04-25-2010, 07:17 AM
In pictures: Sirpur, Chattisgarh, a land of temples and monasteries
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/in_pictures/8637611.stm
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/in_pictures/8637611.stm
Temples: History, Architecture & Distribution - 2
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04-25-2010, 07:17 AM
In pictures: Sirpur, Chattisgarh, a land of temples and monasteries
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/in_pictures/8637611.stm
04-26-2010, 05:30 AM
05-14-2010, 06:59 PM
The State of Ellora
When you finish the last leg of journey after the Daulatabad fort, you donââ¬â¢t realize that youââ¬â¢ve actually arrived at the site of Ellora caves. Parking is chaotic. The parking lot is untarred, uneven, and the ground beneath your feet/car is dented and potholed. And it suffers from the same, permanent illness that most pathetically-maintained historical sites suffer. The government staff who gives the parking ticket is in cahoots with auto drivers, ââ¬Åtourist guides,ââ¬Â and assorted wheeler-dealers. As he tears the ticket, heââ¬â¢ll ââ¬Åsuggestââ¬Â some ââ¬Årecommendedââ¬Â tourist guides and ââ¬Åknowledgeableââ¬Â auto drivers whoââ¬â¢ll size you up first and quote rates accordingly. As magnificient as the Kailasanath temple is, its upkeep and crowd management is thrown to the winds compared to Ajanta where only 20 (?) people are allowed in a cave at a time. As a result, you witness a sea of human chaos, hear an incredible cacophony of loud, jostling and rude people, and equally, witness people spitting at will inside the temple complex. A large ASI board stands perfunctorily outside the cave describing it and declaring it as a UNESCO heritage site but thatââ¬â¢s it. Given the 3-kilometre expanse of Ellora caves, we are shocked by the utter apathyââ¬âbarely-tarred roads connecting each cave, no guides/guards, no signboards, and some stretches are almost gutter-like. Along a few stretches of these caves, I sensed an air of incredible desolation, an almost weeping plea to save them. Exhibit 1: Apart from the ticket-tearing guard at the entrance of the Kailasnath temple, none of the other caves have anybody to even look over them. Hereââ¬â¢s an instance. Notice the superbly-done Nandi sculpture. You can walk around and sit on the Nandi and consume liquor or indulge in any similar activity, not a soul will question you. You can stamp on it with your foot and get away with pretty much any desecration your mind comes up with. This is largely true for most of Ellora except perhaps Kailasanath. Which brings us to the rows upon rows of mutilated temples, sculptures, and idols. Here are two good examples. These are the mother Goddesses, their heads, and limbs chopped off. A casual glimpse at history tell us that Aurangzeb, In 1690 AD . ordered destruction of temples at Ellora, Trimbakeshwar, Narasinghpur, and Pandharpur. Our benevolent government today is simply carrying forward Aurangzebââ¬â¢s torch by a more effective method: neglect, and allowing it to decay. This story is repeated in the nearby Grishneshwar where you need to first pay a kind of obeisance to the mini-mosque that towers over the Shiva (Grishneshwar is one of the names of Lord Shiva) temple. Even to the untrained eye, this comparison reveals an obvious truth. See this first and observe the areas right at the bottom of the picture. Now see this. The items I pointed to in the first image clearly shows a chakra/wheel and the other a shankha/conch, both part of the Sanatana Dharma milieu. The second image shows a mosque. The chakra and shankha are located near the base of the mosque. Additionally, the overall architectural style clearly shows that apart from the standard dome, pretty much most of this mosque resembles more a Hindu structure than an Islamic one. I leave it to your intelligence to figure what happened. And this is a wholly insignificant mosque is but another clear revelation of the character of Nehruââ¬â¢s court historians. Concluding Notes At the end of this rather tedious exercise, some conclusions are inescapable. The reason for the stellar maintenance of Ajanta caves owes a lot to the Buddhist lobby, whose power is perhaps not known widely enough. A good pointer is the way Sanchi is preservedââ¬âactually a hundredfold better than Ajanta. Check this news item from last year to know the extent of mischief whose result, needless to say, will further weaken Hindus. Additionally, the so-called revival of the Nalanda university under the aegis of Dr. Expert-on-Everything Amartya Sen is purely a political gambit in the name of Buddhism. And yet, none of these worthies talk about the industrial scale extermination of Buddhists at the hands of Islamic butchers, the same yardstick they apply in whitewashing Islamic destruction of Hindu temples. This one-upmanship game is one of the chief reasons why Hindu monuments continue to languish this horribly. The other reason though is the near-complete deracination of Hindus. As I mentioned in the opening part, Ellora is simply another drop in the sea of similar monuments across the country. Take any state, city, town and village: the two magnificient Hoysala temples in Nagalapura village (in Karnataka) are orphaned but for a moronic ASI signboard. The state of most of the grand temples in Tamil Nadu evokes tears of blood. Modern day Hindus throng a street-corner Sai Baba or Ganesh or Hanuman temple than give a few minutes thought to revive active worship/pooja in places like the Kailasanath temple. That one change will automatically ensure simple thingsââ¬âlike preventing people from wearing footwear when they enter the Kailasanath templeââ¬âno law or security guard will be necessary then. The other area where urgent change is necessary is the braindead policy of our government, which treats these monument-temples as tourist places not dissimilar to a zoo or aquarium or museum or art gallery. But the reason all these wonââ¬â¢t happen in a hurry brings us back to the same square: lack of a unified Hindu political voice, which in turn is because Hindus are terribly splintered, which in turn, is because weââ¬â¢re deracinatedââ¬Â¦.you get the drift. http://www.sandeepweb.com/2010/05/01/aja...ent-359347
05-27-2010, 07:15 AM
Kalahasti Temple gopuram collapses:
Quote:Hyderabad, May 27: The 'Rajagopuram' or the towering entrance to the ancient Srikalahasti temple in Chittoor district collapsed Wednesday night, police said. No one was injured.
05-27-2010, 05:29 PM
^^^^
Shame on us Hindus for allowing this to happen. No point in blaming the government, we know how GoI works. GoI just cares for the money the temples generate. Hopefully, this opens the eyes of more Hindus and they actively adopt temples in every nook and corner. Added: My theory is that Tirupathi temple attracts lot of pilgrims and consequentially money. The popular it gets, more people throng; and slowly other temples and pilgrimage centers dwindle in importance. Temples need to be patronized by devotees and well-wishers. There is no other way, there are no longer Kings and Emperors to take care of the temples, we Hindus have to do it. Whatever we are doing seems to be not sufficient.
05-28-2010, 10:40 PM
[quote name='ramana' date='26 May 2010 - 06:53 PM' timestamp='1274924706' post='106593']
Kalahasti Temple gopuram collapses: [/quote] Tall temple tower in this picture is what collapsed Actual temple is adjacent to hill which is not visible in the above picture Final the ruins after standing tall for 500 years Seeing the ruins, reminds me of this song. Apt for Srikrishna Devaraya statue before the ruins in the pictures http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TtvAvdQLfHA
05-28-2010, 10:59 PM
[quote name='Swamy G' date='27 May 2010 - 05:07 AM' timestamp='1274961570' post='106594']
^^^^ Shame on us Hindus for allowing this to happen. No point in blaming the government, we know how GoI works. GoI just cares for the money the temples generate. Hopefully, this opens the eyes of more Hindus and they actively adopt temples in every nook and corner. Added: My theory is that Tirupathi temple attracts lot of pilgrims and consequentially money. The popular it gets, more people throng; and slowly other temples and pilgrimage centers dwindle in importance. Temples need to be patronized by devotees and well-wishers. There is no other way, there are no longer Kings and Emperors to take care of the temples, we Hindus have to do it. Whatever we are doing seems to be not sufficient. [/quote] Until temples are taken out of government control, Hindus and Hindus temples will suffer. This temple gets 20-40 crores a year. Money is not problem if properly used. It is sheer negligence by Devadaya shaka (temple ministry) and its political appointees to this temple administration. Till independence, local kings (Velama Doras) (loyal to Rayas even after collapse of Vijayanagara) were patronizing temples in this area. After government took over we have slow death. Hindus shamelessly donate in Hundis, government appointees to temples and government eat that money except doing some nominal work.
05-29-2010, 01:16 AM
the technical cause is the accumulation of water in bricks?
05-29-2010, 11:19 AM
NO. This is terrible news. It's one of my Panchabhutams.
I agree with Shyam's #67. It is due to christo govt's deliberate, calculated negligence (passed off as "secular misfortune" <- the deniability is possible because of christoism's secular cloak, just like christianism can play innocent in the calculated destruction 'dredging' of Ramarsethu for what are made to appear as 'secular' reasons to the sleeping public). If Hindu Temples were left to Hindus, Hindus would have preserved it. Hindus love their Gods and therefore love their Temples. It is why they always donate so happily to their Temples: a) for the upkeep of the sacred sites where my Gods dwell, so we can visit it in the same state and it is preserved for future generations of Hindus b ) for maintaining the direct families and continuity of those who carefully, properly and happily perform the traditional rites to the Gods. So that Temple priests may continue to perform this service for us lay Hindus. (The Temple priests' lives are dedicated to doing this specialised task - and doing so with the right frame of mind - and we don't have to do it but benefit from their performing the correct and necessary rites to the Gods of each Temple), c) for Temples' maintaining large numbers of poor Hindu families of all communities who are nourished and whose lives are supported by Hindu Temples. It is Hindu religion's inbuilt mechanism of - what's that Hellenistic word that Julian is so fond of - philanthropia. Yes, Hindus' philanthropia towards other, less well-to-do Hindus: donate money to Temples who have always looked after our larger Hindu community. Kalahasteeshwarar + Gnyaana Prasunaambika ... The beautiful home built for my wonderful Father and Mother where they dwell for their Hindus... Built on the sacred site where IIRC once a devoted Hindu offered his touching even if inexpert puja to Shiva that moved Bhagavan so. How I wish Julian were still alive and would choose to swing the bat for the Hindu Religion too, in fellow-feeling/understanding. Sigh. Nothing for it then, but to keep hoping I don't outlive the continuation of traditional Hindu Dharma in Bharatam (with which I don't mean modern Indian cults nor other established Indic/Dharmic religions).
06-02-2010, 09:58 PM
For interested folks there is R.E.A.C.H in TN that revives and cleans temples.
http://templesrevival.blogspot.com/
06-03-2010, 03:21 AM
06-17-2010, 11:21 PM
Quote:Tour of Madhya Bharath Part 2 Read the rest at the blog.
06-18-2010, 02:34 AM
Quote:The parlous state of Hindu temples in India
07-08-2010, 11:13 AM
[url="http://www.telegraphindia.com//1100708/jsp/nation/story_12659218.jsp"]Jewellery ââ¬Ëmissingââ¬â¢ from Tirupati[/url]
Quote:OUR SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT
07-15-2010, 12:24 AM
[url="http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/object/article?f=/g/a/2010/07/13/rath_yatra.DTL&o=&type=travel"]Rath Yatra Festival Pictures - 2010[/url]
07-26-2010, 01:44 PM
(partly the same as in the history thread, medieval period)Some lost styles or schools of Indian architecture. This is based upon treatises like the SamarAngana SUtradhAra, AparAjitaprccha, Shilparatna, etc.
Indian architecture involves VAstu (architecture), Shilpa (sculpture and Chitra (painting). The Sthapati was not only an architect-mason, but also an engineer and townplanner. Around him were several guilds or Shrenis of other Sthapatis, SUtragrAhins, TakSHakas and Vardhakins. VAstushAstra is more than only temple architecture. It involves: 1. city, town, village and fort architecture (suburbs were called ShAkhA-nagara, dealing with metropoli) 2. civil and public art and architecture (Veshma and SabhA) 3. palace art and architecture (RAjaveshma: rich and with royals had their NivAsa = residence and VilAsa = pleasure mansions) 4. temple art and architecture (PrAsAda) And each had its distinct and overlapping and also regional styles. Where are those mansions, not only the varied temples, but also the palatial ones? How come that everything of the middle ages and later is Muslim or branded as such? According to the VAstushAstras till around the rule of the Delhi Sultans, there were many schools and regional styles of architecture attached to different topics. In temple architecture, we learn from the standard works that we have principally a Nagara, Dravida and a mixed style, called Vesara. But there were many more: 1. DrAviDa (Deccan and S.India) 2. Latina (or LATa) 3. VAvAta (or VArATa, Berar) 4. SAndhAra 5. BhUmija (BhUmihAra, Purab) 6. Mishra (mixed) 7. ValabhI (Gujarat) 8. Napumsaka 9. SimhAvalokana 10. DAruja 11. NAgara (N.Indian) 12. There is also a VairATa style (Alwar) of temple construction. 13. Besides some variants of specific VimAna schools The principle styles of Palace architecture: 1. PAncAlI (Antarvedi area of Ganga-Yamuna doab) 2. MAgadhI (Bihar) 3. VAngI (Bengal) 4. KAlingI(Orissa) 5. ShaurasenI (areas of old Hindi, old Rajasthani, old Gujarati and Old Panjabi/Haryanvi) 6. DrAviDI (Deccan and south). The word ShaurasenI especially here denotes that we are in an intermediate stage, from the older Apabhramshas period (second half 1st millennium C.E.) evolving in the middle Dingala periode (roughly till 12th-13th century) already gives regional variants evolving in initiatial stages of Old Panjabi, Old Hindi (Braja BhASHa), Old Rajasthani and old Gujarati. The classical Pingala period, roughly after this period, leads to the mature stages of the language of SuradAsa, TulasIdAsa etc. The styles above give ample evidence of lost or ignored palace construction styles which must be looked for in the later invented styles of Pathan and Mughal architecture. Pathans (Fergusson actually takes up here the Delhi Sultans and their off shoots in the east, west and south) were conquerors, they lacked Sthapatis and chief masons, and with every kind of rebellious actions within their realms, there was hardly enough time for them consolidate their power outside Delhi and a thin surrounding area and thus to have stability and peace in governing the raided provinces. Both temples and palaces (and mansions of wealthy people, merchants and nobility) could have overlapping styles. The PanchAyatana construction can be seen in Khajurahu, the palatial ones are Humayun's rauza and the Taj Mahal. Mansions can have (n)one to many domes or Chhatris. In that case we have Ekaratna, Triratna and Pancaratna. Pancaratna was already recognized by Babur as a Hindustani style. With reference to the dome styles, we have the following different styles: 1. Kaurava (Haryana) 2. PancAla (central doab) 3. Vaideha (N.Bihar) 3. MAgadha (S.Bihar), 4. Kaushala (E.UP) 5. KAlinga (Orissa) 6. KAshya (Banaras) 7. VArATa (Berar) 8. Kaulaka (?), 9. ShaNDila (close to Kannauj?) 10. Shaurasena (Rajasthan-Gujarat-Mathura-Agra) 11. GAndhAra NW) 12. Avantika (Malwa) 13. KAshmIra 14. GAngeya (Bengal?). The domes, also called StUpI and smaller dommes are called stUpikA (derived from the stupa shape: semicircular), Other words for a dome are ShikhA and ANDa, it is especially the last which is a word for a bulbous shape. A stupika is a small votive stupa. It is often accompanied by small votive tablets with Buddhist formulae, or small Buddhist images.[1] The stupika can also be the topmost part of a building, particularly a Hindu temple.^ Miksic, John N. (2003). Earthenware in Southeast Asia. NUS Press. pp. 289. ISBN 9789971692711. http://books.google.com/books?id=gxM0k5lGupAC&pg=PT289. Retrieved 2009-08-16. ^ Snodgrass, Adrian (1985). The Symbolism of the Stupa. SEAP Publications. pp. 263. ISBN 9780877277002. http://books.google.com/books?id=o0aQMlFX8ugC&pg=PA263. Retrieved 2009-08-16. aNDakaM sArddha-bhAgena candrikArddha-padA smrtA | AkAshalingaMkurvita dvi-padaM sumanoharaM || SamarAngNna-SUtradhAra 57-78The "Ãâ¬kÃÂà âºaliá¹â¦ga" Finial M. A. Dhaky Artibus Asiae, Vol. 36, No. 4 (1974), pp. 307-315 As the main element the aNDaka (Amalaka or myrobalan), a bulbous cogged wheel shape. CandrikA = padmapatrI or lotuscap Bulbous variety or onionshaped variant of Amalaka/stupI is found in the TripuruShaprAsAda (representing the TrimUrti) the Lara Djanggarang complex in Prambanan, Java in Indonesia of Hindu temples (ca. mid 9th century) Actually and Amalaka=Indian gooseberryt, emblic myrobalan has a bulbous shape. In the ancient texts it is called ANDa, which also has a bulbous shape. MaNDapas were of different shapes, square(caturashra), round (vrttanta), but also octagonal (ashtashra), etc. The same shapes for supporting pillars, pillars/towers in walls (bhitt-stambhas) and monolithic pillars/towers (dhvajastambhas and mAnastambhas, DIpa- or dIpamAnastambhas). Temples did have a monolithic tower/pillar, but the Digambaras already had their Samava-Sharanas with a Manastambha at each direction, giving four monolithic towers or pillars in front of the sacred Hall. Bauddha temples, especially in Gandhara before the Guptas may have had 4 monolithic towers topped with lions surrounding the Hall too, but then positioned like the Taj Mahal towers. At least their sculpture does show this in two miniature models. See: Gandhara, 2nd century CE, has 4 lion-crowned Stambhas surrounding the Stupa on a platform. http://upload.wikime...a2ndCentury.jpg An stylistical miniature example: Model of a stupa (Buddhist shrine), ca. 4th century, Pakistan, ancient region of Gandhara, Bronze; H. 22 3/4 in. (57.8 cm), W. 7 1/2 in. (19.1 cm). Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Donald J. Bruckmann, 1985 (1985.387ab) Source of description: Model of a stupa (Buddhist shrine) [Pakistan, ancient region of Gandhara] (1985.387ab) | Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History | The Metropolitan Museum of Art Monolithic or Towers were a special feature of Bauddha, Jaina (especially the Manastambhas), Shaiva and Vaishnava temples: KIrtistambhas, Dhvajastambhas, DIpastambhas etc. Minarets of Muslims have a very vague history. Actually Muslims made a difference bewteen a Manar = square Light House (kind of DIpastambha) and a place for the Muezzin, which could be from any high place, orginally from the roof of buildings. Round or Cylindrical towers were later applied from (east)Iran. Even Fergusson, but also Diez and many other scholars consider the round towers as adopted from Bauddha and Hindu from east-Iranian (especially Afghanistan) and Central-Asia. A feature of a building containing 4 towers is actually copied by Timur from Delhi. He commissioned a mosque to be built in Samarkand based upon the one in Delhi. As he obviously lacked a Sthapati and chief masons within his groups of captured Indian artisans, and as the chief mason was a Muslim from outside India, his project produced a sorry result (compared to master pieces in India). ShAstras like the MAnasAra clearly describe mansions with surrounding KarNa-harmyas or corner houselike towers. These towers in the corners are also called karNa-CUlikAs in the MAnaSara. These can be attached to the main mansion (temple or palace), but also detached, both giving a PancAyatana concept if it is a houselike tower. (Otherwise detached ones could technically be called KarNa-stambhas and can be the Manastambhas or KIrtistambhas or DIpastambhas). Material used, could be wood, bricks and stones. Marble (sphatika = originally crystall quartz, but Monier-Williams gives prastaraa nd different kinds of prastara, pASHANa, shilA, upala for marble) was also known, at least the stonecutters and mines from Gujarat and Rajasthan were very famous. For construction two techniques were also used, which were Sudhashila (sudha = plaster) and Vajralepa (adamantine glue coating). When both were combined it was also called Vajralepa. White radiance of temples through plaster was called SAttvika, red radiance was RAjasika and black was TAmasika. There was a white temple dedicated to Surya, according to the Mandasor inscription of 473 C.E. with the phrase "the temple resembling a mountain shines white", in line 16. (Indian Antiquary, vol. xv, p. 196) The LakSHmaNa temple in Khajurahu was also white plastered 'like the peaks of the mountains of snow'. (inscription of 1011 C.E.) The Garbhamana system of measuring divides the sacred plot or sanctum in nine divisions, called ASHTApAda or PAdASHTa. garbhamAna-pramANena prAsAdaM shRNuta dvijAH | vibhajya navadhA garbhaM madhye syAl-linga-pITHikA || (Matsya 269.15) pAdASHTakaM tu ruciraM pArshvataH parikalpayet | mAnena tena vistAro bhittInAM tu vidhIyate || (Matsya 269.16) This Garbhamana method with the ASHTa-pAdas is the real origin at least from Gupta times of the much later word Hasht Bihisht (New Persian, post-Sasanian) used by modern writers for this concept in architecture, and wrongly ascribed by these to Persians and as a concept used by Mughals, but this last word Hasht Bihisht can be found nowhere in literature before Amir Khushro of India. And that too in a non-architecture use (denoting eight heavens). Ashtapada in Garbhamana method, thus, denotes 8 Padas or squares surrounding a central one. Every Divine Pada has its own Vasu and VAstupuruSHa. All the 8 Padas represent 8x4 = 32 Devatas; the central 9th Heavenly Pada, the Brahmasthana is represented by the 33th Devata. That's why the Divine Ashta-pada of the Garbhamana method was rendered as the New Persian created word Hasht Bihisht. This Ashta-pada division was also known as Pitha-pada in the Vastushastras! This is clearly an Indian method and certainly not a Persian. One MaNDapa using nine courts can be a the Ranga Mandapa or Ranga Mahal. Perhaps the ancient Palace of Vasantasena as described in the Mrcchakatikam with 8 great courts and a garden is also arranged as a grand ASHTapAda. But, I am not sure about this. Even though it is described in an ancient Sanskrit play, it must be based upon a real grand mansion complex of a wealthy person in Ujjain. An example of the old Malwa school of architecture. Many types of laid-out gardens attached to mansions are described, collectively called KAnana. Famous are the Ujjayini gardens of the ancient Malwa school. Residential buildings or NivAsa bhavanas and pleasure pavilions or VilAsa bhavanas were placed in different types of KAnanas, with rows of different kinds of trees. Many types of Yantras are described, especially the ones supplying waters being used for the gardens, fountains, etc. City planning included different shapes, like square (caturashra), rectangular (Ayatana) like the Taj Mahal, round (vrttAnta), semicircular or bow-shaped (KArmuka, like an Arddha-Chandra) like the Agra Red Fort and Salimgarh above the Delhi Red Fort, etc. According to one authority, a metropolis (Nagara) could have a capital city (RAjadhAnI), with a secondary city (PaTTana, actually predominantly a merchant's city) attached to it, all with their suburbas (ShAkha-Nagaras), including quarters for other merchants/traders, artisans, soldiers, etc. As Agra seems to have another city on the eastern bank (based on the 16th century description of Pelsaert), jointly forming an ancient metropolis with the city on the western bank, it follows the description of the DroNa type of city of the ShAstras. In short, Indian Vastu architecture is grossly misunderstood and described from a limited angle. And its value, coupled to indigenous and Rajput architecture and creativity before and during the Sultanate and Mughal period, is enormously underestimated, by giving its credits to the newly created and non-existent Pathan and Saracenic architecture (inventions of James Fergusson, a merchant having taken up a study on architecture) and overestimated Timurid and Mughal architecture, even though they have their own beauty. But if claims or credits for creation can discredited through primary sources, what then is Mughal architecture? The real credit in any way should be given rightly to Indian architects, masons, sculptors, carpenters, common labourers and their shastras and creative minds.
08-20-2010, 08:16 AM
Quote:Millennial moment
09-16-2010, 10:35 PM
Quote:Hindus, Muslims agree to have temple beside mazar in UP village It means, mandir was demolished and Mazar was build.
09-23-2010, 06:30 PM
Some question marks concerning the Qutb Minar (a first inquiry)
by Ishwa General information Based upon standard works: "This minaret made of red sandstone was built ca. 1193-1230 CE. It was designed on the pattern of Iranian minarets. (others say after the Jam Minar of Ghor) The bottom storey was built by Aybak in 1199, the second, third and fourth were built by Iltutmish in 1286. After a lightning strike in 1368 Sultan Fërà «z Tughluq replaced the destroyed forth storey with two more. The height of the minaret is 72.59 metres." Ancient three storeys First storey: 24 petals, 12 semicircular and 12 triangular fluting. Balcony with stalactite pendentives Second storey: semicircular fluting. Balcony with stalactive pendentives Third storey: triangular fluting. (the fourth and fifth storeys and top chhatri have been built by orders of Firuz Shah by Hindu masons in 1368) The inner staircase: The first three have 360 steps.(the other additional two built by the Hindu masons of Firuz shah Tughluq with other material and techniques, have 19 steps giving a total of 379 steps leading to the top) The number 360 may have a connection to the number 24 of the petals of the first storey and with the number 27 of the neighbouring temples. Qutb Minar chronology In order to get a good idea about the Qutb Minar authorhip, these three sources must be contemplated: A. Inscriptions B. Court writers C. Architecture A. Inscriptions Some Nagari inscriptions The characters of the inscription on the Iron Pillar are the same as those of the mason's marks on the pillars of the colonnade of the Great Mosque, but are quite different from those of the two modern Nagari inscriptions, which are close beside it. On the Aibak date, an Archaeological Survey Report, vol. IV by Mr. Beglar, assistent to Cunningham says: 1. On the plinth, outside on the entrance door has the date ââ¬ÅSamvat 1256ââ¬Â (1199 CE). 2. On the wall of the passage of the inside door to the left ââ¬ÅSamvat 256ââ¬Â. 3. Under the lowest arch-stone ââ¬ÅSamvat 12.6ââ¬Â This gives a date of Samvat 1256 = 1199 CE, the same date which is inscribed in the qiblah of the mosque. Another inscription has "alavadina vijayastambha" During the Khiljis, the ancient name as Vijayastambha was remembered, but now attached to the name of Alauddin Khilji. This was certainly not a Tower of Victory in the eyes of the Mamluks, otherwise both the Mamluks and Alauddin Khilji would have retained that memory instead of inventing his. Damage through lightning In Samvat 1382 (1326 CE) the tower was damaged by lightning. As in 1300 there were three storeys with 360 steps, the top storey which was damaged must have been a kind of cupola. In Samvat 1424 (1368 CE) it was repaired, perhap also after a second lightning. (The upper two storeys were (re)built with its 19 steps. Otherwise, the first 3 storeys have 360 steps. See Abul Fida's testimony of 1300.) ââ¬ÅA Sanskrit inscription on the famous Qutb Minar in Delhi, dated 1368, records an Indian architect's repair of the Tower for Sultan Firuz Shah. ... Sahni has translated the fourth and fifth line as ââ¬Åthe restoration of the Minar was carried out in the palace or temple of Visvakarma.ââ¬Â Eternal garden, by Carl W. ernst, p.32. Line 3: ââ¬Â¦ in the year Samvat 1426 (1369 ce) Masons describing this as a Jayastambha erected by Shri Suratrana Pherojashahi by the grace of Vishvakarma. The Minar is mentioned as 'munAro' and the word 'jIrNoddhAra' is used. This word means 'restoring that which is decayed/old'. This word is a technical one from the Vastushastras, and is a branch of knowledge being part of the 'equipment' of the master masons of India. Hindus did know how to build, but also how to repair! (even if this included to do a job on orders of a Muslim ruler - see the jIrNoddhAra jobs done by Hindu masons in preexisting cities of Agra, Fatehpur Sikri, Dhilli metropolis and Indrapata metropolis, including Shahjahanabad!) Devata invocations One reads, "Shri Vishvakarma-prasade rachita" = Conceived with the grace of Vishwakarma (Prasad 1990:3, 19, 34-35), engraved by the Hindu craftsmen who built the minar on behalf of their masters. In inscription nos. I,14 and II,47,71 Hindu masons address their Deities Vishvakarma (God of Creation), Ganapati (Lord of the Gana)are praised, and Om Svasti is invoked. (an eight-line inscription in Nagari on the left of the fourth balcony) Pirthi Nirap or King Prthvi(raja) A slab with a Nagari inscription ââ¬ÅPirthi Nirapââ¬Â or ââ¬Åthe King Pirthi(raja)ââ¬Â was found on the minaret. On left-hand jamb of Main Entrance door, 9th course. Text. Translation. " The King Pirthi." (The reading is uncertain.) James alfred Page: An historical memoire on the Qutb, 1926, GOI Central publication branch. page 39. R. Balasubramaniam: The world heritage complex of the Qutub, 2005. The dialect of Delhi of the mason is consistent in rendering the RkAra as -ir(a). Says Pushpa Prasad of Aligarh Muslim University: Found on the jamb of the main entrance door in the ninth course of the Qutb Minar, this inscription is written in a local dialect in Nagari script. No date is given* The reading is uncertain and no impression has been published. Sanskrit inscription Delhi Sultanate 1191-1526, Oxford University Press, 1990. Some prove this evidence away with these words: This slab must have come from an earlier structure. The construction of the mosque and the minaret both used stones from earlier Hindu and Jain structures. These claims do not have any basis either in the architecture or in contemporary historical accounts. Although extensive Hindu decorative styles were used in the motifs on the minaret, it architecture is Islamic. But, the name of Prithviraja at the entrance causes much inconvenience. Some who accept the reading, wishes it away suggesting that it was inscribed on reused stone slabs from the demolished temples. But, masons do engrave names at the end of a project at obvious places. It would be too much of a coincidence, without any parallels. Besides, Qutbuddin did reuse material of the temples only for his mosque, as per his inscription. No such inscription exists with reference to the minar. Some Arabic inscriptions Ghurid overlords Two inscriptions on the basement storey naming Muhammad bin Sam. (Gateway of mosque has also his name.) Also the name of Ghiyathuddin bin Sam is given. Slave general Qutbuddin Aibak is referred to as al-amir ul isfehsalar-ul ajall-uk kabir = the amir, the commander of the army, the glorious, the great. This is in the first and lowermost band of the basement storey. Iyaltimish Inscription reading that the erection of this minar was ordered by shamsuddin Iltutmish. Contradicting Inscription reading that ââ¬ÅThe completion of this edifice was ordered by the king, helped by the heavenly grace, the Sun of Truth and Religion, Iltutmish.ââ¬Â B. Courtwriters I. Mamluk courtwriters 1. Hasan Nizami, contemporary of Qutbuddin Aibak and Iyaltimish. He wrote his taj-ul ma'asir. Hasan Nizami, describing the years 1191-1217 doesn't devote a single word on the Qutb Minar, neither on its name. He mentions the mosque being built by Qutbuddin. 2. Ibn Asir, contemporary of the Ghorians. He wrote his Kamil-ut Tawarikh till the end of the Ghorians. No mention of the Qutb Minar 3. Alauddin Jawaini, contemporary. He wrote his Tarikh-i Jahan Kusha. Narrating upto 1257. Neither he mentions the Minar. 4. Minhaj-us Siraj, contemporary of Qutbuddin and Iyaltimish. He wrote the Tabaqat-i Nasiri. He doesn't mention the Minar or Qutbuddin attached to its building. 5. Nasiruddin Ufi, contemporary of Iyaltimish. He wrote the Jami-ul Hikayat wa Lawami-ul Riwayat. Nor he does refer to the Qutb Minar. II. Khilji courtwriter 1. Amir Khushrau, court poet of Alaudin Khilji. He wrote the Tarikh-i Alai. He says that Alauddin ââ¬Åthen resolved to make a pair to the lofty Minar of the jami masjid, which minar was then the single (celebrated) one of the time, and to raise it so high that it could not be exceeded.ââ¬Â Here the name (or word) Qutb is not attached to the Minara. III. Tughluq courtwriters 1. Barani, court historian of Muhammad Tughluq. He is silent about the minar. 2. Abul Fida, contemporary of the Tughluqs. His work is the Tarikh-ul mukhtasar fi akhbari'l bashar. Says in 1300 that ââ¬Åthe mazanah of the Jama Masjid at Delhi as made of red stone and very lofty, with many sides and 360 steps.ââ¬Â This is with reference to the first three storeys. 3. Shams-i Siraj Afif, court historian of Firuz Shah Tughluq. Wrote the Tarikh-i Firuz shahi. He says in 1380, that ââ¬Åthe large pillar in the Masjid-i Jama at Old Delhiââ¬Â was built by Altamish. 4. Sultan Firuz Shah, he wrote the Futuhat-i Firuz Shahi. The Minara of Muizuddin Sam had been struck by lightning. I repaired it and raised it higher than it was before. Based upon these testimonies, Qutbuddin Aibak is not the builder from scratch of the Qutb Minar. Ghiyathuddin and Muhammad bin Sam's names have been engraved when Qutbuddin was the slave and then his own name when Iyaltimish was the Sultan. (servants praising their Sultans) Iyaltimish didn't build the fourth storey, otherwise this would contradict Abul Fida's testimony in 1300 before the damage of 1326. Which means that: a. Before the lightning damage of 1300, the tower had three storeys and a top balcony. b. Altamish didn't build storeys 2-3-4, as there was no 4th storey leading to a top balcony. The fourth was the top balcony. It was Firuz Shah who confessed that he repaired it and made it higher than before. c. If Iyaltimish is connected with working at 3 storeys, he must have done the remodelling of the 1st storey too on behalf of his former master and father in law Qutbuddin Aibak. C. Architecture Hindu masons "The influence of Hindu Rajput craftsmen is visible in the naturalistic motifs, the serpentine tendrils, and even the curves of the alphabets of Quranic inscriptions.", says the Encyclopaedia Brittannica. The repairings were also done by Hindu masons. Hindu motives A website has this information: "Although the Qutb MënÃÂr is an exclusively Islamic conception it was made by Hindus so the ornamentation arround the carved Koran-Verses is influenced by the hindu-style." http://www.bergerfou...y=Inde&col=pays Look at the flowers moving through or beneath the Quranic verses. Indian workmen incorporate looped bells and garlands and lotus borders into the carving. But, also witness the 2 x 12 petalled = totally a 24 petalled lotus model looking at the Minar shaft from above. Again a clear hint to a Hindu motive. (taking 360 steps of the ancient storey inner staircase, with this 2x12=24 number and 27 demolished temples, this hints at some astronomical meanings) Three levels of decorations band 1. flowers and twigs in the band intertwined with Quranic verses band 2. Look at the serpentine wave pattern (Makara?) and floral wave patterns below the Quranic verses band 3. See also circular floral patterns Entrance decorations http://commons.wikim...e_to_Qutb_Minar,_Delhi.jpg 1.Decoration ââ¬â Floral motives: three times triple leaves within circular serpentine 2.Flutings: band with floral motives, above a band with chain motives, above open 8petalflowers Balcony decorations balcony supports "... but details such as the pendant lotus supports of the three circular balconies were in the regional idiom." , as per M. Hattstein and P. Delius: Islami: art and architecture. The stalactite pendentives with lotus motives, thus was a regional one. balconies - First balcony has disconnected four-petalled flowers and turrets have flowerbuds - Second balcony has an eight-petalled flower decoration all around and turrets have flowerbuds - Third balcony has four-petalled flowers and turrets with flowerbuds 6.Fourth balcony has eightstarshaped and turrets with flowerbuds All point to a surprising conclusion that the masons who worked on the minar, but also on the Quranic inscriptions were Hindus, otherwise Muslim masons would have tried to destroy the original organic iconography. Note also that the balcony support (pendant lotus supports) is classified as belonging to the regional idiom = Indian by Hattstein and Delius. And that while researches want to see these stalactite pendentives as an imported Persian product. Lotuses don't have any meaning to Persians or Muslims. Dislodged stone slabs with Hindu deities One day in August, 1986, The Times of India printed on its front page the photographs of two stones carrying defaced carvings of some Hindu deities. There was a short statement beneath the photographs that the stones had been found by the Archaeological Survey of India in course of repairs to the Qutb Mînãr at Delhi. The stones, according to the Survey, had been built into a wall with the carved faces turned inwards. But the daily had dropped this part of the news. Some correspondence cropped up in the letters-to-the-editor column of the newspaper. The majority of writers congratulated the editor for breaking a conspiracy of silence regarding publication of a certain type of historical facts in the mass media. A few writers regretted that a news item like that should have been published in a prestigious daily in an atmosphere of growing communal tension. None of the writers raised the question or speculated as to how those stones happened to be there. From: Hindu Temples, what happened to them by Sitaram Goel, vol. II chapter 4. For a photo of a slab, see Stephen Knapp's site: http://www.stephen-knapp.com/kutab_minar...ixteen.htm Stones dislodged from more constructions in Delhi having Hindu images on one side with Arabic lettering on the other can also be seen in Sultan Ghari, the so-called burial of a son of Iyaltimish. For a photo, see also stephen Knapp's site: http://www.stephen-knapp.com/sultan_ghar...enteen.htm These examples clearly show that Muslim invaders gave orders to their Hindu masons to remove the stone-dressing of Hindu buildings, turn the stones inside out to hide the image facial and inscribe Arabic lettering on the new frontage. what do these anomalies tell us? Remember we are in the 12th century, the Qutb Minar is said to have been a new Muslim building from scratch. Which simply means, that despite its Hindu masons, their Muslim overlords were not that blind to allow organic iconic Hindu motives, which were a violation to their religion. Especially not as this was a tower of victory over the kafirs on their very sacred ground. We see the same serpentine and floral motives in the Quwwat mosque! This points to the Minar and mosque to be of the same pre-Muslim period and architects. The fact that Muslim monuments (of this period) allow clear Hindu motives all point to a new use of preexisting structures adapted to new rulers, though militarily in power, but lacking in time, peace and artisans, masons, sculptors and of course architects. The most simple road for the Muslims was simply capturing Hindu masons and taking them to their realms. That is exactly what Timur also did in 1398. Thus, these serpentine (Makara?) and floral (lotus) motives are a strong indication of the tower being usurped from a previous period and ruler who was a Hindu. The job done by the Sultans was: a. remodelling the Hindu iconography in such a way that it was not too disturbing for the Muslims b. adding quranic verses in order to give it a Muslim stamp c. stressing overall the submission of Hindu symbolism to Muslim supremacy within former Hindu sacred ground Conclusion Muhammad bin Sam's name had been inscribed twice, mot probably by Qutbuddin's order. Qutbuddin's function names were also inscribed, as a general. But nowhere is he connected with its construction neither in inscription nor in literature. All the sources of the mamluk period and Khilji period are silent about the authorship, but certainly do not connect either Qutbuddin or Iyaltimish with the construction from scratch. In 1199 Qutbuddin must perhaps have ended the project of removing icons of the previous ruler both from the mosque and the minar. His successor Iyaltimish must have started with the Quranic texts on the first floor and finished till the third. The Tower may have been tried to function as mazanah around 1300, as the tower had only three storeys. But thiss practice never came in vogue later. Then a few decades later the tower was damaged by lightning. Probably the cupola was destroyed. In 1368 Hindu masons, on behalf of Firuz Shah Tughluq built (after another lightning?) two more storeys. This was not in the same style. These storeys also has inscriptions. The serpentine and floral (lotus) iconography and that too in the quranic texts points to the tower being remodelled like the adjacent mosque, thus both being constructions before the Muslims. The tower was remodelled through Quranic inscriptions initially into a mazanah, later during the Tughluq regaining its older name of Vijaya Stambha, but now for the mamluks. A Minar built from scratch on the very sacred soil of the hated last Hindu ruler could never have included Hindu symbols or organic iconography. Like the mosque, this points to a pre-existence of the Tower, having been remodelled ornamentally just like adjacent temple structure into a new Muslim symbol. The early Mamluks didn't have the time, tools or personnel to execute such a grand project of remodelling, let alone to build anything from scratch. Remember that the Mamluks face a constant thread from Hindu rebels and also repeated invasions of Mongols, which caused the Sultans to constantly shift their vulnerable royal seats. (vulnerable, because as rulers you need the support of the majority Hindu citizens) The Minar of Jam doesn't look like the complexer built Qutb Minar. That Minar is a monolithic tower built of bricks, without any nearby mosque. The same counts for the Ghazni towers, who also don't look like the Qutb Minar. The Ghazni towers must have been built by captured Hindu masons during Mahmud Ghaznavi. (Perhaps also the tower of Jam, more probably by masons of Bauddha Marga.) Ghazni was a former Hindu capital city of Bhatti Rajas, ancestors of the Jaisalmer Rajputs. The name of Prithviraja is engraved at the entrance by a local Hindu mason (of his period). This may be wished away by some, but in the light of all other evidence, like floral and serpentine icons, even within the Quranic verses, only leads to the conclusion that the tower must have been at least from Prithviraja's time, perhaps ordered to have been built or repaired by him. Hindu temples, Shaiva, Vaishnava, Jaina and Bauddha, etc. do have monolithic (or sometimes polylithic) Stambhas in front of their temples, forming part of the temple plan. Indian inspired Boud Khanas > But Khanas with their monolithic cylindrical Stambhas were scattered from the NW towards Afghanistan, Iran and Central-Asia. Cylindrical Towers forming a part of the temple complex are not met with farther west in early Muslim period as minaras or mazanahs. Both the Qutb Minar as the doublesized Alai Minar base are in a neat central line within the outer court. In my opinion the mosque with the temple iron pillar and the outer court containing the two minars, formed integral part of the greater temple complex. The Turk disturbed the original sanctuary planning. Qutbuddin conquered the city and sanctuary with the tower and had finished in 1199 the first remodelling of the icons and a few inscriptions. His successor Iyaltimish started and finished the Quranic inscriptions on this former Hindu symbol. The hatred for Prithviraja by the Turko-Afghans and the desecration of the sanctuary and tower in such a way that it became the symbol of power of the conquerors point to the direction of this conclusion of mine: the sanctuary and tower turned into mosque and minar were part of a special sacred spot of Prithviraja Chauhana. It may have been his Kula Devalaya housing the Murti of his Kula Devata
09-25-2010, 01:23 AM
Babari structure, a new viewpoint
by Ishwa Summary of the main findings by the ASI investigation may be stated as follows: There is 'archeological evidence of a massive structure' below ground where the Babri mosque was destroyed in 1992. The structure bears distinctive features associated with ancient temples of northern India. There is evidence of building work there from as far as the 10th century. Deducing this with the discovered 12th century inscription of king Nayachandra gives me the following chronological development: 1. Pre-Sultanate Period (till 1192) a. Ancient Temple: a 10th/11th century temple is beneath the demolished Babri Masjid, as per B.B. Lal. b. this temple must have been demolished ââ¬â the demolisher should be a Ghaznavid. c. New Temple: Raja Nayachandra inscription 12th century. He built a new temple, as per B.B. Lal. 2. Sultanate Period (1192-1526) 1st possibility: perhaps this Nayachandra Temple was also demolished and then rebuilt 2nd possibility: or probably it was converted into a Muslim structure and then reused as temple 3rd possibility: or most probably it was retained as temple. Anyway, this new structure must have been used by Hindus as a temple before Babar arrived there in 1528. There is no logic in converting or rebuilding a mosque on the same spot as a temple, if it was already used as a mosque. 3. Mughal Period (1528) Babar demolished/damaged the temple and gave orders to Mir Baqi to 'build' a mosque, according to a Babari inscription. In Muslim jargon 'demolishing a temple and building a mosque on the same spot' can also mean that the temple was converted into a mosque, having destroyed the idols and organic icons, founded the Qiblah and ornamented the building with Muslim inscriptions. As there is no structure found being built between the 10th/11th century Ancient Temple and the later demolished Babari Masjid, in my opinion the last structure is the New Temple built by king Nayachandra in the 12th century. At least the style of architecture of the demolished Babari structure is pre-Mughal! Besides, it is impossible to construct the structure from scratch in one year (1528). This all is in support of my opinion that the demolished structure was the New Temple. Babar, thus, didn't demolish the temple completely, but desecrated and converted the functional temple, also known as Masjid-i Janamsthan for Janmasthana (ke) Mandira, into a non-functional Muslim structure, renamed as the (Mandira>) masjid (converted by=) of Babar: the Babari Masjid. If correct, this has a far reaching consequence. Hindus didn't demolish a Muslim construction, but a desecrated former temple of their own, felt to be too offensively dishonoured was felt to be fit to get demolished and then getting rebuilt anew with a fresh, spotless start. |