Indian architecture
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Assorted References
- Indus civilization
- In India: Planning and architecture
The Harappan sites range from extensive cities to small villages or outposts. The two largest are Mohenjo-daro and Harappa, each perhaps originally about a mile square in overall dimensions. Each shares a characteristic layout, oriented roughly north-south with a great fortified “citadel” mound to…
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- In India: Planning and architecture
- South Asian arts
- In South Asian arts: Indian architecture
The favoured material of early Indian architecture appears to have been wood, but little has survived the rigours of the climate. Wooden forms, however, affected work in other mediums and were sometimes quite literally copied, as, for example, in early cave temples of…
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- In South Asian arts: Indian architecture
India
- In India: Architecture
Architecture is perhaps India’s greatest glory. Among the most-renowned monuments are many cave temples hewn from rock (of which those at Ajanta and Ellora are most noteworthy); the Sun Temple at Konarak (Konarka); the vast temple complexes at Bhubaneshwar, Khajuraho, and
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- Ahmadabad
- In Ahmadabad: The contemporary city
…the Hindu, Muslim, and Jaina architectural traditions. Aḥmad Shah and his successors ordered the dismantling and adaptation of Hindu temples in order to build mosques. This gave many of Ahmadabad’s mosques and tombs a Hindu flavur in their form and decoration. The dense “forest” of 260 richly carved columns within…
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- In Ahmadabad: The contemporary city