The visit to this Sri Galaganatha Temple at Pattadakal was a part of
“Hampi, Badami, Pattadakal, Mahakuta and Aihole temples Heritage visit”
organized by வரலாறு விரும்பிகள் சங்கம் Varalaru Virumbigal
Sangam – VVS and எண்திசை வரலாற்று மரபுநடைக்குழு, between 24th December to 28th December
2022. I extend my sincere thanks to the
organizers Mrs Radha and Mrs Nithya Senthil Kumar and Mr Senthil Kumar.
This Pattadakal temple complex is on the banks of river Malaprabha, comprises
nine temples near to one another in a row and from the north to south as
follows…..
1. The Kadasiddhesvara Temple
2. The Jambulinga Temple
3. The
Galaganatha Temple
4. The Chandrasekhara Temple
5. The Sangamesvara Temple
6. The Kasi Visvesvara Temple
7. The Mallikarjuna Temple
8. The Virupaksha Temple
9. The Papanatha Temple ( This temple is 200
metres away from Virupaksha Temple on south side ).
காலகநாதர் கோயில்
ஜம்புலிங்கேஸ்வரர் கோயிலுக்கு கிழக்கு பக்கத்தில் இருக்கும் இந்த கோயில் 7ஆம் நூற்றாண்டின் பிற்பகுதியில் ஆட்சி புரிந்த வினயாதித்தர் காலத்தில் கட்டப்பட்டதாக கருதப்படுகிது. இந்த கோயிலும் நாகர வகையை சேர்ந்தது. முக மண்டபத்தின் அடித்தள சுவடுகள் மட்டுமே இப்போது உள்ளது. கருவறை, ப்ரதிக்ஷணப்பாதை / சுற்றுப்பாதை / circumambulatory path ஆகிய பகுதிகளை உள்ளடக்கிய கட்டுமானங்களுடன் இந்த கோயில் காணப்படுகிறது. கருவறை உள்ளே லிங்க திருமேனி காணப்படுகிறது. இடப வாகனமும் உள்ளது. வாயிலில் நதிப்பெண்களான கங்கை, யமுனை சாமரம் / கவரி ஏந்தியவாறு காணப்படுகின்றனர். இந்த கோயிலின் விமானம், மேலே சிகரம் மற்றும் கலசமும் காணப்படுகிறது. மிகவும் சிதைந்து விட்ட இந்த கோயிலின் தெற்கு கோட்டத்தில் எண் கரம் உடைய சிவன் அந்தகாசுரனை குலாயுதத்தால் குத்தி சம்காரம் சிற்பம் காணப்படுகின்றது. சிவனின் உடலில் கபால மாலையே முப்புரி நூலாக உள்ளது. பஞ்சதந்திர கதைகளுள் ஒரு சில இங்கே புடைப்பு சிற்பங்களாக காணப்படுகின்றன. குபேரன், கஜலக்ஷ்மி இவர்களின் குறுஞ் சிற்பங்களும் இங்கு உள்ளது. கருவறை நுழைவாயிலுக்கு மேலே நடராஜரின் சிற்பம் உள்ளது. தெலுங்கானா மாநிலம் அலம்பூர் பிரம்மா கோயிலின் பிரதி / நகல் கோயிலாக கட்டப்பட்டதாக இக்கோயில் பார்க்கப்படுகிறது.
ARCHITECTURE
In front of the
Jambulinga Temple, a few metres away is the magnificent Sri Galaganatha temple an exemplary typical
example of the rekha-nagara model. The sikhara in particular is the most
imposing of the extant temples of this form. Originally it comprised a
mukha-mandapa pillared sabha-mandapa and a garbha- griha with closed
pradakshina-patha all raised on jagati (platform), an architectural component
found only in this temple. The first two architectural components down to the
level of the jagati had disappeared exposing the north-south cross section of
the garbha- griha raised on the moulded adhishthana, the sandhara-
pradakshina-patha on the sides, the outer sidewalls, and the ghana-dvaras of
the temple. A little below the exterior central deva-koshtha of the
garbha-griha is a series of five square boxes at regular intervals containing
miniature figures such as the monkey and the wedge of the Panchatantra story,
double headed eagle (ganda bherunda), etc. The mukha- patti on the front side
of the sikhara is also dilapidated. The richly ornate dvara- bandha of pancha
sakha order, with natya- Siva in the lalata of the lintel, is of superb
workmanship.
What is particularly noteworthy in the temple is
the ghana-dvaras each on the south, west and north. The western and the
northern are missing. The southern ghana- dvara exhibits a colossal sculpture
of eight armed Siva in the Andhakasurari form (the destroyer of Andhakasura, a
demon). The front pillars rather slender and ornate, is of ghata-pallava order.
The high curvilinear sikhara rather squatish,
comprises four bhumis marked by the karna- amalakas and has a vertically bold
jalaka of laced tiny niches. At the top is the amalaka crowned with the kalasa.
On the whole, this architectural model is similar in type to the Visva Brahma
temple in Alampur Kurnool district, Andhra Pradesh.
HISTORY AND INSCRIPTIONS
In particular, the Sri
Galaganatha Temple seems to be a
little later than the Kadasiddhesvara Temple and the Jambulinga Temple since
the ground plan of the Galaganatha Temple almost abuts the mukha mandapa of the
Jambulinga Temple. Even though the Early Chalukyan style and characteristic
features are evident in the Kashi Visvesvara Temple, the occurrence of the
diminutive niches, rigidity in the human forms of the narrative panels on the
pillars etc. indicate a late date to the temple. Most of the early Chalukyan
features such as fluidity and dynamism in the sculptural depictions and in the
dvara-bandhas is less conspicuous. The temple may be dated to early ninth
century.
POLITICAL HISTORY OF CHALUKYA DYNASTY
Jayasimha, a Chalukya King probably the founder, carved out a
region and ruled. He was immediately followed by Ranaraga who expanded and
consolidated the kingdom. However, not much is known about these two Chalukyan
kings. It was Pulakesi- I, the third king in the genealogical line, who made
Badami, the capital of the kingdom in 543 CE and built a fort on the top of
what is now known as the North hill. His son, Kirtivarma (1) with the
assistance of Mangalesa his younger brother, conquered the neighbouring
kingdoms of the Kadambas in the south- west, the Mauryas of the Konkana, the
Kalachuris etc,. It was his celebrated
grandson Pulakesi-II who extended the political boundaries of the kingdom far
and wide from Narmada to Kaveri. He installed his younger brothers Jayasimhavarma
in the north comprising Gujarath region and Kubja Vishnuvardhana in the eastern
division while he ruled the central part from Badami. However, he met with a
crushing defeat at the hands of Pallava Narasimhvarman of Kanchi in 642 CE.
Badami was 'terra incognito' for the next twelve years. In 654 CE, Vikramaditya - I, Pulakesi's son, succeeded in
re-conquering the kingdom from the Pallavas. The kingdom grew further and was
prosperous, strong and generally peaceful under the next three rulers in
succession namely: Vinayaditya, Vijayaditya and Vikramaditya- II in spite of
their frequent, successful wars particularly with their arch enemy, the
Pallavas others in the north. Kirtivarman- II, the son of Vikramaditya- II
though capable and experienced in wars and administration, succumbed
to the 756 CE onslaught by Dantidurga, the Rashtrakuta chief ruling the Ellora
region. This ended the Badami Chalukyan rule. The Badami region thus became a
part of the Rashtrakuta kingdom.
By 973 CE the Chalukyas till then keeping a low
profile at the appropriate occasion seized and rose to power supplanting the
Rashtrakutas. Later Kalyana in Bidar district, Karnataka had the fortune of
becoming the capital of the kingdom and continued to be so till the ruling
dynasty fell in about 1189 CE. However, Pattadakal gained some importance by
becoming the headquarters of an administrative division known as Kisukadu 70
ruled by Nolamba Pallava Permanadi Singhanadeva as mandalika (feudatory) under
Someshvara II, Bhuvanaikamalla, the Chalukyan king, around 1070 CE and hundred
years later by Chavumda II of the Sindha family, a mandalika to Noormadi Taila-
III the Chalukiyan king. Chavumda’s senior queen Demaladevi and their son Achideva by virtue
of his position as prince were then enjoying
Pattadakal.
Ref
1. A Hand book on World Heritage Series Badami, published by Archaeological Survey of India.
2. A Hand book on Hampi, Badami, Pattadakal & Aihole issued by VVS in Tamil.
3. Temple architecture and Art of Early Chalukyas Badami, Pattadakal, Mahakuta, Aihole by George Michell.
HOW TO REACH
LOCATION OF THE TEMPLE : CLICK HERE
Pattadakal Group of
temples are 13 KM from Aihole, 17 KM from Badami and 459 KM from Bengaluru.
Nearest Railway
Station is Badami. LOCATION OF THE TEMPLE : CLICK HERE
--- OM SHIVAYA NAMA ---
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