Ellora,
Maharashtra,
India
The cave temples of Ellora,
a UNESCO world heritage site , are the pinnacle of Deccan rock cut architecture. Over five centuries,
generations of Buddhist, Hindu and Jain monks carved chapels, monasteries, and
temples from a 2 km long escarpment and decorated them with a profusion of
sculptures of remarkable imagination and detail. In all there are 34 caves at Ellora: 12 Buddhist (600-800
CE), 17 Hindu (600-900 CE) and 5 Jain (800-1000
CE). Ellora represents the renaissance of Hinduism under the Chalukya and
Rashtrakuta dynasties, the subsequent decline of Indian Buddhism, and a brief
resurgence of Jainism under official patronage. The sculpture shows the
increasing influence of Tantric elements in India's three great religions, and
their coexistence at one site indicates a prolonged period of religious
tolerance.
The
masterpiece of Ellora is the Kailasa Temple, one of the most audacious feats of
architecture ever conceived. Dedicated to Shiva, it is the world's largest
monolithic sculpture, hewn from the rock by 7000 laborers over a 150 year
period. Attributed to king Krishna I of the Rashtrakuta dynasty c. 760 AD, the
idea was not only to build an enormous and fantastically carved representation
of Mt. Kailasa, Shiva's home in the Himalaya, but to create it from a single
piece of stone by first cutting three huge trenches into the rock of the Ellora
cliff face and then 'releasing' the shape of the temple using hammers and
chisels. Of overwhelming scale, it covers twice the area of the Parthenon in
Athens, is 1-1/2 times as high, and entailed removing 200,000 tons of rock.
Around the temple are a variety of dramatic and finely carved panels, depicting
scenes from the Ramayana, the Mahabharata and the life of Krishna. [--
Adapted from the Lonely Planet, India, 1999]