Within a quarter century, the Dashavatara Temple at Deogarh (c. 525 CE) expanded upon the concept of the unmanifest becoming manifest, featuring an elaborate symbolic program celebrating the multiple manifestations of the deity, in this case Vishnu. Image courtesy: Wikimedia Commons
Location:
India
Date_accepted:
2024-06-26T12:43:32Z
Modified:
2024-06-27T04:56:31Z
Type:
Image
Creator:
Temples of India Project Team
Contributor:
Dr Pushkar Sohoni
Publisher:
Jio Institute
Rights:
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
References:
Temples of India, Bhitargaon, Lomas Rishi, Early Chalukyas, Sanchi, Pattadakal, Nachna, Parvati Temple, M.S. Mate, Temple, Chaluykas of Badami, Ramtek, Badami, Mahakut, Michael W. Meister, Architecture, Dashavatara Temple, Kanganhalli, Aihole, Temple 17 at SanchiKanganhalli, Imperial Guptas, Deogarh, Kondivate, Vakatakas, Hoysala, and Udayagiri