Elephanta Caves temple
The Elephanta Caves
are a great tourist attraction in the vicinity of the large
Mumbai
meteropolis. The Elephanta island is located 10 km away from the Gateway of
India at Mumbai. These caves house rock cut temples dating back to the 5th
century CE.
The Elephanta
island was so named by the Portuguese, after the statue of an elephant near the
landing area of the island. These rock cut temples dedicated to
Shiva Mahadeva
are rich in sculptural content. Motorboats take passengers from Appollo Bunder
near the Gateway of India. .
How They were Constructed:
This rock cut temples were created by carving out rock, and creating the
columns, the internal spaces and the images. The entire temple is akin to a huge
sculpture, through whose corridors and chambers one can walk. The entire complex
was created through a process of rock removal. Some of the rock surfaces are
highly finished while some are untreated bare rock.
The entire cave temple complex
covers an area of about 60000 squrare feet and it consists a main chamber and
two lateral ones , courtyards and several subsidary shrines. Above the temple is
the mass of natural rock.
There are three
entrances to this temple. The ones on the east and the west marking the axis of
the temple. A 20 pillared hall lines the axis, and on its western end is the
cella in shich is enshrined a
Shivalingam.
The pillars consist of fluted columns standing on square bases, and are crowned
with fluted cushion capitals.
The enigmatic image of Trimurthi Sadasiva:
The Sadasiva manifestation of Shiva is carved in relief at the end of the north
south axis. This collossal 20 feet high image of the three headed Shiva,
Trimurthy
is a magnificient one, considered to be a masterpiece of Indian art. This
colossal image represents
Panchamukha
Shiva,
only three faces of whom are carved into the wall and it demands immediate
attention upon entering the temple through the northern entrance. See
All About Shiva for more information
on Panchamukha Shiva.
Also on the southern
wall are grand sculptured images of
Kalyanasundara, Gangadhara, Ardhanariswara and
Uma Maheswara. To the west of the
northern entrance are sculptured images of
Nataraja and
Andhakaasuravadamoorthy, and to its east are
images of
Yogiswara
and
Ravanaanugrahamurthy.
Thus in the
Elephanta caves, Shiva is portrayed in the non anthropomorphic
Shivalingam
form, as well as in his quintessential being emanating from the Shivalingam in
the colossal image, and in 8 manifest forms.
To the
east of the main temple is a courtyard, flanked by the secondary shrine. This
temple contains six pillars at its entrance, four of which are free standing and
two engaged. The entrance leads to a hall decorated with sculptured panels
depicting legends from the Shiva Purana.
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