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International Destinations
Ajanta and Ellora: India’s handcrafted
caves
In
1819, British officers hunting tigers in the hills north of
Aurangabad, India, came upon a horseshoe-shaped cliff riddled
with what they thought were caves. They decided to explore,
climbing midway up the scarp, pushing aside vegetation that
partially obscured entrances and scrambling over debris that
littered the interiors.
To their astonishment, they found that the “caves”
were actually a series of ornately carved and painted rooms
hewn from the solid rock. The British officers had rediscovered
Ajanta.
Ajanta and nearby Ellora are two of the most amazing archaeological
sites in India. Although handcrafted caves are scattered throughout
India’s western state of Maharashtra, the complexes
at Ajanta and Ellora, roughly 300 kilometers northeast of
Mumbai (Bombay), are the most elaborate and varied examples
known.
Ajanta began as a religious enclave for Buddhist monks and
scholars more than 2,000 years ago. It is believed that, originally,
itinerant monks sought shelter in natural grottos during monsoons
and began decorating them with religious motifs to help pass
the rainy season. They used earlier wooden structures as models
for their work.
As the grottos were developed and expanded, they became permanent
monasteries, housing perhaps 200 residents.
Ajanta encompasses 29 rock-cut rooms created between 200
BCE and 650 CE using rudimentary hand tools. Most are viharas
(living quarters), while four are chaityas (temples).
The artisans responsible for Ajanta did not just hack holes
in the cliff, though. They carefully excavated, carving stairs,
benches, screens, columns, sculptures, and other furnishings
and decorations as they went, so that these elements remained
attached to the resulting floors, ceilings and walls.
They also painted patterns and pictures, employing pigments
derived from natural, water-soluble substances: kaolin chalk
for white, lamp soot for black, glauconite for green, ochre
for yellow and imported lapis lazuli for blue.
Their achievements would seem incredible even if executed
under ideal circumstances, but they worked only by the light
of oil lamps and what little sunshine penetrated cave entrances.
One of their more elegant accomplishments is the cathedral-like
Cave 19, a fifth century chaitya that was once painted throughout.
It has a broad, richly carved entablature beneath a steeply
vaulted ceiling supported by sturdy columns. The focal point
is the stupa (shrine), with a standing Buddha in front and
a three-tiered canopy overhead. An arched window above the
entrance directs light onto the stupa.
Cave 17 contains the greatest number of well-preserved murals.
Some are faded or fragmented, but others still display details
in vibrant colors. Most depict jatakas (tales from Buddha’s
life and teachings) in which Buddha takes the form of an animal
to illustrate certain virtues. The paintings portray such
whimsical creatures as talking lions, flying horses and rain-making
elephants as well as beautiful maidens, princes and warriors.
The seventh century abandonment of these masterpieces is
a mystery. Perhaps the Buddhists suffered religious persecution.
Or perhaps the isolation of the caves made it difficult for
the monks to collect sufficient alms for survival.
Some sources suggest that remnants of the Ajanta colony relocated
to Ellora, a site closer to an important caravan route. There,
another series of handcrafted caves chronologically begins
where the Ajanta caves end.
However, of the 34 caves chiseled into the sloping side of
the low hill at Ellora, only 12 (dating from 600 to 800 CE)
are Buddhist (one chaitya, the rest viharas). Seventeen are
Hindu (600 to 900 CE), and five are Jain (800 to 1100 CE).
As the dates indicate, some caves were fashioned simultaneously,
maybe as a form of religious competition. At the time, Buddhism
was declining in India and Hinduism regaining ground, so representatives
of both were eager to impress potential followers.
Although Ellora has more caves than Ajanta, the rooms generally
are smaller and simpler. The exception is Cave 16, the gargantuan
Kailasa Temple, considered the pinnacle of Indian rock-cut
architecture.
It is not a single room but a compound covering approximately
twice the area of the Parthenon in Greece. Unlike other caves
at Ajanta and Ellora, it has a huge courtyard that is open
to the sky, surrounded by a wall of galleries several stories
high. Two crumbling life-size elephant sculptures guard the
entrance.
Within the courtyard is the massive multi-level temple, its
pyramidal form replicating the real Mount Kailasa, a Himalayan
peak said to be the home of the Hindu god Siva.
The temple consists of a gateway, antechamber, assembly hall,
sanctuary and tower. Virtually every surface is lavishly embellished
with symbols and figures from the puranas (sacred Sanskrit
poems). The temple is connected to the gallery wall by a bridge.
The entire compound was cut from solid rock working from
the top down, so scaffolding was not needed (although good
planning certainly was). Its creation displaced an estimated
200,000 tonnes of rock. It is believed to have taken 7,000
laborers 150 years to complete the project.
Today, both Ajanta and Ellora are maintained by the Maharashtra
Tourism Development Corporation. The sites are open daily
from 9 a.m. until 5:30 p.m., with guides available for hire.
Visitors pay a small admission fee to enter the Ajanta site
and extra to attendants for lighting cave details. Entry is
free to all caves at Ellora except the Kailasa Temple.
A good base from which to visit Ajanta and Ellora is Aurangabad,
serviced daily by Indian Airlines and East West Airlines flights
from Mumbai (Bombay). The city has a variety of accommodations,
ranging from a youth hostel to five-star hotels.
At least a three-night stay in Aurangabad is advised, because
Ajanta (100 kilometers northeast by road) requires a full-day
excursion and Ellora (30 kilometers northwest) a half-day.
Aurangabad itself has several sights worth seeing and offers
some notable shopping values. |