Aurangabad Tourism
- Maharashtra Tours - About Ajanta Caves
About Ajanta Caves
AJANTA is world's greatest historical monument recognised by UNESCO located
just 40kms from Jalgaon city of Maharashtra, India. There are 30 caves in
Ajanta of which 9, 10, 19, 26 and 29 are chaitya-grihas and the rest are
monasteries. These caves were discovered in AD 1819 and were built up in
the earlier 2nd century BC-AD. Most of the paintings in Ajanta are right
from 2nd century BC-AD and some of them about the fifth century AD and continued
for the next two centuries. All paintings shows heavy religious influence
and centre around Buddha, Bodhisattvas, incidents from the life of Buddha
and the Jatakas. The paintings are executed on a ground of mud-plaster in
the tempera technique.
Conjures before one's vision, a dream of beauty- of caves, hidden in the
midst of a lonely glen with a streamlet flowing down below, caves that were
scooped out into the heart of the rock so that the pious Buddhist monk,
out on mission to spread the tenets of Buddhism could dwell and pray, caves
that the followers of Lord Buddha, embellished with architectural details
with a skilful command of the hammer over the chisel, with sculpture of
highest craftsmanship and above all, with the paintings of infinite charm.
At Ajanta, the paintings on the walls, illustrate the events in the life
of prince Gautama Buddha, the founder of Buddhism and in the more popular
Jatakas stories pertaining to Buddha's previous incarnation. According to
the older conceptions, the Buddha wrought many deeds of kindness and mercy
in a long series of transmigration as a Bodhisattva, before achieving his
final birth as the sage of sakyas.
Incidentally they contain the scenes of semi-mythological history, the
royal court and popular life of the ancient times, as told in romances
and plays. Some pictures recall the Greek and Roman compositions and proportions,
few late resemble to Chinese manners to some extent. But majority belongs
to a phase, which is purely Indian, as they are found nowhere else. These
monuments were constructed during two different periods of time separated
by a long interval of four centuries. The older ones were the product
of last to centuries before Christ and belong to Hinayana period of Buddhism
in later part of 2nd century AD when Buddhism was divided into two sections,
after the conduct of the fourth general council under another great king,
Kanishka.
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