Chronosynclastic Infundibulum

  • Home
  • Archive
  • Chrono What?!?
  • Semanti Who?
  • Contact Author
  • Credits
  • Copyright
  • Subscribe via RSS

Hoysala construction techniques in Halebidu

December 18th, 2008  |  by Semantic Overload  |  published in history, india

Until recently my plans of seeing Halebidu seemed jinxed. I always started with the temple in Belur and by the time I was done with Belur it was too late to see Halebidu properly. I was told that Halebidu was much more impressive than Belur, but I hadn’t had a chance to see it well until a few days ago.

A few days ago I visited the ruins of the temples in Halebidu. It was quite a sight to behold. And this, despite the fact that the temple was, in fact, incomplete, and had been vandalized by the Muslim invaders first, and the British later. Much like Belur, each carving in the temple tells a story. Each carving or sculpture deserves its own post. So I won’t even attempt to describe my entire visit in this post. I might write up separate posts for select sculptures later, but for now, I’d like to focus on the techniques used by the Hoysalas to build the temples.

Switch site

  • Switch to our mobile site

Subscribe by email

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

Twitter

  • Motorola postpones updating the Droid to android 2.1 http://short.to/1orgn I am not happy>>1 day ago

Latest Bookmarks

  • [tutorial] Paging: Memory Mapping With A Recursive Page Directory - rohitab.com - Forums
  • The Real Rules for Time Travelers | Cosmology | DISCOVER Magazine
    The idea of time travel is inextricably linked to the notion of free will
  • Barefoot running: How humans ran comfortably and safely before the invention of shoes
  • US troops issued with gun sights carrying coded references to Bible passages - Telegraph
  • Goodness Gracious Me - White Woman

Popular Posts

  • Hoysala construction techniques in Halebidu
  • Mahabali, Ramayan, Aryans, and Dravidians
  • Zeitgeist
  • So India won the Twenty20 world cup
  • Cultural preconditioning and natural instincts
  • On Haj, Mecca and pre-islamic arab
  • Cultural Indoctrination
  • Zeitgeist — second thoughts
  • Female Archetypes

Badges

hosted by hcoop
Valid XHTML 1.0 Transitional
Get Firefox
Wordpress

Switch to our mobile site