Bhojpur
Founded by the legendary Parmar king of Dhar, Raja Bhoj (1010-53),
and named after him, Bhojpur, 28 km from Bhopal, is renowned for
the remains of its magnificent Shiva Temple and Cyclopean dam.
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The temple, which has earned the nomenclature of the Somnath
of the East, is known as the Bhojeshwar Temple. In plan a
simple square, with an exterior dimension of 66 feet, it is
devoid of the re-entrant angles usual in such buildings. The
richly carved dome, though incomplete, has a magnificent,
soaring strength of line and is supported by four pillars.
These, like the dome, have been conceived on a massive scale,
yet retain a remarkable elegance because of their Bhojeshwar
Temple tapering form. Divided into three sections, the lowest
is an octagon with facets of 2.12 feet, from which springs a
24-faced section. |
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Richly carved above, the doorway is plain below, throwing into
sharp relief the two exquisitely sculpted figures that stand
on either side. On the other three sides of the structure are
balconies, each supported by massive brackets and four
intricately carved pillars. The lingam in the sanctum rises to
an awe-inspiring height of 7.5 feet with a circumference of
17.8 feet. Set upon a massive platform 21.5 feet square, and
composed of three superimposed limestone blocks, the
architectural harmony of lingam and platform creates a superb
synthesis of solidity and lightness. |
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The temple was never completed, and the earthern ramp used to
raise it to dome-level still stands. Had it been completed, it
would have had very few rivals. As it is, even with the ravages of
time, it remains one of the best examples of temple architecture
of the 12th and 13th centuries.
Also incomplete, and with a similar stone-raising ramp, is a Jain
shrine that stands close to the Bhojeshwar temple. Three figures
of the tirthankaras are contained within, one being a colossal
statue of Mahavira 20 feet high, and the other two of Parsvanath.
Rectangular in plan, this temple probably belongs to the same
period as the Bhojeshwar.
West of Bhojpur once lay a vast lake, but nothing remains except
the ruins of the magnificent old dams by which its waters were
contained. The site was chosen with great skill, as a natural wall
of hills enclosed the whole area except for two gaps, 100 yards
and 500 yards in width respectively. These were closed by gigantic
earthern dams, faced on both sides with enormous blocks of
sandstone, many being 4 feet long, 3 feet broad and 2.5 feet
thick, set without mortar. The smaller dam is 44 feet high and 300
feet thick at the base, the larger dam 24 feet high with a flat
top 100 feet broad. These embankments held up an expanse of water
of about 250 square miles. This great work is ascribed to Raja
Bhoj, but it may possibly be of an earlier date.
The lake was destroyed by Hoshang Shah of Malwa (1405-34), who cut
through the lesser dam, and thus, either intentionally or in a fit
of destructive passion, added an enormous area of the highest
fertility to his possessions. According to a Gond legend, it took
an army of them three months to cut through the dam, and the lake
took three years to empty, while its bed was not habitable for
thirty years afterwards. The climate of Malwa is said to have been
considerably altered by the removal of this vast sheet of water.