Hinduism & Evolution of Indian Architecture
Hinduism & Evolution of Indian Architecture
Hinduism & Evolution of Indian Architecture
&
EVOLUTION OF THE TEMPLE
Their architecture was dedicated to building stone temples for the various gods.
They made structures called Stupas, this form of architecture made its way to china, where it was altered
slightly and renamed the Pagoda.
They invented manuals which described how to build the temples.
•Sophisticated urban culture, people of prime. Lot of literature, scultpure, texts, art etc
•Best knows old poets from this period Kalidas,Kama Sutra came from this period
•Establishment of Sanskrit culture, high culture of city elites AND Bhramanical Architecture. Rituals were
imbibed in the Temple Architecture. Scientific reasoning was given for all. And were reserved for upper
class.
Revival of Arya concepts as a new civic culture.
The gupta’s were influenced by Kusana, Mathura, and Gandhara and borrowed the common
features of T-shaped doorways, decorated door jambs, sculpted panels with high-relief figures,
and laurel-wreath and acanthus motifs.
Constructed using sandstone, granite, and brick, Gupta-era temples added to this architectural
heritage with horseshoe gavakshas arches and distinctive curved shikhara towers which are
frequently topped with a ribbed disk ornamentation known as an amalaka,t he crown.
These elaborate buildings are further decorated with a mass of ornate mouldings and
sculptures set in niches.
In Gupta architecture, the square was considered the most perfect form and temples were
designed to be appreciated from all sides so that each carries decorative architectural features.
Most temples also adopt a square plan with the single cubicle garbhagriha in the centre. This is
normally entered by a short columned porch set over a single, highly decorated doorway with a
projecting lintel.
Columns can support a pot-and-foliage capital, and roofs were generally flat, as in surviving
examples at Tigawa and Sanchi in Madhya Pradesh. Other typical Gupta decorative features
include triangle motifs inside doorways and lion's heads at the ends of stone beams.
Evoluti on of Temple Architecture in India during Gupta Period:
The evolved Gupta temple also had a covered processional path for
circumambulation (PradakshanaPath) that formed a part of the
worship-ritual.
Ea r l i e rte m pl es o ft he pe r i o dh a da m o no l i t h i c fl at
slabroof.
1. TEMPLE ARCHITECTURE
2. ROCK-CUT TEMPLE ARCHITECTURE
Buddhist and Hindu Temples during
the Mauryan and Gupta Periods
Hindu Temples Buddhist Temples
• During the Mauryan period, • Some Buddhists carved entire
temples were small, stone temples out of mountainsides.
structures with one or two
• The temples at Ajanta and
rooms and flat roofs.
Ellora are two of the most
• During the Gupta period, the famous of this type of
temples were more complex, Buddhist temple.
with huge towers and intricate
carvings. • Another type of Buddhist
temple was the stupa.
GUPTA IRON PILLAR
Shaft
Lion abacus ; Bell capital
Supports a statue of god Vishnu with a halo
43’ high
At present it is the iron pillar at Delhi
Erected by Kumaragupta,Original site near Mathura
Erected 415 BC
Later shifted to a mosque site
23’ 8” high, made of pure malleable iron
6 tons weight
First it bore the image of Garuda
Moldings on top
Can be divided into three parts
Uppermost- square abacus
Below melon capital
Campani form capital
The iron pillar is 7.21 metres tall, with 93 cm buried below the
diameter of 41 cm
The pillar, made up of nearly seven tones of 98 per cent wrought iron of pure quality, is
7.21m (23 feet 8 inches) high, with 93 cm buried below the present floor level, and
has a diameter of 41cm (16 inches)
According to the inscription on it, the pillar was erected at its original venue by Chandragupta II
Vikramaditya (375–414 C.E.
EARLY CHALUKYAN PERIOD-5th – 8th
c. AD (550 – 750 AD, 973 – 1190 AD)
The birth of the Chalukyan Dynasty was in the 5th c. with its capitals
at Aihole, Badami, Pattadakkal
Constituted the center of influence for medieval Indian art
The contributions of the Pallavas and Orissa along with Northern influences were absorbed
Aihole illustrates 2 distinct variants in the development of dressed stone Hindu architecture
• The Pallavas and the Chalukyas were rival dynasties battling the control of south India
• There was hence a style that combined Dravidian and Nagara Styles
• Hence the Structures of this period have Pallavan influence. Most of the later chalukyan
•The only dated monument in Aihole, the Meguti Temple was built atop a small hill in 634
AD.
•Now partly in ruins, possibly never completed, this temple provides an important evidence
of the early development of the Dravidian style of Architecture
CHALUKYAN
• rectangular building with a flat roof of stone slabs
• stone-grills on two sides to admit light
PERIOD-5 th
– 8th c.
•The eastern end opens in the pillared porch. The wall is in reality a Pre style of massive
AD (550 – 750 AD, 973 –
stone posts between which the latticed
1190 AD)slabs have KHAN
- LADH been placed like screens.
TEMPLE
•The main shrine houses a Shiva Linga with–aAIHOLE – 450
Nandi and outer walls having many carved
AD
images along with floral motifs.
•The mukha mandapa situated in front of the sanctum and consists of a set of twelve
carved pillars.
•Lad Khan temple is the earliest example of the massive bracket-like capital continued
North Indian Nagara Style South Indian Dravida Style Combined Style
•Shikara has the repetition of architectural motifs, converted into an element
of decoration. These architectural motifs have much deeper
meaning.Symbolically it means to reach or get closer to the GOD
•There are two style of temple architecture were followed.
•Dravidian style in south
•Indo Aryan in north.
1. In one concept it was the derivation from the peaked or domed huts.
2. Temple developed form stupa-elongated form of the dome.
3. Temple is referred as ratha or car.so the sikhara
North Indian Nagara Style South Indian Dravida Style Combined Style
•The Durga Temple is the most unique temple you have ever seen.
• It almost resembles a mini fort. And therefore probably it is named Durg or a fortress
rather than dedicated to Goddess Durga.
•The sign says that it has apsidal plan but non-apsidal curvilinear shikhar.
•the temple is a delight to look at and is emblematic of Aihole town.
•A colonnaded corridor runs around the temple that allows parikrama or
circumambulation.
•The pillars have some great carvings.
•The garbha griha or the sanctum sanctorum is topped with a broken
shikhar.
•The temple was built in the 8th century during the times of the later king Vikramaditya
II.
•The exquisite and detailed carving clearly shows that in 2 centuries since they started
temple construction, the Chalukyan Architecture had reached its peak.
•This is the brahmanical version of the
Buddhist Chaitya hall adapted to suit the
service of the former belief.
•The durga temple which mostly follows
this model was probably erected during
the sixth century.
temple.
•The walls rise in bold moldings, their upper portions being decorated with a row of rectangular panels
image.
•This is the oldest remaining Hindu shrine with a roof and a high Sikhara in which there is a series of
arches