Chapter 1
Chapter 1
Chapter 1
INTRODUCTION
1218), who actually built the temple, perhaps towards the latter part
Great temple, with its lofty tower soaring high in the horizon.
after, the curtain fell on the history of the China architecture in the
south.
2. EARLY SERIES
A. BACKGROUND
The Cho1a rulers were the great builders of temples, and also
temples were built since the revival of the Chola power under
As the greatest monarch that south India has ever produced, he can
easily boast of having laid the foundation of the greatest empire of the
the niche figures were not painted, though the rest of the structure
is the same trend, which, however, betrays signs of does- deuce. But
is exactly the same, both in content and script, as the one found
show that this gopura could be late. We have two fine gopuraa
core of the temple, the present plan, elevation etc., seem to be of the
attached to the main shrine are found in the Pallava temples of Kanchi
and not in Cho ja temples. The stucco figures lo not resemble the
cult images placed inside the niches as in Chola temples, but resemble
very much the wall-figures of the Pallava structural temples. Inside the
Thus we have every reason to believe that the core of the main
damage in rains and has been reinforced with granite base at a much
later date possibly Sarkar is right when he says that this could have
image of Goddess is late. I now hold the view that present image
philosophy. We hope that this book would serve as model for future
Kerala rulers as well. All this campaign, apart from filling his
control over the inland trade-routes feeding the ports of the Cho la
advantage over the control of the overseas trade with China and
with the wide horizon as the backdrop, apart from the elevational
The apparent object of the expedition was to fetch the water from
the ganga but that can hardly be a real objective, especially when it
involved ceaseless war for two years in adverse terrain and distant
demonstrate his might to his contemporaries in the north but the fact
commercial interests of his country with China and other Far Eastern
regions.
and considerable part of this surplus wealth was invested, but hardly
out the gate of close cultural contact between the south and the
north. He brought saiva teachers from the banks of the Ganga and
Udayar saiva siva Pandita of the Thanjavur temple but also to his
EARLY EXPERIMENTS
although its height is only 59 feet (17.98 n3.). Both are Vaishnava
Unlike south Indian temples, the height has been steadily increased
1:21. Only one early temple in the south has a ratio of 1:3 and that
Table I) during the Pallava period is not more than 21 ft. (8.40
tonnes.''
temple.
depends largely on the basal square upon which the structure has
96.50 ft. (29.50 m.), thus obtaining a proportion of 1:2 (see Table
Kailasanatha temple has almost the same ratio if all the projections
from the main square are taken into account; and without them it
C. ARCHITECTURE
fourteen talas, while there is no Pallava temple having more than four.
The vimana with four talas has been mentioned in the Vastu-sastras
the Thanjavur temple. Yet all its upward contour lines offer an
the talas are endowed with a rhythm of wavy lines that has broken the
paragraph.
pr es en ce of m ur al s on t h e w al l s of t h e pradakshina-patha, and
talas rise above the storeyed formation of the lower part of the
distinct personality.