Mahabalipuram
Globally renown for its shore temples, Mahabalipuram was the second capital
of the Pallava kings of Kanchipuram. 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.
History
The temples of Mamallapuram, 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'.
Temples in 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. Modelled on a Buddhist
vihara or monastery, it sports a square hall topped by a vaulting roof. The
Bhima, Arjuna and Nakula-Sahdeva rathas are lesser copies of the Dharmaraja
ratha.
The Draupadi ratha is the smallest and the quaintest. It is simple structure,
fashioned as a thatched hut borned on the backs of elephants and lions. It
was probably the fascimile of a portable village shrine.
The fact that many of the temples and sculptures of Mamallapuram are unfinished,
points to the sudden withdrawal of patronage from rock-cut temples when King
Rajasimhavarman came to power.
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