Join my journey offers informations on temples and spiritual places of India. India has rich cultural and historical heritage well preserved in its temple architecture and pilgrim sites. From the majestic Himalayan ranges in the North, to Kanyakumari in the South, India is arrayed with thousand of shrines, temples, pilgrimage and worship places dating back to hundreds of years..
Ajanta
Caves ars situated in the Aurangabad district of Maharashtra
State in India (106 kilometers away from the city of Aurangabad).
The nearest towns are Jalgaon (60 kilometers away) and Bhusawal
(70 kilometers away). Along the bottom of the ravine runs the
river Waghur, a mountain stream. The monastic complex of Ajanta
consists of several viharas (monastic halls of residence) and
chaitya-grihas (stupa monument halls) cut into the mountain
scarp in two phases. The first phase is mistakenly called the
Hinayana phase (referring to the Lesser Vehicle tradition of
Buddhism, when the Buddha was revered symbolically). Actually,
Hinayana – a derogative term for Sthaviravada – does not object
to Buddha statues. At Ajanta, cave numbers 9, 10, 12, 13, and
15A (the last one was re-discovered in 1956, and is still not
officially numbered) were excavated during this phase. These
excavations have enshrined the Buddha in the form of the stupa,
or mound. There are 29 caves (as officially numbered by the
Archaeological Survey of India), excavated in the south side
of the precipitous scarp made by the cutting of the ravine.
They vary from 35 to 110 ft. in elevation above the bed of the
stream. Paintings on the walls of Ajanta illustrate the life
of Prince Gautama Buddha. |
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Ajanta, is located hundred KM from
Aurangabad district in the state of Maharashtra of India, conjures
before one's vision, a dream of beauty- of caves, hidden in
the midst of a lonely glen with a streamlet flowing down below,
caves that were scooped out into the heart of the rock so that
the pious Buddhist monk, out on mission to spread the tenets
of Buddhism could dwell and pray, caves that the followers of
Lord Buddha, embellished with architectural details with a skillful
command of the hammer over the chisel, with sculpture of highest
craftsmanship and above all, with the paintings of infinite
charm.
According to the Buddhist traditions, these former Buddhas were
revered even in the historical Buddha's lifetime. By the time
king Ashoka, their cult was widespread and was patronized by
Ashoka. Later, when the stupas were constructed and beautified,
the carvings were executed in a symbolic way. An inspired sculptor
began to carve images of Buddha himself and within the few generations,
all the Buddhist sects took to worshipping images. The universe
of Mahayana contains numerous Bodhisattava, the chief of whom
is Avalokitesvara with attributes of compassion. He is also
called Padmapani or the lotus bearer. The Manjushri with a naked
sword in one hand, stimulates the understanding. The sterner
Bodhisattava who is a foe of the sin and evil and bearing a
thunderbolt in the hand is Vajrapani. The future Buddha, Maitreya
will take birth to save the world. A few paintings which survive
on the walls of Caves 9 and 10 go back to the 2nd century BC-AD.
The second group of the paintings started in about the fifth
century AD and continued for the next two centuries as, noticeable
in later caves. The themes are intensely religious in tone and
centre round Buddha, Bodhisattvas, incidents from the life of
Buddha and the Jatakas. The paintings are executed on a ground
of mud-plaster in the tempera technique.
According to the older conceptions, the Buddha wrought many
deeds of kindness and mercy in a long series of transmigration
as a Bodhisattava, before achieving his final birth as the sage
of sakyas. Incidentally they contain the scenes of semi-mythological
history, the royal court and popular life of the ancient times,
as told in romances and plays. Some pictures recall the Greek
and Roman compositions and proportions, few late resemble to
Chinese manners to some extent. But majority belongs to a phase
which is purely Indian as they are found no where else. These
monuments were constructed during two different periods of time
separated by a long interval of four centuries. The older ones
were the product of last to centuries before Christ and belongs
to Hinayana period of Buddhism in later part of 2nd century
AD when Buddhism was divided into two sections, after the conduct
of the fourth general council under another great king, Kanishka.
At Ajanta, the paintings on the walls, illustrate the events
in the life of prince Gautama Buddha, the founder of Buddhism
and in the more popular Jataka stories pertaining to Buddha's
previous incarnation. The caves including the unfinished ones
are thirty in number, of which five (9, 10, 19, 26 and 29) are
chaitya-grihas and the rest are sangharamas or viharas (monasteries).
After centuries of oblivion, these caves were discovered in
AD 1819.They fall into two distinct phases with a break of nearly
four centuries between them. All the caves of the earlier phase
date between 2nd century BC-AD. The caves of the second phase were excavated during the supremacy of the Vakatakas and Guptas.
According to inscriptions, Varahadeva, the minister of the Vakataka
king, Harishena (c. 475-500 AD), dedicated Cave 16 to the Buddhist
sangha while Cave 17 was the gift of the prince, a feudatory.
An inscription records that- Buddha image in Cave 4 was the
gift of some Abhayanandi who hailed from Mathura. The new feature
of Mahayana Buddhism was the concept of future Buddha's. The
Buddha, himself probably thought that he was the last of the
long succession of earlier Buddha's who lived before him.
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