are devoid of carving and are left plain as the temple faces the east and, every year, at the time of the equinoxes, the sun shines directly into this central shrine.
    • Eastern Indian temples include those found in the North-East, Bengal and Odisha.
    • Each of these three areas produced distinct types of temples.
    • The history of architecture in the North-East and Bengal is hard to study because a number of ancient buildings in those regions were renovated, and what survives now are later brick or concrete temples at those sites.
    • It appears that terracotta was the main medium of construction, and also for moulding plaques which depicted Buddhist and Hindu deities in Bengal until the seventh century.
    • A large number of sculptures have been found in Assam and Bengal which shows the development of important regional schools in those regions.
    • An old sixth-century sculpted door frame from DaParvatia near Tezpur and another few stray sculptures from Rangagora Tea Estate near Tinsukia in Assam bear witness to the import of the Gupta idiom in that region.
    • This post-Gupta style continued in the region well into the tenth century.
    • However, by the twelfth to fourteenth centuries, a distinct regional style developed in Assam.
    • The style that came with the migration of the Tais from Upper Burma mixed with the dominant Pala style of Bengal and led to the creation of what was later known as the Ahom style in and around Guwahati.
    • Kamakhya temple, a Shakti Peeth, is dedicated to Goddess Kamakhya and was built in the seventeenth century.

    Bengal:

    • The style of the sculptures during the period between the ninth and eleventh centuries in Bengal (including Bangladesh) and Bihar is known as the Pala style, named after the ruling dynasty at the time, while the style of those of the mid-eleventh to mid-thirteenth centuries is named after the Sena kings.
    • While the Palas are celebrated as patrons of many Buddhist monastic sites, the temples from that region are known to express the local Vanga style.
    • The ninth century Siddheshvara Mahadeva temple in Barakar in Burdwan District, for example, shows a tall curving shikhara crowned by a large amalaka and is an example of the early Pala style.
    • It is similar to contemporaneous temples of Odisha.
    • This basic form grows loftier with the passing of centuries.
    • Many of the temples from the ninth to the twelfth century were located at Telkupi in Purulia District.
    • They were submerged when dams were built in the region.
    • These were amongst the important examples of architectural styles prevalent in the region which showed an awareness of all the known nagara sub-types that were prevalent in the rest of North India.
    • However, several temples still survive in Purulia District which can be dated to this period.
    • The black to grey basalt and chlorite stone pillars and arched niches of these temples heavily influenced the earliest Bengal sultanate buildings at Gaur and Pandua.
    • Many local vernacular building traditions of Bengal also influenced the style of temples in that region.
    • Most prominent of these was the shape of the curving or sloping side of the bamboo roof of a Bengali hut.
    • This feature was eventually even adopted in Mughal buildings, and is known across North India as the Bangla roof.
    • In the Mughal period and later, scores of terracotta brick temples were built across Bengal and Bangladesh in a unique style that had elements of local building techniques seen in bamboo huts which were combined with older forms reminiscent of the Pala period and with the forms of arches and domes that were taken from Islamic architecture.
    • These can be widely found in and around Vishnupur, Bankura, Burdwan and Birbhum and are dated mostly to the seventeenth century.
    • The main architectural features of Odisha temples are classified in three orders, i.e., rekhapida, pidhadeul and khakra.
    • Most of the main temple sites are located in ancient Kalinga—modern Puri District, including Bhubaneswar or ancient Tribhuvanesvara, Puri and Konark.
    • The temples of Odisha constitute a distinct sub-style within the nagara order.
    • In general, here the shikhara, called deul in Odisha, is vertical almost until the top when it suddenly curves sharply inwards.
    • Deuls are preceded, as usual, by mandapas called jagamohana in Odisha.
    • The ground plan of the main temple is almost always square, which, in the upper reaches of its superstructure becomes circular in the crowning mastaka.
    • This makes the spire nearly cylindrical in appearance in its length.
    • Compartments and niches are generally square, the exterior of the temples are lavishly carved, their interiors generally quite bare.
    • Odisha temples usually have boundary walls.
    • At Konark, on the shores of the Bay of Bengal, lie the majestic ruins of the Surya or Sun temple built in stone around 1240.
    • Its shikhara was a colossal creation said to have reached 70m, which, proving too heavy for its site, fell in the nineteenth century.
    • The vast complex is within a quadrilateral precinct of which the jagamohana or the dance-pavillion (mandapa) has survived, which though no longer accessible is said to be the largest enclosed space in Hindu architecture.
    • The Sun temple is set on a high base, its walls covered in extensive, detailed ornamental carving.
    • These include twelve pairs of enormous wheels sculpted with spokes and hubs, representing the chariot wheels of the Sun god who, in mythology, rides a chariot driven by seven horses, sculpted here at the entrance staircase.
    • The whole temple thus comes to resemble a colossal processional chariot.
    • On the southern wall is a massive sculpture of surya carved out of green stone.
    • It is said that there were three such images, each carved out of a different stone placed on the three temple walls, each facing different directions.
    • The fourth wall had the doorway into the temple from where the actual rays of the sun would enter the garbhagriha.



      ⭐THE HILLS

      • A unique form of architecture developed in the hills of Kumaon, Garhwal, Himachal and Kashmir.
      • Kashmir’s proximity to prominent Gandhara sites (such as Taxila, Peshawar and the northwest frontier) lent the region a strong Gandhara influence by the fifth century CE.
      • This began to mix with the Gupta and post-Gupta traditions that were brought to it from Sarnath, Mathura and even centres in Gujarat and Bengal.
      • Brahmin pundits and Buddhist monks frequently travelled between Kashmir, Garhwal, Kumaon and religious centres in the plains like Banaras, Nalanda and even as far south as Kanchipuram.
      • As a result both Buddhist and Hindu traditions began to intermingle and spread in the hills.
      • The hills also had their own tradition of wooden buildings with pitched roofs.
      • At several places in the hills, therefore, you will find that while the main garbhagriha and shikhara are made in a rekha-prasada or latina style, the mandapa is of an older form of wooden architecture.
      • Sometimes, the temple itself takes on a pagoda shape.
      • The Karkota period of Kashmir is the most significant in terms of architecture.
      • One of the most important temples is Pandrethan, built during the eighth and ninth centuries.
      • In keeping with the tradition of a water tank attached to the shrine, this temple is built on a plinth built in the middle of a tank.
      • Although there are evidences of both Hindu and Buddhist followings in Kashmir, this temple is a Hindu one, possibly dedicated to Shiva.
      • The architecture of this temple is in keeping with the age-old Kashmiri tradition of wooden buildings.
      • Due to the snowy conditions in Kashmir, the roof is peaked and slants slowly outward.
      • The temple is moderately ornamented, moving away from the post-Gupta aesthetics of heavy carving.
      • A row of elephants at the base and a decorated doorway are the only embellishments on the shrine.
      • Like the findings at Samlaji, the sculptures at Chamba also show an amalgamation of local traditions with a post- Gupta style.
      • The images of Mahishasuramardini and Narasimha at the Laksna Devi Mandir are evidences of the influence of the post-Gupta tradition.
      • Both the images show the influence of the metal sculpture tradition of Kashmir.
      • The yellow colour of the images is possibly due to an alloy of zinc and copper which were popularly used to make images in Kashmir.
      • This temple bears an inscription that states that it was built during the reign of Meruvarman who lived in the seventh century.
      • Of the temples in Kumaon, the ones at Jageshwar near Almora, and Champavat near Pithoragarh, are classic examples of nagara architecture in the region.



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