Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Gadarmal Devi Temple
Hindu Yogini temple in India From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Gadarmal Devi temple is a Hindu and Jain temple at Badoh village of Vidisha, Madhya Pradesh. It was built by a person of Gadaria caste. Also called Gadarmal Temple of the Mothers, it is one of India's yogini temples. It has 42 niches for yogini statues, unusually arranged in a rectangle; it must originally have been hypaethral.
Remove ads
Description
Gadarmal Devi temple dates back to the 7th century A.D., which was built by a Gadaria. [1]The architecture of this yogini temple is a fusion of Pratihara and Parmara styles. It is built similar to Teli ka Mandir in Gwalior fort. This temple houses both Hindu and Jain idols.[2] The temple is made of sandstone with seven small shrines surrounding the main shrine.[3]
It is a 42-niche yogini temple. 18 broken images of the goddesses that once fitted into grooves in the temple platform are preserved from the waist down. It is composed of a rectangular shrine and a tall and massive Shikhara. Vidya Dehejia writes that as a yogini temple, it must once have been hypaethral, open to the sky.[4]
The archaeologist Joseph David Beglar photographed a colossal bas-relief sculpture of a mother and child inside the temple in 1871–2. He called it a figure of Maya Devi and the infant Buddha.[5]
- Idol of Vishnu
- A ceiling with Idols of Hindu goddesses
- Doorway decorated with Hindu deities and human figures
Remove ads
See also
References
Sources
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads