Stampa:Pattadakal, Virupaksa Temple (9842959473).jpg

Page contents not supported in other languages.
Minn Wikipedija, l-enċiklopedija l-ħielsa

Fajl oriġinali(5,184 × 3,456 pixel, dimensjoni: 7.34 MB, tip ta' MIME: image/jpeg)

Dan huwa fajl mill-Wikimedia Commons. Il-deskrizzjoni fuq il-paġna ta' diskussjoni oriġinali tidher hawn taħt.
Commons huwa repożitorju ta' fajls multimedjali liċenzjati b'xejn. Int tista' tgħin.

Taqsira

Deskrizzjoni

Pattadakal, Virupaksa Temple

Pattadakal also spelled Pattadakalu is a World Heritage site, a village and an important tourist centre on the left bank of the Malaprabha River in the state of Karnataka, India. It is close to Badami and Aihole, both of which are well known for Chalukya monuments.

Pattadakal, place for Chalukyas Coronation, was the capital of the Chalukya dynasty of Karnataka in Southern India. The Chalukyas built many temples here between the 7th and 9th century. There are ten temples including a Jain sanctuary surrounded by numerous small shrines and plinths in fusion of various Indian architectural styles (Rekha, Nagara, Prasada and Dravida Vimana). Four temples were built in Chalukya Dravidian style, four in Nagara style of Northern India and the Papanatha temple in mixed style. Nine Shiva temples and one Jaina basadi, situated along the northern course of the River, which is considered as very auspicious according to Holy Scriptures.

Virupaksha temple is the largest and grandest of the temples in Pattadakal. It was built in the 8th century by Queen Lokamahadevi (Trilokyamahadevi) in 745 to commemorate the victory of her husband (Vikramaditya II) over the Pallavas of Kanchi. The Virupaksha temple is rich in sculptures like those of Lingodbhava, Nataraja, Ravananugraha and Ugranarasimha. The temple has a sanctum, an inner passage, pillared navaranga and triple entrances from the north, east and the south porches. It has a massive gateway in front from the east and a small gate behind. There are inscriptions and imposing stone carved figures inside the stone mantapa. A little inside is the four-pillared Nandimantapa, which has a fine large stone bull. The sanctum has a circuit path and installed on the square pedestal, a black Shivalinga. The famous Kailasa temple at Ellora was built on the model of the Virupaksha temple.

(source: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pattadakal)
Data
Sors Pattadakal, Virupaksa Temple
Awtur Arian Zwegers from Brussels, Belgium
Camera location15° 57′ 00.35″ N, 75° 48′ 57.91″ E Kartographer map based on OpenStreetMap.View this and other nearby images on: OpenStreetMapinfo

Liċenzja

w:mt:Creative Commons
attribuzzjoni
Dan il-fajl huwa liċenzjat taħt it-termini tal-liċenzja Creative Commons Attribuzzjoni 2.0 Ġeneriku
Inti ħieles:
  • li taqsam – li tikkopja, tiddistribwixxi u tittrażmetti din l-opra
  • li timmodifika – li tadatta l-biċċa xogħol
Taħt il-kundizzjonijiet segwenti:
  • attribuzzjoni – Għandek tattribwixxi x-xogħol bil-mod speċifikat mill-awtur jew minn min ta l-l-iċenzja (imma mhux b'xi mod li jissuġġerixxi ji jappoġjaw lilek jew l-użu tax-xogħol).
This image was originally posted to Flickr by Arian Zwegers at https://flickr.com/photos/67769030@N07/9842959473. It was reviewed on 8 Marzu 2016 by FlickreviewR and was confirmed to be licensed under the terms of the cc-by-2.0.

8 Marzu 2016

Captions

Add a one-line explanation of what this file represents

Items portrayed in this file

depicts Ingliż

copyrighted Ingliż

15°57'0.346"N, 75°48'57.913"E

8 Jannar 2013

captured with Ingliż

Kronoloġija tal-fajl

Agħfas fuq il-grupp data/ħin biex tara l-fajl biex tara kif jidher dak il-ħin.

Data/ĦinMinjaturaQisienUtentKumment
kurrenti20:23, 8 Marzu 2016Minjatura tal-verżjoni ta' 20:23, 8 Marzu 20165,184 × 3,456 (7.34 MB)ShipjustgotrealTransferred from Flickr via Flickr2Commons

Il-Paġna segwenti twassal għal din l-istampa:

L-użu globali tal-fajl

Il-wikis segwenti jużaw dan il-fajl:

Metadati