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There are 650 carved elephants on the platform of the temple. Each of these has a different body language & expression
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Chennakesava Temple is situated in a small taluka Belur, in Hassan district of Karnataka. It is 220 km from Bangalore & about 40 km
from city of Hassan. Nearest railway station is Chikmagalur which is 22 km away.
Its average height is 3200 ft above sea level & breezy weather here is similar
to that of Bangalore. Best time to visit is Oct-Mar when humidity level is low. Belur & it's surroundings are rural agricultural area & roads are in need of improvement.
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Deepastambha & Rayagopuram. This is said to be an addition during Vijayanagara period |
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Side view of the temple |
Belur or Beluru in Kannada, together
with Halebidu which is 16 km away were the early capital of the Hoysala Empire.
There is a legend about the name Hoysala. It is said that Sala & his guru
Sudatta Muni were performing a ritual in a temple of Vasantha Parameshwari in nearby
Sosevur & a tiger attacked them. Sudatta Muni gave a call of ‘Hoye” to Sala
who struck the tiger (some say it was a lion) down. Thus began Hoysala dynasty which
ruled for 300 years with Sala as first ruler. The scene of fight between Sala
& the tiger has been carved out of stone beautifully & it became an
emblem of Hoysalas.
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The emblem of Hoysalas on the right side of the entrance of Chennakesava Temple. Sala is fighting with tiger |
Of the Hoysala kings two
names are very prominent King Vishnuvardhana & his grandson King Veera
Ballala II. King Vishnuvardhana was great patron of art & is said to have
commissioned 1500 temples of which 100 have survived. He started building the Chennakesava
temple in 1117 to commemorate victory over Cholas & his grandson king Veera
Ballala II completed the task after 103 years.
The temple is dedicated to
Chenna-Kesava that is handsome Kesava or Krishna another avatar of Vishnu. The
walls & the pillars of the temple are full of intricate & fine
engravings & sculptures. Hardly any space is left blank. Besides elephants,
horses & tigers, stories from ancient Hindu scriptures have been carved
with great care, intricacy of design & poetic depiction.
Soap stone has been used extensively in the temple which is easy to work for creating
ornate designs. Jakanachari & his son Dankanchari were main sculptors. Others
have also been mentioned in inscriptions or have signed the statues. Some of
them are Ruvari
Mallitamma (over 40 sculptures), Dasoja
and his son Chavana (10 madanikas),
Malliyanna and Nagoja (birds and animals) Chikkahampa and Malloja (other than main temple).
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Dwarpals at right side entrance of the temple |
The temple is built on a large platform or Jagati 300 ft
by 300 ft in star shape & provides for a walk-around or pradikshinapatha. The hall or
mantapama is open & has three entrances while the top shikhar has been lost
to elements. Ornate pillars inside the hall are a unique feature of the temple.
Each of them has lots of engravings & intricate carvings which are
technically brilliant. Smooth surfaces, geometrically perfect designs are
magnificent. Guide informed that these heavy stone pillars were rotated with
the help of elephants & while rolling they were hand-chiselled & hand
polished. The result is fantastic & they look as if they have been
smoothed & shined on mechanical lathes.
Another remarkable feature is delicate &
beautiful bracket figures or madanika’s or Shilbalika’s at the top of pillars.
They look so fine & fragile that it is difficult to imagine them to be carved
out of stone.
2 comments:
https://jogharshwardhan.blogspot.com/2016/08/visit-to-chennakesava-temple-belur.html
Part 2 -
https://jogharshwardhan.blogspot.com/2016/08/chennakesava-temple-belur-karnataka-2.html
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