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Elephanta Caves
Hewn out of solid rock, the Elephanta Caves date back to 600 AD, and attract more visitors each year than the entire city of Mumbai. No wonder: this place resonates with the spiritual energy of India. The cave complex is a collection of shrines, courtyards, inner cells, grand halls and porticos arranged in the splendid symmetry of Indian rock-cut architecture, and filled with exquisite stone sculptures of Hindu Gods and Goddesses. It is situated on Gharapuri Island in Mumbai's harbour, about an hour's boatride from the Gateway Of India. At the entrance to the caves is the famous Trimurti, the celebrated trinity of Elephanta : there's Lord Brahma the Creator, Lord Vishnu, the preserver and Lord Shiva the Destroyer Unfortunately, many of the sculptures inside have been damaged by iconoclastic Portuguese rulers who took potshots at Hindu Gods with their rifles. And yet somehow, nothing has disturbed the sublime beauty of this place for centuries. |
There are seven caves of which the most important is the Mahesha-Murti Cave. The main body of the cave, excluding the porticoes on the three open sides and the back aisle, is 27 m square and is supported by rows of six columns. The gigantic figures of Dvarapalas, or doorkeepers are very impressive.
The cave temple, which is the pride of Elephanta, sprawled over an area of approximately 5000 square metres, is reached by climbing a flight of more than 100 steps, to the top of a hill. Inside the temple, is a large pillared hall with rows of columns, that appear to hold up the roof of the cave.
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| Elephanta Caves |
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.
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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| Elephanta Caves
Elephanta Caves 1 :- The Many Forms of Shiva
On an island thirty minutes boat ride away from Mumbai harbor, the rock-cut caves of Elephanta could date back to 600 AD, and are one of the principal tourist attractions of the city. The island is today full of tourists, and the associated small-business people, and the fifteen minute trek to the top of hill is not silent any more, but we can imagine that at one time, centuries ago, the Shiva cult that inspired this temple complex demanded silence and solemnity - a place of worship in the middle of the vast ocean.
Elephanta Caves 2 :- There is little information or records that indicate the precise date of the Elephanta caves, neither are there inscriptions on or inside the caves themselves. Dating has usually been done by comparing Elephanta to other similar monuments in the region. In the absence, thus, of any clear consensus, the most widely accepted view is that the Kalachuri dynasty were the most probable patrons of the cave complex.
What is certain, however, is that the Elephanta caves have been described by writers, among them European travellers, since the 16th century.
Elephanta Caves 3 :- The earliest documented description is that of Garcia da Orta, who sailed with his countryman, the Portuguese ship captain and adventurer Martim Afonso de Sousa. Da Orta, describing Elephanta, records the following:
Another pagoda, the best of all, is on an island called Pori, which we call the Isle of the Elephant. On it there is a hill and in the upper part of it is a subterranean house worked out of the living rock…On the walls, all round, there are sculptured images of elephants, lions, tigers and many human images, some like Amazons, and in many other shapes well sculptured…
Elephanta Caves 4 :- From this and other initial records, research on Elephanta gradually intensified, with the British extensively documenting the island cave complex and identifying what the carvings inside represented. In modern times, the Elephanta cave temple has been fully identified as a complex dedicated to Shiva and his various forms, and extensive studies on its iconography are under way.
Elephanta Caves 5 :- Comparisons have been made, and not unreasonably, to earlier Hindu temples dating from the 6th and 7th centuries BC. This is evident when one looks at the temple plan: a basic pillared hall culminating in the principal deity-chamber: the garba-griha. Constraints of carving within rock mean that the pillars of the hall are not necessarily orthogonal, and the temple is embellished with several subsidiary shrines on the sides. Entrances from the north, east and west are flanked by more sculpture depicting Shiva in various forms and incarnations.
Elephanta Caves 6 :- The garba-griha itself encloses the main lingam, representative of Shiva and male energy, while the southern wall showcases Sadasiva, flanked by chapels to Ardhanareshvara (Shiva, the androgynous god) and Gangadhara (the bearer of Ganga, from her fall from heaven). Rock-cut mouldings frame these spaces, thus giving the interior a sense of architectural progression and hierarchy.
Elephanta Caves 7 :- Other wall-niches depict Shiva in other scenes – as the killer of the demon Andhaka, as the dancer Nataraja sustaining the cosmic cycle, as Umamaheshvara, Uma’s (Parvati’s) consort, as Ravananugraha, the god who by his little toe alone stops Ravana from shaking a mountain.
Elephanta Caves 8 :- Elephanta today bears marks of much use and abuse – from the ravages of time to the bullets of drunken sailors, the temple has lost much of its former glory and stands a mute testimony to the cult of Shiva – Rudra, the Wild God, Pashupati, the God of Wild Animals, the Indus Valley cult figure who was assimilated in Vedic culture and would go on to become one of the most important figures of the Hindu pantheon.
Elephanta Caves 9 :- Outside, the island teems with tourists – attracting as many as the entire city of Mumbai – but the question is, what is tourism doing to the already-fragile man-made treasure that is the isle of Elephanta?
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| Getting There
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The Elephanta Island can be reached only by boat. Ferry rides are available from the Gateway of India and it takes just 15 minutes to reach the Elephanta Island. It is one of the most adventurous ride as the boat cruise up and down the wavy sea making it a life time experience.
Open from 09 hours to 17 hours (except Mondays). Entry fee for those above 12 years - Rs. 5.00. Free entry on Fridays.
Open from 9 A.M. to 5 P.M.
Closed on Monday
Entrance Fee:
Citizens of India - Rs. 10/- per head
Others: US $ 5 or Indian Rs. 250/- per head
(children up to 15 years free)
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