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The Elephanta Caves are a
network of sculpted caves located on Elephanta Island, or Gharapuri
(literally "the city of caves") in Mumbai Harbour, 10 kilometres (6.2
mi) to the east of the city of Mumbai in the Indian state of Maharashtra.
The island, located on an arm of the Arabian Sea, consists of two groups
of caves - the first is a large group of five Hindu caves, the second, a
smaller group of two Buddhist caves. The Hindu caves contain rock cut
stone sculptures, representing the Shaiva Hindu sect, dedicated to the
god Shiva.
The rock cut architecture of the caves has been dated to between the 5th
and 8th centuries, although the identity of the original builders is
still a subject of debate. The caves are hewn from solid basalt rock.
All the caves were also originally painted in the past, but now only
traces remain.
The island was called Gharapuri and was a Hindu place of worship until
Portuguese rule began in 1534.
The Portuguese called the island Elephanta on seeing its huge gigantic
statue of an Elephant at the entrance. |
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The Statue is now placed in the
garden outside the Bhau Daji Lad Museum (erstwhile Victoria & Albert
Museum) at the Jijamata Udyaan (erstwhile Victoria Gardens) at Byculla
in Mumbai. This cave was renovated in the 1970s after years of neglect,
and was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1987 to preserve the
artwork. It is currently maintained by the Archaeological Survey of
India (ASI).
Geography
Elephanta Island, or Gharapuri, is about 7 miles (11 km) east of the
Apollo Bunder (Bunder in Marathi means a "pier for embarkation and
disembarkation of passengers and goods") on the Mumbai Harbor and 6
miles (9.7 km) south of Pir Pal in Trombay. The island covers about 4
square miles (10 km2) at high tide and about 6 square miles (16 km2) at
low tide. Gharapuri is small village on the south side of the island.
The Elephanta Caves can be reached by a ferry from the
Gateway of India,
Mumbai, which has the nearest airport and train station. The cave is
closed on Monday.
The island is 1.5 miles (2.4 km) in length with two hills that rise to a
height of about 500 feet (150 m). A deep ravine cuts through the heart
of the island from north to south. On the west, the hill rises gently
from the sea and stretches east across the ravine and rises gradually to
the extreme east to a height of 568 feet (173 m). This hill is known as
the Stupa hill. Forest growth with clusters of mango, tamarind, and
karanj trees cover the hills with scattered palm trees. Rice fields are
seen in the valley. The fore shore is made up of sand and mud with
mangrove bushes on the fringe. Landing quays sit near three small
hamlets known as Set Bunder in the north-west, Mora Bunder in the
northeast, and Gharapuri or Raj Bunder in the south.
The two hills of the island, the western and the eastern, have five
rock-cut caves in the western part and a brick stupa on the eastern hill
on its top composed of two caves with a few rock-cut cisterns. One of
the caves on the eastern hill is unfinished. It is a protected island
with a buffer zone according to a Notification issued in 1985, which
also includes "a prohibited area" that stretches 1 kilometre (0.62 mi)
from the shoreline. History
Since no inscriptions on any of the island have been discovered, the
ancient history of the island is conjectural, at best. Pandava, the hero
of the Hindu epic Mahabharata, and Banasura, the demon devotee of Shiva,
are both credited with building temples or cut caves to live. Local
tradition holds that the caves are not man-made.
The Elephanta caves are "of unknown date and attribution". Art
historians have dated the caves in the range of late 5th to late 8th
century AD. Archaeological excavations have unearthed a few Kshatrapa
coins dated to 4th century AD. The known history is traced only to the
defeat of Mauryan rulers of Konkan by the Badami Chalukyas emperor
Pulakesi II (609 - 642) in a naval battle, in 635 AD. Elephanta was then
called Puri or Purika, and served as the capital of the Konkan Mauryas.
Some historians attribute the caves to the Konkan Mauryas, dating them
to the mid 6th century, though others refute this claim saying a
relatively small kingdom like the Konkan Mauryas could not undertake "an
almost superhuman excavation effort," which was needed to carve the rock
temples from solid rock and could not have the skilled labour to produce
such "high quality" sculpture.
Some other historians attribute the construction to the Kalacuris (late
5th to 6th century), who may have had a feudal relationship with the
Konkan Mauryas. In an era where polytheism was prevalent, the Elephanta
main cave dedicates the monotheism of the Pashupata Shaivism sect, a
sect to which Kalacuris as well as Konkan Mauryas belonged.
The Chalukyas, who defeated the Kalacuris as well as the Konkan Mauryas,
are also believed by some to be creators of the main cave, in the mid
7th century. The Rashtrakutas are the last claimants to the creation of
the main cave, approximated to the early 7th to late 8th century. The
Elephanta Shiva cave resembles in some aspects the 8th century
Rashtrakuta rock-temple Kailash at Ellora. The Trimurti of Elephanta
showing the three faces of Shiva is akin to the Trinity of Brahma,
Vishnu and Mahesh (Shiva), which was the royal insignia of the
Rashtrakutas. The Nataraja and Ardhanarishvara sculptures are also
attributed to the Rashtrakutas.
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Later,
Elephanta was ruled by another Chalukyan dynasty, and then by
Gujarat Sultanate, who surrendered it to the Portuguese in 1534. By
then, Elephanta was called Gharapuri, which denotes a hill
settlement. The name is still used in the local Marathi language.
The Portuguese named the island "Elephanta Island" in honour of a
huge rock-cut black stone statue of an elephant that was then
installed on a mound, a short distance east of Gharapuri village.
The elephant now sits in the Jijamata Udyaan zoo in Mumbai.
Portuguese rule saw a decline in the Hindu population on the island
and the abandonment of the Shiva cave (main cave) as a regular Hindu
place of worship, though worship on Mahashivratri, the festival of
Shiva, continued and still does. |
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The
Portuguese did considerable damage to the sanctuaries. Portuguese
soldiers used the reliefs of Shiva in the main cave for target practice,
sparing only the Trimurti sculpture. They also removed an inscription
related to the creation of the caves. While some historians solely blame
the Portuguese for the destruction of the caves, others also cite
water-logging and dripping rainwater as additional damaging factors. The
Portuguese left in 1661 as per the marriage treaty of Charles II of
England and Catherine of Braganza, daughter of King John IV of Portugal.
This marriage shifted possession of the islands to the British Empire,
as part of Catherine's dowry to Charles.
Though the main cave was restored in the 1970s, other caves, including
three consisting of important sculptures, are still badly damaged. The
caves were designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1987 as per the
cultural criteria of UNESCO: the caves "represent a masterpiece of human
creative genius" and "bear a unique or at least exceptional testimony to
a cultural tradition or to a civilization which is living or which has
disappeared". Overview
The island has two groups of caves in the rock cut architectural style.
The caves are hewn from solid basalt rock. All caves were painted in the
past, but only traces remain. The larger group of caves, which consists
of five caves on the western hill of the island, is well known for its
Hindu sculptures.
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The
primary cave numbered as Cave 1, is situated about 1 mile (1.6 km)
up a hillside, facing the ocean. It is a rock cut temple complex
that covers an area of 60,000 square feet (5,600 m2), and consists
of a main chamber, two lateral chambers, courtyards, and subsidiary
shrines.
It is 39 metres (128 ft)
deep from the front entrance to the back. The temple complex is the
abode of Shiva, depicted in widely celebrated carvings which reveal
his several forms and acts. On the eastern part of the island, on
the Stupa Hill, there is a small group of caves that house Buddhist
monuments. This hill is named after the religious Stupa monument
that they display. |
One of the
two caves is incomplete, while the other contains a Stupa made in brick.
Main
Cave
The main cave, also called the Shiva cave, Cave 1, or the Great Cave, is
27 metres (89 ft) square in plan with a hall (mandapa). At the entrance
are four doors, with three open porticoes and an aisle at the back.
Pillars, six in each row, divide the hall into a series of smaller
chambers. The roof of the hall has concealed beams supported by stone
columns joined together by capitals. The cave entrance is aligned with
the north-south axis, unusual for a Shiva shrine (normally east-west).
The northern entrance to the cave, which has 1,000 steep steps, is
flanked by two panels of Shiva dated to the Gupta period. The left panel
depicts Yogishvara (The Lord of Yoga) and the right shows Nataraja
(Shiva as the Lord of Dance). The central Shiva shrine is a
free-standing square cell with four entrances, located in the right
section of the main hall. Smaller shrines are located at the east and
west ends of the caves. The eastern sanctuary serves as a ceremonial
entrance.
Each wall has large carvings of Shiva, each more than 5 metres (16 ft)
in height. The central Shiva relief Trimurti is located on the south
wall and is flanked by Ardhanarisvara (a half-man, half-woman
representation of Shiva) on its left and Gangadhara to its right, which
denotes river Ganges's descent from Shiva's matted locks. Other carvings
related to the legend of Shiva are also seen in the main hall at
strategic locations in exclusive cubicles; these include
Kalyanasundaramurti, depicting Shiva's marriage to the goddess Parvati,
Andhakasuravadamurti or Andhakasuramardana, the slaying of the demon
Andhaka by Shiva, Shiva-Parvati on Mount Kailash (the abode of Shiva),
and Ravananugraha, depicting the demon-king Ravana shaking Kailash.
The main cave blends Chalukyan architectural features such as massive
figures of the divinities, guardians, and square pillars with custom
capitals with Gupta artistic characteristics, like the depiction of
mountains and clouds and female hairstyles.
Main Cave Shrine
The central shrine is a free-standing square cell, with entrances on
each of its sides. Each door is flanked by two dvarapalas (gate
keepers). The Linga, the symbol of Shiva in union with the Yoni, and the
symbol of Parvati together symbolise the supreme unity that is deified
by the shrine. The Linga is set on a raised platform above the floor of
the shrine by 6 feet (1.8 m). Six steps lead to this level from the
floor level. The height of the eight dvarapalas varies from 14.833 -
15.167 feet (4.521 - 4.623 m). All are in a damaged condition except
those at the southern door to the shrine. The southern gate statue has
many unusual features - an unusual headgear; a large skull above the
forehead; lips parted with protruding teeth; statues adorned with a
single bead necklace, earrings, plain twisted armlets and thick
wrist-lets; a stooped right shoulder; a globe held at navel level; the
robe is held at the right thigh by the left hand, and the legs are
shapeless.
Sources: Wikipedia |
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