| Lakshmana Temple
other sites in Khajuraho |
Khajuraho, India |
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Lakshmana temple, dedicated to Lord Vishnu, was built from 930-950 AD during the reign of King Yasovarman of the Chandella kingdom. It houses a sacred image of Vaikuntha-Vishnu brought from Tibet. Though the temple is one of the oldest in the Khajuraho fields, it is also one of the most exquistely decorated, covered almost completely with images of over 600 gods in the Hindu Pantheon. The main shrine of the temple, which faces east, is flanked by four freestanding subsidiary shrines at the corners of the temple platform.
The temple is famous for the explicitely sexual carvings on the southern side of the temple (images 12-13), though these make up only a small fraction of the total.
Bibliography:
All images copyright 2001 Kaye Yeo Ahn, MArch student, Yale University
Koch, Ebba. Mughal
Architecture: an Outline of its History and Development (1526-1858)
Prestel-Verlag publishers.
Munich. 1991
Tadgell, Christopher. The History of Architecture in India
Phaidon Press Limited. Singapore. 1998