| Cave
1 The most beautifully decorated of the
Ellora caves, has some of the best preserved paintings.
Magnificent array of colours, hairstyles, poses
and costumes can be seen in the paintings. A verandah
surrounded by several smaller cells and porches
at either end, has three doorways leading into
a pillared hall which has sculptures and narrative
murals. The paintings of women, jataka scenes
etc cover the hall walls. Paintings of Bodhisattvas
with headdresses flank the antechamber doorway
in the middle of the rear wall. The most popular
among them is of Bodhisattva Avalokitesvara and
Bodhisattva Padmapani in a pose of spiritual detachment,
(one with lotus in his hand). These paintings
reveal the true mastery of the artist and a relief
carving of four deer's is also a wonder of this
cave. Bodhisattva Vajrapani with a crown jewels
on his head is another well known portrait of
cave 1.
Cave 2 is a late 'Mahayana' vihara remarkable
for its ceiling decorations and murals narrating
the birth of Buddha. The painted ceiling is decorated
with murals as well as geometric and floral patterns.
The mural scenes include a number of 'jatakas'
and events surrounding the Buddha's birth such
as a scene of Buddha's mother standing in the
garden at Lumbini showing his birth, Gautama being
held by his mother and taking his first steps,
and '1000's of Buddha's', a large painting which
illustrates the miracle when the Buddha multiplied
himself to confuse a heretic.
Cave 3 was never completed.
Cave 4 is the largest monastery
at Ellora and is supported by 28 pillars. The
verandah has eight octagonal columns, with cells
at both ends. Although it was never completed,
the cave has some fine sculptures, including scenes
of people fleeing from the eight great dangers
to the protection of the Buddha's disciple Avalokitesvara
and depicts a man and woman fleeing from a mad
elephant, a man giving up his resistance to a
tempting woman etc. An inscription records that
Buddha image in Cave 4 was the gift of some Abhayanandi
who hailed from Mathura. There are large unfinished
Buddha images in the cave.
Cave 5 is also unfinished but
the door was completed. The door points to an
early date with heavy, curvilinear figures and
low-relief 'makaras'.
Cave 6 is the only two storey vihara at Ellora.
The lower level is a pillar hall, to support the
upper level; inside is a seated Buddha image with
his feet squat on the base with an intricately
carved door to the shrine. Stairs from the lower
level lead upstairs to a hall surrounded by cells
with fine paintings on the doorways. Although
incomplete, the cave provides an insight to the
importance of shrines.
Cave 7 has a large porch. It
has an unusual design of verandah with two porches
each supported by heavy sculptured octagonal Elephanta-type
columns which leads directly to the four cells
and the elaborate shrine. The central shrine houses
the usual arrangement of Buddha and Bodhisattvas.
Cave 8 is a small vihara.
Cave 9 a chaitya, dates from
the Hinayana period. It is a large liturgical
hall, with a monolithic stone stupa carved from
the living rock. The vaulted room was once wooden
ribbed and leads back from a huge 3.4m arched
chaitya sun windows which throws light on the
stupa at the rear. Two Buddha figures from the
Mahayana period on either side of the entrance
are painted.
Cave 10 is said to be the oldest
cave dating from 200 BC filled with Buddha's and
dominated by an enormous stupa. It is a chaitya
hall with an apsidal-ended interior. There are
paintings from the Hinayana and Mahyana periods.
The 'Shadanta jataka', (1st century BC) a legend
about the Buddha, is depicted on the wall in a
continuous panel. The indentations in the floor
near the left-hand wall were used for mixing paint
pigments. Traces of later Buddha figures are seen
on the columns and aisle ceilings. The cave also
preserves a number of inscriptions.
Cave 11 has a verandah and roof
painted with birds and animals, flowers, a hall
supported by four heavy pillars and a stone bench
running along the right side. The high plinth
and parapet of the exterior are decorated with
railings. There are five cells and a shrine of
a seated Buddha. The Buddha in shrine of cave
11 is one of the earliest images at Ellora. The
important fact about this Buddha is that, it is
attached to a stupa. This indicates a compromise
between stupa worship and image worship and shows
the transition from the earlier Hinayana to the
later Mahayana Buddhist phase of worship.
Cave 12 and 13 are small viharas
belonging to the earlier phase at Ellora. Their
facades have completely collapsed, exposing their
interior square cells with rock-cut beds. The
doorways in cave 12 have arched motifs connected
by friezes of railing motifs.
Cave 14 was planned on a grand
scale, but was never finished and can be missed
along with cave 15 which is a
long hall with a Buddha carved out of the rock.
Cave 16 is one of the largest
and later monasteries at Ellora. Some of the finest
paintings can be seen here. The combined media
of painting and sculpture adorn the dark interiors.
There is a fine view of the river from here. Two
welcoming elephants guard the entrance. The 'Teaching
Buddha' is seated on a lion throne teaching the
eight fold path. The most interesting feature
of cave 16 is the painting of 'The dying princess',
representing Sundari, the wife of Buddha's half
brother, Nanda, who left her to become a monk
on which an art critic commented, "For pathos
and sentiment and unmistakable way of telling
its story, this picture cannot be surpassed in
the history of art". This is one of the finest
paintings at Ellora. Nanda features in several
other paintings, including one of his conversion
by the Buddha.
Cave 17 has the finest as well
as the largest number of murals at Ellora. They
include beautiful women flying overhead on the
roof, while carved dwarfs support the pillars.
On the left of the verandah of cave 17, is a row
of amorous couples in varied styles of dress and
coiffures above which is a row of seated eight
Buddhas including Maitreya, the next Buddha to
come under the respective Bodhi tree. One of Ellora's
best known images shows a princess, surrounded
by attendants, applying make-up. In one, there
is royal procession, while in another an amorous
prince plies his lover with wine. In yet another
panel the Buddha returns from his enlightenment
to his own home to beg from his wife and astonished
son. Other favorite paintings include the scene
of a woman applying lipstick and of a princess
performing sringar. The ceiling of the Cave 17
porch is very elaborate, and beautifully executed.
Cave 18 is basically a cut-through
to Cave 19 from Cave 17. It has a little of merit
and can be missed.
Cave 19 is one of the two Chaitya
halls belonging to the later series with many
paintings and sculptures. It is carved with pillars,
a monolithic carved symbolic stupa and images
of the Buddha which heralded the introduction
of the Mahayana phase. There is a standing Buddha
on the tall stupa. The stupa itself is crowned
with an umbrella that nearly touches the room.
This cave is amongst the best surviving examples
of a rock cut Chaitya griha.
Cave 20 is a small vihara and
has rock-cut beams carved into the ceiling. The
animals, fish-tailed figures, and lotuses are
all reminders that this ceiling, like the others
at the site, depicts a lotus-lake. An antechamber
protrudes into the hall. The verandah columns
and brackets are delicately carved.
Cave 21 has several large viharas
which remain unfinished and has a fallen verandah
with flanking chapels. The walls have relief carvings.
The porch carving is refined and nearly complete.
Cave 23 is incomplete but the
pillars are elaborate, with beautiful yakshi brackets.
Cave 24 would have been the largest
vihara at Ellora if it had been completed but
the doorway is beautifully carved. Cave 24 shows
how they were constructed-long galleries were
cut into the rock, and then the rock between them
was broken through.
Cave 26 is a large chaitya hall
and two side viharas. The walls carved with scenes
of the Buddha's life and miracles, including the
temptations by Mara's daughters, but the most
striking being a huge figure of 7m long figure
of the 'reclining image of the Parinirvana (liberation)
Buddha', about to enter Nirvana. Below are figures
of his followers mourning his passing away and
above are the celestial beings. But almost every
trace of its paintings has disappeared.
Cave 27 is virtually a vihara
connected to the cave 26 chaitya. There is a great
pond in a box canyon 200m upstream from the cave.
|