Flight of deities and rebirth of temples: episodes from Indian history
Material type: TextPublication details: Aryan Books International New Delhi 2023Description: x, 405 pISBN:- 9788173056192
- 294.5350954 JAI
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Book | Indian Institute of Management LRC General Stacks | Non-fiction | 294.5350954 JAI (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 005224 |
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294.52113 PAT 99 thoughts on Ganesha (Hindi) | 294.528 DIN Shiva origins: | 294.535 VID The sacred complex in Hindu Gaya | 294.5350954 JAI Flight of deities and rebirth of temples: episodes from Indian history | 294.537 SWA The ancient science of mantras: wisdom of the sages: realize your dreams, achieve your goals | 294.54 SAS The essentials of Hinduism: an introduction to all the sacred texts | 294.5435 SWA A million thoughts: learn all about meditation from a Himalayan mystic |
This work examines the medieval response to temple destruction and image desecration. While temples were destroyed on a considerable scale, also noteworthy were the repeated endeavours to reconstruct them. In each instance of rebirth, the temple retained its original name, even though there was a visible downsizing in its scale and grandeur. The Keshava temple at Mathura, the Vishwanath temple at Kashi, the Somnath temple in Saurashtra, the Rama mandir at Ayodhya were among the shrines continually restored, well after Hindus had lost all semblance of political power. The Bindu Madhava, the most important Vishnu temple in Varanasi, was demolished in 1669 and a mosque constructed in its place. The temple now bearing the name Bindu Madhava is a modest structure in the shadow of the mosque, but continues the traditions associated with the site. Intriguingly, mosques built on temple sites often retained the sacred names —Bijamandal mosque, Lat masjid, Atala masjid, Gyanvapi mosque, and not to forget, masjid-i- janamsthan.
Equally worthy of study was the fate of images enshrined in temples. Many were swiftly removed by anxious devotees, many more were hurriedly buried; some remained on the move for decades, till such time they could be escorted back to their abodes. In several cases, images were damaged in flight. Countless images were lost, as their places of burial were forgotten over time. That necessitated the consecration of new images in more peaceable circumstances. So there were temples of the tenth-eleventh centuries, which housed images instated in the sixteenth. In situations where neither temple nor image could be safeguarded, the memory endured, and a shrine was recreated after an interval of several centuries.
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