Mahabalipuram, Hindu Pilgrimage in India
MAHABALIPURAM FACTS & FIGURES
Location:
58-Km From Chennai
Best time to Visit: In winter, between the months of November and February.
Significance: In winter, between the months of November and February..
Best time to Visit: In winter, between the months of November and February.
Significance: In winter, between the months of November and February..
Globally renown
for its shore temples,
Mahabalipuram was
the second capital
of the Pallava kings
of Kanchipuram.
It is also known
as Mamallapuram.58
kilometres from
Madras on the Bay
of Bengal, this
tiny sea - side
village of Mahabalipuram,
is set in a boulder
- strewn landscape.
Tourists are drawn
to this place by
its miles of unspoiled
beach and rock-cut
art. The sculpture,
here, is particularly
interesting because
it shows scenes
of day-to- day life,
in contrast with
the rest of the
state of Tamil Nadu,
where the carvings
generally depict
gods and goddesses
Mahabalipuram
art can
be divided into
four categories
: open air
bas - relief, structured
temples, man-made
caves and rathas
('chariots' carved
from single boulders,
to resemble temples
or chariots used
in temple processions).
The famous Arjuna's
Penance and the
Krishna Mandapa,
adorn massive rocks
near the centre
of the village.
The beautiful Shore
Temple towers over
the waves, behind
a protective breakwater.
Sixteen man-made
caves in different
stages of completion
are also seen, scattered
through the area.
The Past
The temples of Mamallapuram
(Mahabalipuram),
built largely during
the reigns of Narasimhavarman
and his successor
Rajasimhavarman,
showcase the movement
from rock-cut architecture
to structural building.
The mandapas or
pavilions and the
rathas or shrines
shaped as temple
chariots are hewn
from the granite
rock face, while
the famed Shore
Temple, erected
half a century later,
is built from dressed
what makes Mamallapuram
so culturally resonant
are the influences
it absorbs and disseminates.
All
but one of the rathas
from the first phase
of Pallava architecture
are modelled on
the Budhist viharas
or monasteries and
chaitya halls with
several cells arranged
around a courtyard.
Art historian Percy
Brown, in fact,
traces the possible
roots of the Pallavan
Mandapas to the
similar rock-cut
caves of Ajanta
and Ellora. Referring
to Narasimhavarman's
victory in AD 642
over the Chalukyan
king Pulakesin II,
Brown says the Pallavan
king may have brought
the sculptors and
artisans back to
Kanchi and Mamallapuram
as 'spoils of war'.
Prominent Pilgrimage Attractions of Mahabalipuram
There are, or rather
were, two low hills
in Mahabalipuram,
about 400m from
the sea. In the
larger one, on both
sides, there are
eleven excavated
temples, called
Mandapas, two "open
air bas reliefs",
one of which is
unfinished, and
a third enclosed
one. Out of a big
rock standing free
nearby there is
a "cut out"
temple, called a
"Ratha".
This type is unique
to Mahabalipuram.
Out
of the other hill,
much smaller and
standing about 200m
to the south, are
fashioned five more
rathas, and three
big sculptures of
a Nandi, a Loin
and an Elephant.
On the top of the
bigger hill there
is a structural
temple, and a little
distance the magnificent
beginnings of a
Vijayanagar Gopura
and also survivals
of what is believed
to be a palace.
Shore Temple
Perched
on a rocky outcrop,
it presides over
the shoreline, serving,
as Percy Brown puts
its, 'a landmark
by day and a beacon
by night'. Designed
to catch the first
rays of the rising
sun and to illuminate
the waters after
dark, the temple
ended up with an
unusual lay-out.
As the main shrine
faces the sea on
the east, the gateway,
the fore count and
the assembly hall
of the Shore Temple
all lie behind the
sanctum.
Unusual,
too, is the fact
that the temple
has shrine to both
Shiva and Vishnu.
The main sanctum
and one of the two
lesser ones on the
west are dedicated
to Shiva. The enclosing
wall has a series
of Nandi bulls on
it.
Interconnected
cisterns around
the temple meant
that the sea could
be let in to transform
the temple into
a water shrine.
But, in recent times,
a stone wall as
been added to protect
the shrine from
the rising seas
and further erosion.
Mandapas
The
main hill at Mamallapuram
is dotted with pillared
halls carved into
the rock face. These
mandapas, with their
graceful columns
and intricate figure
sculptures bear
witness to the artistry
of the Pallavan
rock cutter. The
ten pavilions at
Mamallapuram, of
which two are unfinished,
were designed as
shrine, with a sanctum
and on outer hall.
The shallow porticoes
are adorned with
exquisite sculptures
of gods, goddesses
and mythological
figures.
The
Ganesh mandapa is
an active shrine
even today, with
the idol of the
elephant-god being
revered by the faithful,
fourteen centuries
after it was first
consecrated.
Beyond
the circular rock
called Krishna's
Butterball is the
Varaha mandapa dedicated
to the two avatars
of Vishnu as Varaha
the boar and Vamana
the dwarf. The pillars
of this pavilion
are perhaps the
earliest to display
a motif that became
the signature of
southern architecture-the
lion pilaster, where
a heraldic lion
support ornamental
pillar. The Mahishasuramardini
mandapa has the
goddess Durga in
bas relief, slaying
a buffalo-headed
demon, and the Vishnu
Sayana Mandapa shows
Lord Vishnu lying
under the protective
hood of the seven-headed
serpent Adishesha.
Of
the other mandapas,
the Panch Pandava
mandapa, that is
unfinished, has
a more elaborate
facade. Its pillars
are adorned with
rearing lions springing
from the capital,
and the shrine is
the only one surrounded
by a passage which
allows circumvolutions.
Rathas
The eight rathas
are monolithic temples
fashioned as chariots.
They remain an architectural
mystery, for each
is apparently a
faithful reproduction
of a structure built
of wood. In fact,
even the grain of
the timber beams
and rafters has
been simulated in
stone.
Of
the eight rathas,
five have been named
for the Pandava
brothers, the heroes
of the epic Mahabharata,
and their shared
wife, Draupadi.
The largest is the
Dharmaraja ratha
and it sets the
tone for the others.
How to Reach Mahabalipuram
Air
:
Chennai (58-km)
is the nearest airport
with both domestic
and international
terminus.
Rail
:
The nearest railway
stations are Chengalpattu
(29-km) and Chennai
(58-km). From these
stations one has
to take road to
reach the Mahabalipuram.
Road :
Buses are