COIMBATORE, June 4, 2012
Inside the Chola Temple
source:The Hindu
History scholars kept their audience spellbound with an action-packed account
of the mighty Cholas, writes Pankaja Srinivasan
The clunk of chisel on stone fills the air. Instructions fly
around. Priests, courtiers, masons and architects confer. The Natya Karanas
(dance movements) are being carved into the wall of the corridor around the
garbhagruha. Landmark judgements, donations and minutiae of day-to-day
administration are inscribed on the outer rock walls. On the inside, artists
capture scenes from the royal court, stories from the Puranas, gods, goddesses
and creatures great and small. There is a tinkle of anklets, a rustle of silk,
someone singing a Thevaram, someone else tuning a musical instrument…
The Brihadeeshwara temple as it must have been a thousand years
ago came alive as 12 speakers — a combination of scholars, researchers, writers
and die hard history enthusiasts — spirited us away to a time of the mighty
Cholas and their marvels of engineering, the temples.
The focus of the two-day seminar organised by the Rotary Club of
Metropolis was the heritage of the Cholas. The speakers lucidly described the
temple — from its layout, vimana, garbhagruha and gopura to
its symbolism, iconography, vaastu and its canons of architecture and rituals.
Professor S. Swaminathan explained the tradition and evolution of
temple architecture, starting from the Pallavas to the Nayakas. He pointed out
the change in the style of the sculptures from small and simple carvings to the
increasingly voluptuous and grand. The Tamil Nadu temples were mostly square or
rectangular (the shastras list 16 different shapes). Most importantly, these
temples were repositories of art, music and dance.
A living monument
UNESCO described the Brihadeeshwara temple as ‘The great Living
Chola Temple', said Chithra Madhavan in her lecture on the Brihadeeshwara
temple. “Living” because people still visit, worship and use the temple premises
like they did at the time of Raja Raja Chola.
It is a matter of pride that 80 per cent of temple inscriptions in
India were in Tamil Nadu, and Chithra spoke of the calligraphy that was of the
highest order, with a wealth of information contained in them. From the
inscriptions one learns of the transfer of 400 dancing girls to the temple,
where they lived, how much they were paid, who the musicians were and who were
the choreographers! She spoke of the monolith Nandi, the paintings on the
ceiling, the massive dwarapalakas…
She mourned the destruction of the Gangai Konda Chola Puram temple
of Rajendra Chola. The British carried away huge chunks of it to build a dam.
Even then the temple remains a jewel.
Parts of these grand monuments are forever closed to the public.
But, thanks to the slide shows at the seminar, one travelled the secret passages
around the sanctum sanctorum, gazed up the inside of the Sri Vimana and came
within touching distance of frescoes and murals. Having worked tirelessly with
the Archeologically Survey of India, P.S. Sriraman shared his breath taking
experience of the work he and his team did in the dark, unlit, unventilated
passage behind the sanctum sanctorum trying to photo-document the priceless
works of art for posterity.
Building a dream
S. Rajendran who evaluates repairs and restores old heritage
buildings gave a block by block explanation of the enviable engineering skills
of the Cholas who put up structures that were built to last ad infinitum. The
session ended with an eloquent description of the Darasuram temple by Kudavoil
Balasubramaniyam who walked the gathering through every nook and cranny of the
exquisite structure.
The brain behind the seminar, S. Gurumurthy, had reason to be
pleased. From a class nine student Sanjay Krishna from Perianaickapalayam,
architect K.V. Roshini and homemaker Renuka Seshachalam to professors of design
Balaram and Padmini, students of history, doctors, artists…they filled the GKD
Auditorium. “Spell bound”, “a sea of information”, “Awe-inspiring”, “Moving”
were just some of the reactions. “I wanted it to reach out to everyone,” said
Gurumurthy. “Our speakers were knowledgeable and held audience attention. Our
apprehension whether such a subject would evoke interest were laid to rest.”
Gurumurthy was besieged with requests to have more such programmes.
The seminar was inaugurated by Swami Dayananda Saraswati. It
concluded with industrialist Ravi Sam, who is deeply involved in the
conservation of south Indian temples, pledging his support to such endeavours
and promising more heritage-related events for Coimbatore. The chief guest
Babaji Raja Bhonsle, prince of Thanjavur, appreciated the interest in conserving
heritage and lauded the effort of the organisers.
The other eminent panellists were R Nagaswamy, R. Gopu, Silpa
Sastra scholar K.P. Umapathy Acharya, Aravind Venkatraman, sculptor P.
Sivaramakrishnan and Marabin Maindhan Muthaiah.
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