| Index: > A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z |
|
|||||
| First Prev [ 1 2 ] Next Last |
Not long after its construction, the temple was abandoned and began to deteriorate.
The reconstruction of the compound began in 1918, and is not finished at the current time. The main building has only been completed in 1953, since it is next to impossible to find the original stonework, which has often been stolen and reused at remote construction sites. A temple will only be rebuilt if at least 75% of the original stones are available. Therefore, from most of the smaller shrines one can still see not much more than their foundation walls.
Today, it is an UNESCO World Heritage Site and one of the largest Hindu temples in south-east Asia. It is characterised by its tall and pointed architecture, typical for the hindu temple architecture, and by the 47m high central building inside a large complex of individual temples.
The compound is assembled of eight main shrines or candis, and more than 250 surrounding individual candi s. The three main shrines, called Trisakti (Ind. "three sacred places"), are dedicated to the three gods Shiva the Destroyer, Vishnu the Keeper and Brahma the Creator.
The Shiva shrine at the center contains four chambers, one in every cardinal direction. While the first contains a three meter high statue of Shiva, the other three contain smaller statues of Durga, his wife, AgastyaIn Hinduism, Agastya is a legendary sage or rishi. He is reputed to have traveled to south India to teach the people there of the Vedic religion. On the way the Vindhya Range in central India, which had been growing uncontrollably to enormous height, bowe, his teacher, and GaneshaIn Hinduism, Ganesha ( Gaesa, "lord of the hosts," also spelled Ganesa and sometimes referred to as Ganesh in Hindi, Bengali and other Indian vernaculars) is the god of wisdom, intelligence, education and prudence. He is a son of Shiva and Parvati, and th, his son. The statue of Durga is also called temple of Loro Jongrang (slender virgin), after a Javanese princess, daughter of King Boko . She was forced to marry a man she did not love, Bandung Bondowoso . After long negotiations she eventually agreed to the marriage, under the condition that her prince built her a temple ornamented with 1000 statues, between the setting and the rising of the sun. Helped by supernatural beings, the prince was about to succeed. So the princess ordered the women of the village to set a fire in the east of the temple, attempting to make the prince believe that the sun was about to rise. As the cocks began to crow, fooled by the light, the supernatural helpers fled. The prince, furious about the simple trick, changed Loro Jongrang to stone. She became the last and the most beautiful of the thousand statues.
The two other main shrines are that of Vishnu, to the north, and the one of Brahma, facing to the south. In front of each main temple is a smaller candis on the east side, dedicated to the mounts of the respective god - the bull NandiIn Hinduism, Nandi is the white bull which Shiva rides, and the leader of the Ganas. In western Kenya, the Nandi is an ethnic group or tribe and is a sub-group of the Kalenjin. Hindu mythology. for Shiva, the gander Angsa for Brahma, and Vishnus Eagle GarudaGaruda the eagle, is a lesser Hindu and Buddhist god, the mount (vahanam) of Vishnu, one of the main forms of God in Hinduism. Garuda is depicted as having a golden body, white face, red wings, and an eagle's beak and wings but a man's body. He is ancient, which serves as the national symbol of Indonesia (cf. also to the airline Garuda IndonesiaGaruda Indonesia is an airline based in Indonesia. Garuda is the name of the mythical bird found on the national seal of the government of Indonesia. History Garuda Indonesia traces its beginning to the late 1940s, when Indonesia was locked in a battle ag).
The bas-reliefs along the twenty sides of the temple depict the RamayanaThe Ramayana ( Sanskrit: vehicle of Rama) is part of the Hindu smriti, written by Valmiki (c. This epic of 24,000 verses tells of a Raghuvamsa prince, Rama of Ayodhya, whose wife Sita is abducted by the rakshasa, or demon, Ravana. The Ramayana had an impo legend. They illustrate how SitaSita in Hindu mythology is the wife of Rama. She was a foundling, found in a furrow in a plowed field, and became the adopted daughter of King Janaka. Because of this birth she is sometimes considered a daughter of Bhumidevi. After marrying Rama, she was, the wife of Rama, is abducted by an evil ogre. The monkey king Hanuman brings his army to help Rama and rescue Sita. This story is also shown by the Ramayana Ballet , regularly performed at full moon in front of the illuminated Prambanan complex.
The temple complex is surrounded by more than 250 individual temples of different sizes, called Pewara , believed to have been offered to the king as a sign of submission. The Pewara are arranged in four rows around the central temples, according to the rank of the people allowed to enter them. While the central row was accessible to the priests only, the other three were reserved for the nobles, the knights and the simple people respectively.
See also: Borobudur