शुक्रवार, 25 जुलाई 2014

Kailashnath Temple at Ellora - Complete Guide (Travel, History)



The Kailashnath (Kailash) temple at the Ellora Caves is part of a UNESCO World Heritage Site located near the city of Aurangabad in the state of Maharashtra. Let's take a look at their history, architectural details and travel information.
There are famous examples of rock-cut sanctuaries elsewhere in the world – Abu Simbel or Petra, for example – but nowhere else did cave architecture reach such heights of achievement or play such a central part in the development of civilization. It is as if the cave served a need that the Indian psyche felt with a peculiar intensity. A particularly fine conglomeration of these sanctuaries is to be found at Ellora, in Maharashtra state.
Ellora is dominated by the mammoth Kailashnath temple complex, or Cave 16. Dedicated to Shiva, the complex is a replica of his legendary abode at Mount Kailash in the Himalayas. The world's largest monolithic structure, approximately twice the area of the Parthenon in Greece and 1.5 times as high, the Kailasha reveals the genius, daring, and skill of its artisans.
To create the complex, an army of 7000 stonecutters worked for 150 years, starting at the top of the cliff, where they removed 930,000 cubic meters (3 million cubic feet) of rock to create a vast pit with a free standing rock left in the center. Out of this single slab, 86 meters (276 feet) long and 48 meters (154 feet ) wide, they created Shiva's abode, which includes the main temple, a series of smaller shrines, and galleries (small rooms) built into a wall that encloses the entire complex. Nearly every surface is exquisitely sculpted with epic themes. Over 175,000 metric tons of rock are estimated to have been removed, and the whole complex took over one hundred years to complete. No wonder the architect presiding at its completion is said to have exclaimed: "Oh wonderful! Have I done this? How could I ever have accomplished such a thing?”
The Kailashnath Temple dates from A.D. 765 and was built by the Rashtrakuta dynasty, under the patronage of King Krishna I. Although much of the carving inside was damaged by the Muslims at the end of the thirteenth century, the temple is both a masterpiece of the rock cutters' art and a storehouse of Hindu mythology. The temple is in the southern Indian (Dravidian) style, with some northern Indian (Indo-Aryan) elements. Mount Kailash is considered the center of the universe, the axis of the world and the holy territory par excellence. Shiva is "Lord of Kailash" (Kailashnath).
The whole place has been hewn out of the living rock by starting at the top and sinking three great trenches on the north, south, and east sides to create a quarry Once these trenches were begun, wooden trunks were inserted into them, which were then soaked with water, the resulting expansion splitting the rock. In this way the builders slowly exposed the entire rock face. This left one huge block-over two hundred feet (sixty meters) long and one hundred feet (thirty meters) high-standing free. Starting from the top, this block was sculpted into everything you see: the temple with its crowning spire (vimana), the subsidiary shrines, and the elephants. Workers laboriously cut and polished each section before moving on to the next, to avoid the use of cumbersome and dangerous scaffolding. All the carving was done with chisels, each about an inch (less than three centimeters) wide!
To prevent the whole edifice being lost in the darkness of the pit, it was "raised" on a platform some twenty-five feet (seven and a half meters) high. Thus the structure is on two floors: the lower one a solid plinth, the upper containing the temple proper – Nandin shrine, hall, and holy of holies. Moreover, the building was originally covered in white stucco, which not only lightened the whole effect but served to mimic the snow-covered peaks of the gods' Himalayan home. Nevertheless, the overwhelming feeling here is one of massive solidity. Emotionally, this fulfills the purpose of the temple because it is through its special quality of stability that sacred architecture most faithfully represents the divine.
The external decorations of the temple-niches enclosing deities, colonnades, engaged columns, and the heavy overhanging cornices, the “Bengali roof” type, these are all, like the main spire, typically Dravidian. There are also mandaps or halls, which would typically have been used during festivals and celebrations such asMahashivratri.
Travel
The caves are open from dawn to dusk, from Wednesday to Monday. The ticket costs Rs.10 for Indians and 5USD for overseas visitors. The Ellora caves are only 30 kilometers or 18 miles from Aurangabad in Maharashtra. Aurangabad and Bombay are only about 45 minutes apart by air. The Government of India Tourist Office in Aurangabad oversees about 40 multilingual tour guides who can be hired through its office, the MTDC office, also in Aurangabad. Guides are also available at the ticket office at the Kailashnatha Temple. Archaeological Survey guides can be also hired without prearrangement at the sites, often at a lower rate, but there's no guarantee one will be available when you want one.
The Ellora Dance Festival, held annually in December/January, draws top classical Indian dancers and musicians from around the country to perform outdoors against the magical backdrop of the Kailashnath temple.



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