Khajuraho - An eloquent and ornate poetry in stone that
reflects the eternal philosophy relevant to all mankind !

Khajuraho,
once the great Chandela capital, is today a village of about a few thousand
people in the interiors of central India, in Chhatarpur district of Madhya
Pradesh. Tradition records the existence of eighty five temples, of
which only twenty five, strewn amidst lakes and fields, have survived. The
temples at Khajuraho, brilliant examples of medieval Indian architecture,
were built under later Chandela kings between AD 950 and AD 1050. Each
ancient structure in India has a fascinating story to tell. But few match
the temples of Khajuraho.
History of Khajuraho
The name Khajuraho derives from the khajur or date palm trees that
once surrounded the huge Khajurvahaka Tal. Legend has it that one
sultry summer night, Hemvati, the widowed daughter of a minister of the King
of Benaras, was bathing in the lake when the Moon God Chandrama saw here and
was entranced by her beauty. The son born out of their union was
Chandravarman who grew up to found the Chandela dynasty. In order to atone
for his mother's lapse, he raised temples that celebrated the union of
Purush and Prakriti, man and nature, as the source of all life and creation.
Chandela Rajputs rose to power during the early 10th century AD in the
land known as Jajhauti, now Bundelkhand. From being local feudatories of the
Partiharas of Kannauj, they rose to become a major power in northern India.
They were great patrons of the arts and equally great builders. From 12th
century onward, the other rival power of central India and Muslim invaders
like Mahmud Ghazni whom the Chandelas had kept at bay, began reasserting
themselves. Al-Biruni, the chronicler of Mahmud Ghazni, mentions Jajhauti
with 'Kajuraha' as its capital.
Construction and
Architecture of Khajuraho
Temple
construction continued sporadically until the 12th century. Far
removed from the politcal centre of the kingdom, its location minimised the
danger of external attack, making Khajuraho te Chandelas' spiritual
homeland. In 1335 Ibn Batuta talks about 'Kajarra' with a great pond,
flanked by temples containing idols and ascetics with matted locks living in
them.
The earliest temples of Khajuraho were built in
coarse granite. However, the most famous ones - including the World
Heritage monuments known as the Western Group of temples - are mostly built
in fine-grained buff, pink and pale yellow sandstone, quarried from
neighbouring Panna. The temples belong to different religious sects like
Shaiva, Vaishnava and Jain and mark the culmination of the northern Indian
or Nagara style of temple architecture.
A typical
Khajuraho temple sits upon a lofty stone terrace called the adisthana or
jagati, over which rise the jangha or walls of the inner
compartments. It also has canopied windows with balconies to admit air and
light into the interior. The roof comprises turrets of varying heights,
culminating in the tall and graceful curvilinear shikhara suggesting rising
mountain peaks. The Khajuraho temples are almost all aligned east to west,
with the entrance facing east. A profusely carved arch leads to the oblong
porch or ardhamanapa, behind which is the large assembly hall or mandapa,
open on three sides, followed by the still larger hall mahamandapa, a closed
hall with a corridor around it. This hall finally leads into the vestibule
or the antarala. Beyond this is the garbhagriha or sanctum, entered through
another ornate doorway, that houses the cult deity.
The larger temples have both inner and outer ambulatory
passages or sandharas. And some have subsidiary shrines on the four
corners making the structure a panchayatna or five shrined complex. Both the
interiors and the exterior are beautifully carved. A series of friezes runs
right round the temple, from the basement to the projections and the
recesses of the walls above. The inside walls, doorways, pillars, pilasters,
niches, architraves and ceilings all display a wealth of ornamentation which
has few parallels.
The sculptors of Khajuraho have show immense
virtuosity in expressing the myriad aspects of Indian life - god and
goddesses, guardians of the quarters, sensuous and graceful apsaras
(nymphs), surasundaris (attendants of higher divinities), salabhanjikas
(tree nymphs) in infinite moods and postures.
Themes
of passion and sensuality in Khajuraho

It
is the amorous couples of Khajuraho, appearing mostly on the panels of the
sandhara temples, that have drawn maximum attention.
Their gestures
and expressions pulsate with life and exhibit great passion, sensitivity,
joy and warmth. Traditionally, love or kama, symbols of life and creation,
had religious sanction as one of the aims of pursuits of life,
along with dharma or piety and artha or economic pursuit. The full
attainment of all three leads to moksha or salvation. Depictions of mithuna
or loving human couples were seen as auspicious signs of fertility that
would ward off evil and bestow great merit on the builder when used in
architecture.
The existing temples of Khajuraho can be divided
into three groups, Western, Eastern and Southern. The famous Western group,
designated a World Heritage site, is enclosed within a beautifully laid-out
park. The Lakshmana and Vishvanath temples to the front and the Kandariya
Mahadev, Jagdambi and Chitragupta temples at the rear, showcase the best of
Khajuraho.