Transportation:    | 
    By Road  | 
    
      
        Examples of Hoysala
        Temple Scultptures  | 
       
      
         
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    Distance:           | 
    Belur :
    222 Kms. from Bangalore 38 Kms. From Hassan 
    Halebid : 239 Kms. from Bangalore 27
    Kms. From Hassan 
    Shravanabelagola : 158 Kms. from
    Bangalore 51 Kms. From Hassan  | 
  
  
    Accommodation:  | 
    Nearest KSTDC Hotel  
    (Hotel Velapuri, Belur), 
    (Hotel Shantala, Halebidu)     | 
  
  
    KSTDC Conducted Tours 
    SCHEDULE  | 
    Daily (1 Day) 
    Departure : 7.15 a.m. 
    Return : 10.00 p.m. 
    Fare : Rs.340/-   | 
  
  
    Description:  
     
     
                 
       
       
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        Introduction: 
        Belur is a small town in the Hasan district of Karnataka. Here, kings of 
        the Hoysala dynasty constructed the 'Chennakeshva' (handsome Vishnu) temple. It is about
        one hundred feet high and has a magnificent gateway tower (gopuram), built in Dravidian
        style.  The main temple, surrounded by a group of subsidiary shrines, stands in the
        center of a rectangular, paved courtyard along the perimeter of which are ranges of cells
        fronted by a pillared veranda. The temple has lost its super structure but looks very
        imposing. It has a pillared hypostyle hall (navaranga), a square vestibule (antale ), and
        a solid, stellate vimana. Three entrances lead into the hall, each being flanked by a
        shrine. The doorways are guarded on either side by the gorgeously decorated doorkeepers.
        The extensive hall is supported by forty-six pillars, each of a different design. The
        Narasimha pillar could be rotated at will.   | 
       
     
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    The unique pillars were manufactured by rough-finishing a monolithic
    block of stone and then mounting it in upright position on a wheel. This was rotated
    against a chisel, set as a turning tool. Each pillar has a bell-shaped member towards the
    lower half of the shaft. A sloping bracket has been fixed to the capital by means of
    sockets. The brackets were carved from single slabs into images, enshrined with leafy
    aureoles of beautiful maidens known as 'shilabalakis'. The seductive, voluptuary emphasis
    is remarkable. The subjects are all secular and mostly represented are voluptuous maidens.
    All are graceful, charming and fascinatingly chiseled out. Each damsel is celestial, with
    exuberant serene beauty, exhibiting  the virtuosity of the sculptors. They all are in
    conformity with the art of dance and sculpture ( 'Natya' and 'Shilpa' shastras). Hence,
    their breasts remind of the moon, the waist resembles that of a swan, and their hips
    remind those of an elephant.  | 
     
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    Bittiga ( date? ), the fourth and
    mightiest monarch of the Hoysala dynasty, was converted from the Jain faith to the
    Vaishnava faith by the sage Ramanuja. The king changed his name to Vishnuvardhana and
    built temples with great vigor and dedication. In order to commemorate his victory over
    the Cholas in the battle of Talkad, he built Belur Temple in 1117 A.D. His queen Shantala,
    though a Jain by faith, was noted for catholicity of her religious outlooks. She was a
    well-known dancer and on one of the temple's brackets her dancing pose has been sculptured
    in the most ornate and exuberant style.  
    In
    the rich marble screens of the navaranga there are twenty-eight grill windows. Some are
    pierced with the conventional patterns. They are generally star-shaped, with bands of
    foliage, and with figures and mythological subjects. On one of the screens king
    Vishnuvardhana is shown beside his queen Shantala. A metallic icon of the period depicts
    the king in a standing posture which gives the exact idea about his stature, personality,
    dress and different ornaments he wore. 
       
    Historians find a tradition that the ancient and medieval Indian artists
    rarely sign their work of art. However, the Hoysala sculptors have broken this custom and
    signed their sculptures.They engraved their names, titles and even the place of their
    origin at the foot of their art work.The stone inscriptions and copper plates of the
    period give some more details about these artisans. Mallitamma was the most prolific of
    all known Hoysala artists and more than forty well-executed sculptures stand in his name.
    Dasoja and his son Javana were migrants of a nearby town called Ballegavi. Javana is
    credited for the sculptures of five madanakai damsels and  his father is credited for
    another four. Malliyanna and Nagoja have included birds and animals in their sculptures.
    The sculptures located in the navaranga were carved out by Chikkahampa and Malloja. It is
    a great pity that no biographical details about these artisans are available. What 
    these sculptures brought them in return to their hard and extremely pain-taking work must
    have been a pittance! However, even after a lapse of eight centuries, the art lovers of
    the whole world can adore them.  | 
  
  
    Contd......  | 
  
  
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