Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Ajanta and Ellora Caves-post 2

Ok you saw the highlight.  Now I have finally had time to do the rest of the Ellora caves, the Ajanta caves, and the city between the two and in which we stayed, Aurangabad.

The rest of Ellora
So in the last post I didn't mention Ellora is a big horseshoe, with the big monolith, the Kailasanatha, in the middle.  As we went to the right of that monolith were more Hindu caves (in which monks actually lived) and then the Buddhist caves (same deal, monks lived there).  To the left were the Jain caves.  Just having the three next to each other is pretty remarkable and speaks to the harmony of religions that has been and still is possible in India.


Hindu Caves
Inside from the cave



A picture of a cow for mom.

I think this is Kali, also a destroyer, though not the consort of Vishnu the destroyer.  Kali is a woman.

There were guys like this everywhere hanging out, as you see here at the cave entrance.  Kind of like the American equivalent of going to the mall (except they had no women to chase after as Sandip is pointing out as I type).  It was kind of annoying, but what can you do?

Family just having a picnic at the entrance to one of the caves.

Buddhist Caves
Older, still cool.
The Buddhist caves

This is a photo of the group, taken from where I took the above photo.

The caves

Sandip and Shannon standing outside an entrance.  There is a huge Buddha behind those screens.

This is one of my favorite shots.  This yellow sari was so vibrant against the backdrop, but I couldn't quite capture it but it was magical.

Another shot of the inside.

seriously, how cool is this?

Really awesome

Jain Caves
Jain temples in India are among the most spectacular, awesome, ornate things you can see.  With all due respect to the Jains out there, these caves are not.

Everyone is so over the caves.

View looking down at the most magnificent of the Jain caves.  Uninspiring.

Mahavir


Ajanta Caves
Ok it took an hour to drive here, then we had to either wait another hour for a shuttle or walk (we chose walk) to see another set of caves.  These are known for their paintings, not sculpture.  Equally impressive however.  And the wild thing is they were rediscovered by a British guy who literally found them while out riding his horse.

Less photos here because it was dark inside and they tried to keep light off to preserve the art.


Our walk to the caves

Here we are at the set of caves

Ok, there was some scultpure

A photo of the paintings

Another photo


Sandip's brilliant attempt to fix his broken flip-flop.  It worked.  For about  5 minutes.
There were many monkeys on the way out, and some people were feeding them.  Idiots.  


Our "short-cut" through the field on the way back.  It was shorter actually, just a bit rougher

Our driver stopped at this mosque in the middle of the countryside (as close to middle of nowhere as you can get in India) to do his sunset prayers



In and Around Aurangabad

Tomb of Aurangabad.  Remember he is Shah Jahan's kid, imprisoned dad, killed all his brothers and sisters, and ruled the area with iron fist.

This is Aurangabad's tomb (compare to Taj Mahal, just a generation before).  One of Aurangabad's big things about dad was that he spent too much state money on these ostentatious monuments.  So here is his tomb. 

We had to stop for the goats.

This is called "Poor Man's Taj"  Can you see the resemblance to Taj?

Bamboo scaffolding

Us at the restaurant at our hotel Lemontree.  All the managers had ponytails.

1 comment:

  1. Wonderful pictures as always and it's so great to hear your voice so clearly in the writing. I think the Buddhist caves look familiar from the movie "A Passage To India" - could I be right?

    I love your blog, Ang ... thank you once again!

    ReplyDelete