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Category Archives: Ajanta and Ellora

The Stone Temples of Ajanta and Ellora

www.jimmccluskey.com Posted on January 14, 2015 by JimApril 13, 2015

Even in the brief time we have been here, less than two weeks, it has become clear that India is a country of diversity and contrasts. Mumbai itself shows many different faces depending on which way you look (though whichever way you look, it is crowded.) But all of Mumbai is relatively modern— “ Old Bombay” dates basically to the Colonial Era. In the scope of India’s history, that isn’t very long.

Entryway to temple at Ajanta, carved from solid stone.

Entryway to temple at Ajanta, carved from solid stone.

Our next destination was a giant leap into the past, the ancient and beautiful temples and monasteries of Ellora and Ajanta, near the city of Aurangabad. Carved out of solid rock cliff faces, some date back more than 2000 years.

Large seated Buddha in a small room, carved from solid rock at Ajanta caves.

Large seated Buddha in a small room, carved from solid rock at Ajanta caves.

Over a period of about a thousand years, monks with chisels chipped out a variety of ornately pillared rooms, massive Buddhas almost filling the chamber where they sit and many other statues and symbols. At Ellora Buddhist, Hindu and Jain temples coexisted side by side, testimony to the tolerance of eastern religions.

Ellora15The Ajanta caves are the oldest and date back to the second century B.C. But thanks to being lost for centuries until a British soldier out hunting tigers discovered them in 1819, they are remarkably well preserved. Originally the walls and ceilings were covered with pigmented plaster paintings, using the fresco technique. There are still large areas where the paintings have survived and show the beauty and sophistication of the art of that era.

As someone who grew up in California thinking the Gold Rush of 1849 was ancient history, it is hard for me to fathom the age of these temples. They were a feat of art, architecture, and engineering—not to mention sheer effort—at a time when the western world was barely out of the Stone Age. One of the best reasons to travel is to encounter things which make you rethink your understanding of the world. India is doing that already…and we have two more months to go.

There is not enough room to include many pictures in this post, but there are a bunch more in the gallery [here].

Posted in Ajanta and Ellora, India, TRAVEL

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I started traveling to Guatemala in the mid-80s. When the internet became commonly available there a dozen years later I began writing a travel journal and emailing it to friends and family. This is the archive of those journals. GO>>>

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