Brahma Temple, Khajuraho

Brahma Temple is a ninth or early tenth century temple and is located at Chhatarpur in Madhya Pradesh, India. Although titled after the Hindu god Brahma, the temple is dedicated to Shiva. This temple, along with many others form the UNESCO World Heritage Site of Khajuraho Group of Monuments.

Brahma Temple
Brahma Temple
Religion
AffiliationHinduism
DistrictChattarpur
DeityShiva
Location
LocationKhajuraho
StateMadhya Pradesh
CountryIndia
Architecture
TypeNagara architecture
CreatorChandela
Completed9th/10th century
Temple(s)1

Background

The temple is located on the banks of Khajuraho Sagar lake. It is incorrectly called a Brahma Temple; the garbhagriha (sanctum) of the temple contains a four faced lingam, the symbol of Shiva, and local worshippers mistook this for a sculpture of Brahma, who has four faces.[1] The western windows and the central positions of the lintels of the garbhagriha contain figures of Vishnu. However, the stones from which they are made are different from the stones which are used to build the temple.[1]

The temple was built in either ninth and earlier half of the tenth century.[2][3]

Architecture

Shiva linga inside the temple

The Brahma temple is one of the various surviving temples in the Khajuraho temple complex. Unlike most of the other temples, which are made of grainstone, this temple is made of granite.[4] The plan of this temple is similar to that of the Lalguan Mahadeva temple. These temples were built during a period in which a transition was occurring from granite to sandstone.[5]

According to the Archaeological Survey of India, the plan of this temple is simpler compared to the other temples of Khajuraho. The shikhara (the tower over the chamber in which the deity is kept) is made of sandstone.[6] The temple originally consisted of a porch and a garbhagriha. The porch has been destroyed and only the garbhagriha remains which is crowned by the shikhara. Externally, the garbhagriha is cruciform in shape and contains projections in each side. Internally, it is square in shape and rests on 12 pilasters of granite. The eastern projection contains the main doorway, and the western projection contains a smaller doorway. Latticed windows are present on the remaining two lateral projections.[6]

The main doorway is largely unornamented. It only contains a sculpture of the trimurti on the lintel and Ganga and Yamuna at the base.[6]

gollark: It's not a kernel one, it's in their text rendering library.
gollark: In the "effective power" one, the problem was apparently some issue with processing text for display in shortened form in notifications where it accessed the wrong memory address, which made the entire process doing that exit, and apparently for some bizarre reason when the notification process exited it brought the entire OS down.
gollark: True, true, you'd expect them to have better sandboxing or something.
gollark: Because it's extremely complicated to do text rendering, look at that link.
gollark: From a technical perspective I kind of wish we had just done regular ASCII plus some nonligaturey extra characters and symbols.

References

  1. Dharma, p. 18.
  2. "Brahma Temple". ASI. Retrieved 30 May 2019.
  3. Dharma, p. 19.
  4. Deva, p. 5.
  5. Deva, p. 67.
  6. Deva, p. 72.

Bibliography

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.