Mahabalipuram
| » Location : |
58-Km From Chennai, Tamil Nadu |
| » Also Called : |
Mamallapuram, The City Of Bali |
| »Famous : |
Centre For Pallava Culture And Arts |
| » Important Festivals
Celebrated : |
Dance Festival In The Month Of December |
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|
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Temple Town Of Tamil Nadu
Located at a distance of 58-km from Chennai, Mahabalipuram has
everything that makes a site memorable; tradition, history, piety,
western annals, and current importance as a centre of tourism.
About Mahabalipuram
The history of Mahabalipuram dates back to two thousand years, it
contains nearly forty monuments of different types including an "open
air bas relief" which is the largest in the world, for centuries it
has been a centre of pilgrimage, it figures in the early annals of the
British search for the picturesque in India in the 18th century, today
it attracts shoals of foreigners in search of relaxation and sea
bathing, and most strange of all, it has an atomic power plant for
neighbour. A small library has been written on it. Over its history and
that of its monuments a number of scholarly controversies rage.
Mahabalipuram was already a centre of pilgrimage when, in the 7th
century Mamalla made it a seaport and began to make temples fashioned of
rock. It was through Mahabalipuram that many Indian colonists, who
included sages and artists, migrated to Southeast Asia. Sri Lanka's
national chronicle, the "Mahavamsa" testifies to this fact.
Name Of The Site
The proper name of the site is "Mamallapuram", after Mamalla,
an honorific of the Pallava king, Narasimha Varman I (630-668), who
created the earliest of its monuments. But it is popularly called "Mahabalipuram",
or "The city of Bali", whom Lord Vishnu chastised for his
pride and of whom there is a relief in one of the excavated temples
here.
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.
The Shore Temple
The Shore Temple occupies a most extraordinary site, by the very margin
of the Bay of Bengal so that at high tide the waves sweep into it and
the walls, with their sculptures, have been eroded by the winds and
waves of thirteen centuries. The European name for Mahabalipuram, since
the first western visitor wrote of it in the 16th century, is the "Seven
Pagodas".
There are not seven temples here. The number has been made up
fancifully and even whimsically. Some of the Europeans believed that the
sea has overwhelmed a part of the town containing some temples. But,
there is no sunken city in the waves off Mahabalipuram. The European
name, "Seven Pagodas", is irrational and cannot be accounted
for.
The Shrines In The Shore Temple
There are three shrines in the Shore Temple. That facing the sea and
another facing west into the township are Saiva. The one between is
Vaishnava, with an image of Lord Anantasayi made of live rock. There are
Vimanas over the Saiva (also spelt as Shaiv or Shaiva) shrines, but none
over the third; it seems to have disappeared with time. There are
Somaskanda reliefs on the walls of the Saiva shrine. In front of the
eastern shrine there is a stone dhvajastambha, frequently under the
waves. The light that shone on it at night must have been the last sight
of home for thousands of Pallava citizens immigrating to South East
Asia.
The Dhvajastambha and the Balipitha, which normally stand in front of
the main shrine, are here located to the west of the shrine. There was a
Prakara here, with small Nandis on its walls. Some of the Nandis still
stand on the survivals of the walls.
Till some decades ago parts of the temple were under sand. The sea is
an ever-present danger. A semi-circular groyne wall has been built to
the east. But what is notable is the fact that the temple has survived
all these centuries. Built by Narasimha Varman II Rajasimha, the maker
of the Kailasanatha temple in Kanchipuram in the 8th century, this is
one of the earliest structural temples in Tamil Nadu.
Temple Of Sthalasayana Perumal
Immediately to the north of the bigger hill there is the temple of
Sthalasayana Perumal, much enlarged in Vijayanagar times. By the very
margin of the sea, with the waves often flowing at its foot, there is a
magnificent fane with three shrines in an axial line, called the "Shore
Temple".
To the west of the five Rathas there are three more rathas, two side by
side. About 600 m north of Mahabalipuram, along the coast, is
Saluvankuppam, where there are magnificent excavated temples and, near
it, a rock Mandapa with tiger heads along its periphery, called the "Tigers
Cave". Between Saluvankuppam and Mahabalipuram, less than 200m from
the sea, stands another structural temple, the Mukunda Nayanar.
Each and every one of these monuments of different types, structural
temple, excavated temple "cut out" temple, "open air bas
relief", not to mention sculptures and Mandapas to be found here
and there, is important and interesting. The Shore temple, the
celebrated "open air bas relief" called "Arjuna's Penance",
the Mahishamardhani and the Adivaraha "Cave" temples and the
Five Rathas are the especial rewards of the visitor. All the monuments
are Pallava except that the original Sthalasayana Perumal temple was
expanded in Vijayanagar times. To the Chola days belongs a Mandapa at
the entrance to the township.
Arjuna's Penance - An Open Air Bas Relief
If a temple by the sea and, at times, in the sea is a tour de force,
the "open air bas relief" is even more so. In Mahabalipuram
alone of all innumerable sites of monuments in India sculptor was
impelled to choose a large cliff face on which to make his carvings.
What is more, he chose a scene from the "Mahabharatha" (also
spelt as Mahabharata), which a great Sanskrit dramatist, probably then
living in Kanchipuram, had popularised.
This surface, 29m by 13m, consists of two large boulders with a fissure
in between. In the cleavage there are a serpent god and a serpent
goddess in the act of worship. Covering the surface on the boulders on
either side of them there are nearly one hundred figures of Gods, sages
semi-divine beings, huge elephants and a few other animals.
The Depictions Of Arjuna's Penance
There have been strong differences of opinion among eminent scholars on
what this scene depicts. An old view was that it represents Bhagiratha's
penance. But the opinion that currently holds the field is that it
depicts Arjuna's Penance. This "Mahabharatha" incident, also
represented in both mural and relief in Lepakshi and a number of other
sites, relates to Arjuna's obtaining a weapon to use in the impending
war against the Kauravas.
Bharavi, the Sanskrit dramatist, who, it is believed, was living in
Kanchipuram in the seventh century, when this masterpiece was made, has
made it his theme in his "Kiratarjuniyam". The Pallava court
in that century was a nest of singing birds. It is highly probable that
it is this scene, which is depicted here. The main scene of action is on
the southern face. Here an ascetic is performing severe penance,
standing on one leg. Near him is Lord Shiva, with His attendants.
Immediately below them there is a small shrine with a relief of Lord
Vishnu inside. By its side are many seated sages in meditation.
The fissure indicates a river. This is clear from a fact and a
suggestion. The fact, also strengthened by the presence of water
serpents, is the depiction at the edge of the southern surface of some
persons performing the rite of "Sandhya vandhana" by the
river. The suggestion is that, in Pallava days, actual water flowed down
the cleavage from the hill behind, where there are survivals of what
would be called a water tank. The notion is similar to what is found in
the Isurumuniya in Anuradhapura, the ancient capital of Sri Lanka.
On the northern face are some huge elephants, among the very best of
their kind in the whole range of Indian sculptures. There is, besides,
the hypocritical cat which, pretending to perform penance, draws to it a
number of unfortunate unsuspecting rats. This is a touch of humour not
very common in Indian art. There are, besides, the Lion, the Tiger, the
Boar. In the upper part off the surface there are rows of semi-divine
beings effortlessly flying, all towards the fissure. Close by is placed
an engaging composition of a monkey picking out lice from the head of
another. It was brought here from near the Mukunda Nayanar temple.
A little distance to the south there is an unfinished attempt at the
depiction of the very same scene on another boulder. Probably the maker
of the first bas-relief initially tried his hand here.
There is a third bas-relief, this time depicting Sri Krishna protecting
the good people of Brindavan from Indra's wrath by interposing a
mountain. This is a fine pastoral scene, which visitors to Mahabalipuram
in the early centuries would have readily understood. Strangely enough,
there are a few small sphinxes and gryphons at the edges of the huge
composition. A Mandapa was built in Vijayanagar times in front of what
originally was an open-air bas-relief.
The Five Rathas - The Dharmaraja, The Bhima, The Arjuna, The
Draupadi and The Sahadeva
The Five Rathas, about 200 m south of the main hill, were fashioned out
of a smaller hill sloping down from the south. From the largest part was
made the biggest of the five rathas, the Dharmaraja. Then followed
onwards north, in the descending order of height, the Bhima, the Arjuna
and the Draupadi.
A little to the west of Draupadi there was a comparatively large rock
and out of it the Sahadeva Ratha was made. Immediately in front of the
Draupadi again two smaller rocks were sculptured into an elephant and a
lion. Behind the Draupadi and the Arjuna, which stand on a common base,
there is a Nandi.
Not Exactly Temple Chariots!
These rathas (an irregular expression, for they are really Vimanas, and
not temple chariots, as the word means) perpetuate the forms of the
temple in use when they used to be made of perishable materials. A
Pallava who must have been something of an art critic or art historian
decided that these styles should be preserved in eternal rock. Outside
Mahabalipuram except in Kazhugumalai (in Tirunelveli district), there is
nothing like these rathas anywhere in India.
There are four rathas elsewhere in Mahabalipuram so that there are nine
in all. Among themselves they represent four main styles: the apsidal,
the barrel vaulted, the domical and the so-called "hut". The
third was to dominate the future, with some modifications. The first two
are comparatively rare and the last very much so.
The rathas with the domical sikhara are the Dharmaraja, the largest of
them all; the Arjuna, a smaller version of the first, the Pidari and the
two Valayankuttai, these three located elsewhere in Mahabalipuram. The
Bhima Ratha and Ganesa Ratha, which is near the larger hill, are barrel
vaulted, the Sahadeva is apsidal, and the Draupadi is "hut shaped".
There are some superb sculptures on the Dharmaraja and the Arjuna. The
former contains splendid divine and secular portraits, with labels
beside some of them. The later are certainly kings, but it is difficult
to identify them. There are some lovely royal couples on the Arjuna.
Again, it is impossible to say who they are. Nevertheless, these
sculptures show how beautifully delicate and sensitive Pallava sculpture
is, making it one of the great schools of Indian art.
The lion, Goddess Durga's mount, stands right in front of Her shrine,
here called the "Draupadi". Just alongside the apsidal
Sahadeva Ratha stands the elephant, also apsidal in shape. Such touches
are frequent in Mahabalipuram. It is very probable that there was a
school of sculpture here in ancient days. For, probationary and
incomplete sculptural and architectural efforts are to be seen at every
turn. An important point is that not a single monument in Mahabalipuram
is quite complete.
Mahishamardhani and the Adivaraha Mandapas
Of the many excavated rock temples in Mahabalipuram anomalously called "Mandapas",
two of the best are the Mahishamardhani and the Adivaraha. The former
contains on walls facing each other two of the most superb sculptural
reliefs known to Indian art, both connected with each other in their
common scriptural source. The latter Mandapa has two groups of royal
sculptures, also facing each other. Besides, it is the only temple in
Mahabalipuram apart from the Sthalasayana Perumal, where worship
continues today, but fitfully.
The Mahishamardhini temple has been excavated in a rock on the eastern
side of the top of the hill. Right above it there is a structural
temple, one of four of a lighthouse for decades until a new lighthouse
was erected close by. Near the Mahishamardhani temple there is a smaller
rock where an unfinished attempt at excavating a fane has been made.
There are three shrines in the Mahishamardhani Mandapa. A small Mandapa
projects forward from the central shrine. On the northern and southern
walls of the Ardhamandapa there are the great sculptural reliefs of
Goddess Durga fighting the demon and of Lord Vishnu in His cosmic sleep.
The incidents are from two consecutive cantos of the "Devi
Mahatmyam". In the one relief the energy with which the young
Goddess goes forth to war with the buffalo headed demon is in
magnificent contrast with the cosmic sleep of Lord Vishnu on His serpent
couch.
The royal groups in the Adivaraha temple are, in one, of a seated king
with two queens flanking him and, in the other, of a standing king with
two consorts standing by him. There are many opinions but it is
generally thought that the seated monarch is Simhavishnu (574-600) and
the standing one his son and successor, Mahendra I (600-630). There are,
besides, reliefs of many divinities.
Mahabalipuram- A Classical Site Of Indian Historical Archaeology
When the first British visitors went to Mahabalipuram in the eighteenth
century, they found the monuments under sand, a few completely so. It
must have fallen into neglect after the fall of the Vijayanagar Empire
or, at least, Vijayanagar authority. It had prospered under the Cholas
and their successors until about the seventeenth century. Europe knew of
it as early as the 13th century when, following Marco Polo's visit, it
appears in the Catalan Map of 1275.
The first European to mention it directly, but with no personal
knowledge, of it, did so in 1582. The first English visitor was William
Chambers in 1788. Following this, earnest antiquarians from Madras
puzzled over it. One of them, Colin Mackenzie, dug out some of the
monuments from sand and deputed assistants to collect its traditions and
coins. In this way Mahabalipuram became one of the classical sites of
Indian historical archaeology.
Fair & Festival at Mahabalipuram
Dance Festival at Mahabalipuram : The
internationally acclaimed and globally renowned "Mahabalipuram
Dance Festival" is organised by the Department of Tourism,
Government of Tamil Nadu every year in Mahabalipuram - the renowned and
ancient 7th century centre for Pallava culture and arts.
The Dance festival starts on the 25th of December every year and is
conducted on all Saturdays and Government holidays, upto February first
week. Dancers and musicians of repute from India and abroad thrill the
crowds every year. Folk dances of India are an added attraction.
Sit before an open-air 'stage' created 13 centuries ago, the incredible
monolithic rock sculptures of the Pallavas, next to the sea in this
ancient city of Mahabalipuram. Lovers of dance will be treated to a very
unique and unforgettably aesthet ic event: Bharathanatyam, Kuchipudi,
Kathakali and Odissi, presented by the very best exponents of the art
besides folk dances.
How to Get There
Air : Chennai (58-km) is the nearest airport with
both domestic and international terminus. Chennai is connected with all
the major places in India through the numerous domestic flights.
International flights operate from various parts of the world to
Chennai.
Rail : The nearest railway stations are Chengalpattu
(29-km) and Chennai (58-km). From these stations one has to take road to
reach the Mahabalipuram.
Road : Buses are available from Pondicherry,
Kanchipuram, Chengalpattu and Chennai to Mahabalipuram daily. The road
to Mahabalipuram is good. Tourists can also hire a taxi from Chennai.
Tour Packages of Mahabalipuram