NORTH INDIAN ARCHITECTURE
ARCHITECTURE
North Indian temple architecture, style
produced throughout northern and
as far south as Bijapur district in northern state,
characterized by its distinctive shikhara, a
superstructure, tower, or spire above the garbhagriha (“womb-room”),
a small sanctuary housing the main image or emblem of the temple deity. This structure is
sometimes referred to as Nagara, a type of temple mentioned
in the Shilpa-shastras
(traditional canons of architecture), but exact correlation of the
Shilpa-shastra terms with extant architecture has not yet been
established.
The
typical temple in northern India, on plan,
consists of a square , preceded
by one or more adjoining pillared mandapas (porches
or halls), which are connected to the sanctum by an open or closed vestibule (antarala).
The entrance doorway of the sanctum is usually richly decorated with figures of
river goddesses and bands of floral, figural, and geometric ornaments. An ambulatory is
sometimes provided around the sanctum. The shikara is
usually curvilinear in outline, and smaller rectilinear shikharas
frequently top the mandapas as well.
The whole may be raised on a terrace (jagati) with
attendant shrines at the corners. If a temple is dedicated to the god Shiva,
the figure of the bull Nandi,
the god’s mount, invariably faces the sanctum, and, if dedicated to the god Vishnu, standards (dhvaja-stambha) may
be set up in front of the temple.
The
centre of each side of the square sanctum is subjected to a graduated series of
projections, creating a characteristic cruciform plan. The exterior walls are
usually decorated with sculptures of mythological and semidivine figures, with
the main images of the deities placed in niches carved on the main projections. The
interior is also frequently richly carved, particularly the coffered ceilings,
which are supported by pillars of varying design.
That
the prototype of the
North Indian temple already existed in the 6th century can be seen in surviving
temples such as the temple at Deoghar, Bihar state,
which has a small, stunted shikhara over the
sanctuary. The style fully emerged in the 8th century and developed distinct
regional variations in (Odisha), central India. .
North Indian temples are generally classified according to the style of the shikhara:
the phamsana style
is rectilinear, and the latina is curvilinear and
itself has two variations, the shekhari and
the bhumija.
One
typical form of the North Indian style is seen in the early temples
at Orissa, such as the graceful 8th-century Parashurameshvara Temple at Bhubaneshwar,
a city that was a great centre of temple-building activity. From the 10th
century a characteristic Oriya style developed that exhibited a greater
elevation of the wall and a more elaborate spire. The 11th-century Lingaraja Temple
at Bhubaneshwar is an example of the Oriya style in its fullest development.
The 13th-century (Surya Deul) at Konarak,
the sanctum of which is badly damaged, is the largest and perhaps the most
famous Oriya temple.
A
development from the simpler to a more elevated and elaborate style is evident
in central India, except that the shekhari type
of superstructure, with multiple tenets, is more favoured from the 10th century
onward. Interiors and pillars are more richly carved than in Orissa. The
Central Indian style in its most developed form appears at KHAJURAHO ,
as seen in the Kandarya Mahadeva Temple (c. 11th
century). There an overall effect of harmony and majesty is maintained despite
the exuberance of sculpture on the outer walls; the rich profusion of miniature
shrines on the shekhari spire
reinforces the ascending movement considerably.
Large numbers of temples are
preserved in Gujarat, but most of them have been badly damaged. The early
11th-century Sun Temple at Modhera is one of the finest.
DONE BY
ARCHITA. T. MENON
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ReplyDeleteVarshaa.R
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ReplyDeleteG.Abirami
Hamsika
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ReplyDeleteFaaiqa Aisha
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ReplyDeleteFaadila Aisha