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Excursions » Karnataka » Belur


 

Excursions of Belur India | Belur Excursions in South India




Karnataka Major AttractionsBelur


Belur being a spiritual tourist center, the tourist would also be interested in visiting Halebid, a place at a distance of 16 km from the city of Belur. It will be very pleasurable to visit the Hoyasaleesware Temple in the Halebid for the tourist of Belur. Some other temples of Jain and other Hindu deities are there to entertain the spiritual tourist here in Halebid. Kedareshwara temple and other Jain Temples are also the major tourist attractions of the places nearby Belur.

The Shravanabelagola is another place of excursion from Belur at some distance is the major pilgrim center of Jainism.

This city is connected with the rest of the cities of the country and especially the south Indian cities with railways, roadways and airways. Roadways are the best and cheapest means for traveling to this city of pilgrimage. There is a proper National Highway linked with almost all the northern parts of India.

The Karnataka State Road Transportation Corporation is providing excellent bus services to the tourist of this place. Deluxe buses are also available for luxurious traveling. Hassan is the nearest train station from where the visitors could get railway transportation. Bangalore and Mangalore provides air transportation.

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.

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.

Belur is 222 Kms from Bangalore, 34 Kms from Hassan and 149 Kms from Mysore. This place is famous for its exquisite temples. Belur is known as Dakshina Varanasi or South Banaras for its temples.

The serenity of Belur is attributed to the celebrated temple of Channakeshava, built by the Hoysala King Vishnuvardhana in 117 A. D. to commemorate his conversion from Jainism to Vaishnavism.


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