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Annual Reports |
GENERAL Mahavīra is cut in relief on the brow of a rock overhanging another rock, on which latter are fashioned 5 or 6 groups of the so-called Pañchapāṇḍava beds with low pillows for the Jaina monks residing here. But there are no labels on these beds or pillow lofts. About5 50 years off is a pair of huge boulders leaning against each other, and in the recess between them is found a loose slab about 4 feet high with a fairly archaic sculpture of the Jaina goddess Padmāvatī cut on it in high relief. On the sides of the boulders facing each other on either side of the goddess are two panels, one containing in bold relief the figure of Gommaṭa and the other that of Pārśvanātha. Near the former figure is engraved a small inscription (No. 251) in characters of about the 10th century A. D., recording the erection of a Tēvāram (temple ?) evidently meaning these three figures, by a private individual named Vēli Koṅgaraiyar Puttaḍigaḷ. The Raṅganātha temple at Śrīraṅgam.
Architecturally, the Śrīraṅgam temple offers many interesting points to the student of Indian art. It belongs to the uttamōttama class of temples, as it has its full complement of seven prākāras running round the garbhagṛiha, and in addition has separate subsidiary shrines for all the minor parivāradēvatās, as prescribed in the Āgamas. In his Elements of Hindu Iconography T. A. Gopinatha Rao has given a chart illustrating the positions of the main temple and its auxiliary shrines according to the Vaikhānasa authorities. This plan does not agree in some of the details with the existing shrines in the temple, and this divergence is perhaps due to later improvements and alterations made knowingly or unknowingly in successive generations. In fact the temple has undergone so much alternation at the hands of pious kings of several dynasties and donors of different generations that it is difficult to distinguish between the original nucleus and the later accretions. The introduction of images of the Vaishṇava-Ālvārs in shrines which previously contained images of gods, appears also to have been a later innovation, made during the time of Rāmānuja and Vēdānta-Dēśika. A shrine for Dhanvantari, the god of medicine, which is located in the north side of the fourth prākāra in this temple is unique, as it is not met with in any other temple of South India. A stucco image of god Narasiṁha called Eḍuttakai-älagiyār depicted as fighting with Hiraṇyakaśipu, figured on the north gōpura of the fourth prākāra, is provided with a maṇḍapa constructed in front of it, and presents a rare instance of an ornamental image in a gōpura acquiring sanctity in course of time. Sculpturally, however, the temple is rather poor. The garbhagṛiha which is only in mortar, is circular in shape and is surmounted by the famous ‘ Śrīraṅgavimāna,’ with the gold-plated representation of god Para-Vāsudēva portrayed on its front side, which is considered very sacred. The numerous maṇḍapas, prākāra walls and gōpuras that rose up at different periods do not exhibit any remarkable workmanship, except in the case of the so-called Śēshagirirāyan-maṇḍapa on the east side of the fifth prākāra, which contains a few well-made composite pillars of the type commonly met with in constructions of the Vijayanagara period, viz., rearing yāḷi and horses ridden over by hunting cavaliers piercing tigers
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