Khajuraho India Tourism
Khajuraho is a village in the Indian state of Madhya Pradesh, located in
Chhatarpur District, about 385 miles (620 kilometres) southeast of Delhi,
the capital city of India.
One of the most popular tourist destinations in India, Khajuraho has
the largest group of medieval Hindu temples, famous for their erotic sculpture.
The name Khajuraho is derived from the Hindi word khajur meaning date
palm.
The city was once the original capital of the Chandela Rajputs, a Hindu
dynasty that ruled this part of India from the 10th to the 12th centuries.
The Khajuraho temples were built over a span of a hundred years, from
950 to 1050. The Chandela capital was moved to Mahoba after this time,
but Khajuraho coninued to flourish for some time.
The whole area was enclosed by a wall with eight gates, each flanked
by two golden palm trees. There were originally over 80 Hindu temples,
of which only 22 now stand in a reasonable state of preservation, scattered
over an area of about 8 square miles (21 km²).
Unlike other cultural centers of North India, the temples of Khajuraho
never underwent massive destruction and a number of them have survived.
They are fine examples of Indian architectural styles that have gained
popularity due to their salacious depiction of the traditional way of
life during medieval times. They were rediscovered during the late 19th
century and the jungles had taken a toll on some of the monuments.
Khajuraho temples, constructed with spiral superstructures, adhere to northern
Indian shikhara temple style and often to a Panchayatana plan or layout.
A few of the temples are dedicated to the Jain pantheon and the rest to
Hindu deities - to God's Trio, Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva, and various Devi
forms, such as the Devi Jagadambi temple.
A Panchayatana temple had four subordinate shrines on four corners and the
main shrine in the center of the podium, which comprises their base. The
temples are grouped into three geographical divisions : western, eastern
and southern
With a graded rise secondary shikharas (spires) cluster to create appropriate
base for the main shikhara over the sanctum. Kandariya Mahadeva, one of
the most accomplished temples of the Western group, comprises eighty-four
shikharas, the main being 116 feet from the ground level.
These shikharas - subordinate and main, attribute to the Khajuraho temples
their unique splendor and special character. With a graded rise of these
shikharas from over the ardhamandapa, porch, to mandapa, assembly hall,
mahamandapa, principal assembly hall, antarala, vestibule, and garbhagraha,
sanctum sanctorum, Khajuraho temples attain the form and glory of gradually
rising Himalayan peaks.These temples of khajuraho have sculptures that look
very realistic and are studied even today.
The Khajuraho temples are now set in a parkland landscape. When India gained
independence from Britain in 1947 the landscape setting was semi-desert
and scrub. The archaeological park now has something of the character of
an English public park, with mown grass, rose beds and ornamental trees.
This may be popular with visitors but has no relationship with the historic
landscape at the time the temples were built. The development of landscape
archaeology as an academic discipline raises questions concerning the landscape
of archaeology of Khajuraho and the original relationship between the temple
complex and the surrounding area.
There are no records of what the original landscape might have been but
it is known that a large community of priests used the temple complex and
that Indian gardens in the tenth century were predominantly tree gardens.
They did not have lawns or herbaceous flowering plants.
Khajuraho India Tourism, Central India Tourism Reservation Form