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Dravidian Style




πŸ›• Chapter 02 Β· Topic 02 Β· Temple Architecture

Dravidian Style of Temple Architecture

Vimana, gopuram, mandapa, tank; Pallava, Chola, Pandya, Vijayanagara dynasties; major temples β€” complete UPSC & PSC notes.

πŸ›• Overview of Dravidian Style

  • The Dravidian style (South Indian style) is the dominant temple architecture tradition of peninsular India south of the Vindhyas
  • Developed from the Pallava period (6th–9th century CE) onwards
  • Key feature: the vimana (pyramidal tower) over the garbhagriha β€” shorter and more pyramidal than the Nagara shikhara
  • The gopuram (gateway tower) is often taller than the vimana β€” opposite of Nagara style
  • Large temple complexes with enclosure walls (prakaras), tanks (pushkarini), and multiple mandapas

πŸ›οΈ Key Components of a Dravidian Temple

ComponentDescription
GarbhagrihaSanctum sanctorum; houses the main deity
VimanaPyramidal tower above the garbhagriha; stepped/tiered; topped with a dome (stupi)
GopuramMonumental gateway tower; often taller than the vimana; covered with sculptures; marks the entrance
MandapaPillared hall; multiple types β€” ardhamandapa, mahamandapa, kalyanamandapa
PrakaraEnclosure wall surrounding the temple complex; multiple prakaras in large temples
Pushkarini/TeppakulamSacred tank within the temple complex
Nandi mandapaSeparate shrine for Nandi (Shiva’s bull) facing the main shrine
StupiDome-like finial at the top of the vimana

πŸ“… Evolution of Dravidian Architecture by Dynasty

DynastyPeriodKey FeaturesExamples
Pallava6th–9th CERock-cut rathas; Shore Temple; early structural temples; Mahendra, Mamalla, Rajasimha stylesMahabalipuram (Pancha Rathas, Shore Temple), Kanchipuram (Kailasanatha)
Chola9th–13th CETall vimana; bronze casting (Nataraja); elaborate mandapas; Dravidian style at its peakBrihadeeswarar (Thanjavur), Gangaikondacholapuram, Darasuram
Pandya7th–14th CETall gopurams; large temple complexes; Madurai styleMeenakshi Amman Temple (Madurai)
Vijayanagara14th–17th CEMassive gopurams; 1,000-pillared halls; horse pillars; Hampi styleVirupaksha Temple (Hampi), Vittala Temple (Hampi)
Nayaka16th–18th CEExtremely tall gopurams; elaborate sculptures; Madurai, Thanjavur, TiruchirapalliMeenakshi Temple (expanded), Ranganathaswamy (Srirangam)
⭐ Brihadeeswarar Temple (Thanjavur): Built by Chola king Raja Raja Chola I (~1010 CE). UNESCO World Heritage Site (part of “Great Living Chola Temples”). The vimana is 66 metres tall β€” one of the tallest in India. The capstone (shikhara) weighs 80 tonnes and was placed using a ramp. The temple is dedicated to Shiva. The Nandi (bull) in front is carved from a single rock. The temple walls contain magnificent frescoes and inscriptions.
πŸ“Œ Nagara vs Dravidian β€” Key Differences:
Shikhara vs Vimana: Nagara = curvilinear shikhara; Dravidian = pyramidal vimana
Gopuram: Nagara = no gopuram; Dravidian = prominent gopuram (often taller than vimana)
Enclosure: Nagara = no large enclosure; Dravidian = multiple prakaras
Tank: Nagara = rare; Dravidian = essential component
Region: Nagara = north of Vindhyas; Dravidian = south of Vindhyas

βœ… Revision Checklist β€” Dravidian Style

βœ… Dravidian style = South India = south of Vindhyas = pyramidal vimana
βœ… Vimana = pyramidal tower over garbhagriha; Gopuram = gateway tower (often taller)
βœ… Prakara = enclosure wall; Pushkarini = sacred tank
βœ… Pallava = rock-cut rathas + Shore Temple = Mahabalipuram
βœ… Chola = tall vimana + bronze casting = Brihadeeswarar (Thanjavur)
βœ… Brihadeeswarar = Raja Raja Chola I = ~1010 CE = 66 m vimana = UNESCO
βœ… Vijayanagara = massive gopurams + 1000-pillared halls = Hampi
βœ… Vittala Temple Hampi = stone chariot + musical pillars
βœ… Meenakshi Temple = Madurai = Pandya/Nayaka = 14 gopurams
βœ… Great Living Chola Temples = UNESCO = Brihadeeswarar + Gangaikondacholapuram + Darasuram