Alampur Papanasi Temples
Alampuram Papanasi Temples | |
---|---|
Alampuram | |
State | Telangana |
Country | India |
Geographic coordinates | 15°52′17.3″N 78°07′22.8″E / 15.871472°N 78.123000°E |
Architecture | |
Style | Nagara |
Completed | 9th to 11th century |
Temple(s) | 23 |
Alampuram Papanasi Temples are a group of twenty three
The Papanasi temples exhibit the Nagara architecture with a square plan.[1][3] The Papanasisesvara temple is the largest of Papanasi group. It has a square plan, a phamsana superstructure with a brahmachchanda-griva sikhara, plain outer walls and rangamandapa inside. The temple is dedicated to dancing Shiva (Nataraja, Natesha).[1]
Together with the Navabrahma temples, the Papanasi group were related to the Kalamukha and Pashupata sect of Shaivism. Additional temples in this region made the site a Shaktism pitha. All of these temples featured Vaishnavism themes and narrated Hindu texts in their arts. Together these formed the Brahmeshvara Sthana tirtha (Kshetra), and before their destruction in the 14th and 15th centuries during Delhi Sultanate invasions and associated Muslim-Hindu conflict, they wielded enormous influence in regional religious life.[4] Some historic Hindu and Buddhist literature refers to this site near Kurnool as Srisaila or Sriparvata.[5][6] According to David White, this site in 12th century also became linked with the Shaivism sect called Virasaiva or Lingayats.[6]
The Papanasi temple group is not at the original location. They have been moved and restored from their ruins by the Archaeological Survey of India after 1980. They were threatened by the Srisailam hydroelectric project, but they were moved to higher grounds and a barrage built to protect them which has saved them from further damage.[3] Excavations associated with this transplantation of the temples unearthed evidence of temple building rituals.[7]
Location
The Alampuram Navabrahma temples are located in the Telangana village of Alampur, at the
Gallery
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One of the temples
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Another temple with Ganga and Yamuna goddesses, plus Vimana
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The mandapam of the largest temple
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Nandi facing the sanctum
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A 10th-century inscription
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Nataraja and directional deities carved in ceiling
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A relief showing the Vedic legend of samudra-manthan
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Saptamatrikas (Shaktism)
See also
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References
- ^ ISBN 978-81-7371-285-2.
- ^ Odile Divakaran (1971), Les temples d'Ālampur et de ses environs au temps des Cāḷukya de Bādāmi, Arts Asiatiques, Vol. 24, No. 1, pp. 51-101
- ^ ISBN 978-81-7436-903-1.
- ISBN 978-0-19-806096-3.
- ISBN 978-0-520-01842-6.
- ^ ISBN 978-0-226-14934-9.
- ^ MS Nagaraja Rao (1985), Indian Archaeology: A Review Archived 20 September 2010 at the Wayback Machine, Vol. 1982-83, ASI, pages 9-13
External links
- Ten Mahishasuramardani Icons from Alampur, M Radhakrishna Sharma
- Doorframes on the Earliest Orissan Temples, Thomas Donaldson