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MONUMENTS
OF ORISSA |
Khandagiri |
Only a few buses go specifically to the caves,
but there are plenty which pass the nearby junction, the main
Calcutta to Madras highway.
The caves on the opposite hill, Khandagiri, can be reached
either by the long flights of steps leading from the road,
just up from the main entrance to the Udaigiri caves, or cutting
directly across from Hathi Gumpha via steps that drop down
from cave 17. The latter route brings you out at caves 1 and
2, known as the "Parrot Caves" for the carvings of birds on
their doorway-arches. Cave 2, excavated in the first century
BC, is the larger and more interesting.
On the back wall of one of its cells, a few faint lines in
red brahmini script are thought to have been scrawled 2000
years ago by a monk practicing his handwriting. The relief's
in cave 3, the Ananta Gumpha or "Snake Cave"- serpents decorate
the doorways - contain the best of the sculpture on Khandagiri
hill, albeit badly vandalzed in places.
Caves 7 and 8 both house relief's of Tirthankaras on their
walls as well as Hindu deities which had, by the time conversion
work was done, become part of the Jain pantheon. The best
place to wind up a visit to Khandagiri is the modern Jain
Temple at the top of the hill. Aside from some old Tirthankars
in the shrine room, the building itself, erected during the
nineteenth century on the site of a much earlier structure.
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Udaigiri |
Near Bhubaneshwar. Udaigiri caves occupy
a fairly compact area around the south of the hill. Cave 1,
the Rani Gumpha or "Queen's Cave", is tucked away around the
corner. Its best sculpture is to be found over the pillars,
arches and to the rear of the courtyard on the lower level,
and across the back wall of the upper storey, where a long
frieze shows rampaging elephants, panicking monkeys, sword
fights and the abduction of a women.
Nobody, as yet, has managed to string all these scenes into
a coherent narrative, though some are thought to illustrate
episodes from the life of Kalinga's King Kharavela. As you
return along the same path, the first caves of interest are
numbers 3 and 4 - a double-storied cave containing sculptures
of a lion holding its prey, elephants with snakes wrapped
around them and pillars topped by pairs of peculiar winged
animals.
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Its popular name, Ganesh Gumpha, is not derived
from the elephants in front of the cave, but from the appearance
on the rear wall of the cell on the right of the elephant-heades
Ganesh. From here, follow the path to the ledge at the very
top of Udaigiri hill for good views and the ruins of an old
chaitya hall. This was probably the main place of worship
for the Jain monks who lived below and may even once have
housed the legendary .
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