ELLORA CAVES
Hidden
Secrets of Ancient Kailasa Temple and Ellora Caves MYSTERIOUS PLACES - We could
be missing the point about the Kailasa temple. This famous underground creation,
one of the Ellora caves in Maharashtra, India, fascinates many people.
Everyone is marveling at the construction. Researchers, including ancient alien
theorists, try to find out how the Kailasa temple was built, what an
effort it must have been to cut it out of the rocks. But what does the Kailasa
temple represent, what does it actually tell us? The Kailasa temple is a Hindu
temple. It symbolizes Mount Kailash as the home of Lord Shiva. It is very much
an elephant place: there are statues and reliefs of elephants in and around the
location. An image of the sacred bull Nandi is on the central temple. Like
other Hindu temples, the Kailasa temple has a Sikhara (spire), but it looks
relatively small compared to the whole structure. On the inside of the temple,
there is a ring or flower relief on the ceiling of the central room. The
Kailasa Temple is part of the Ellora cave group. it is number 16 of a total of
34 caves. The Ellora caves are not natural caves, but religious dwellings
excavated out of the face of a cliff. These caves are generally thought to have
been created between the fifth and tenth centuries AD. But were they really? Is
it possible that the first work was done much earlier in time? So many of these
structures have been reworked throughout history worldwide. Just compare the
discussions about the sphinx in Egypt. Its pharaoh head seems too small for its
body. Some people think that the sphinx was built long before the pharaohs
lived and that the head was just re-carved later. The Ellora caves house Hindu,
Buddhist as well as Jain temples. According to Hinduism, Buddhism and Jainism, it
is one of the possible locations of Mt Meru or Sumeru, which is the center of
the universe. Jainism is by far the oldest religion in the region. Jains were
the first to build temples as symbolic representations of the mountain.
Couldn’t Jains, or even people before them, have carved the basic Ellora caves,
in times immemorial? Otherwise the site was some just some sort of market
place, where each religious group or ruler carved out booths for themselves
when they needed them. This just sounds too random. The thought that there was
a larger, older plan to the Ellora complex is supported by the numbering of the
caves. Why are they numbered in the first place? And why is the numbering not
chronological? Maybe the cave complex as a whole represents something. If
Kailash temple symbolizes the center of the universe, then what is around it?
The solar system, the galaxy, the cosmos? What if we theorize that the Ellora
cave group is thousands of years older than expected? It would be interesting
to research the complex from this point of view, to see what its secret story
is.
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