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architecture |
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Architecture Of Nepal |
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Nepalese religious architecture is another art
medium that is an important part of the country's cultural
heritage. There are three broad styles - the Pagoda style, the
Stupa style and the Shikhara style.
The Pagoda Style :- This style
refers to multi-roofed structures with wide eaves supported by
carved wooden struts. Windows, either latticed or grilled, are
usually projecting, while triangular spires enclosing and inverted
bell of stucco or burnished gold generally top off the roof. The
pagoda style shows the architectural genius of Nepal. A young
architect-sculptor-painter named baibhau (or Arniko as the Chinese
call him), led a delegation of 80 Nepalese artists to Tibet during
the late thirteenth century at the invitation of the Chinese
Emperor Kublai KhanThe Pagoda style was soon adopted in China and
from there spread to other Asian Countries. The best example of
the pagoda style in the Kathmandu Valley is Kasthamandap, a wooden
pagoda built in the Malla period and from which the name of the
capital city is said to be derived. The nine-storey Basantpur
Palace built by King Prithvi Narayan Shah is another outstanding
pagoda specimen. The Pashupati, Taleju and Changu Narayan temples
are also notable examples.
The Stupa Style :- The Swayambhu and
Boudhanath shrines are Nepal's first examples of the stupa or
Chaitya style. This style is purely Buddhist in concept and
execution. The outstanding feature of the stupa is a hemispherical
mound topped by a square base supporting a series of the thirteen
circular rings. Narrowing towards the top, the rings are crowned
by a parasol. The four Sides of the square base or the harmika, as
it is called, are often painted with pairs of mystic ' all -
seeing eyes'. The stupas in Patan, said to have been built by King
Ashoka, are considered to be the most ancient stupas of Nepal.
The Shikhara Style :- The Shikhara
style forms yet another architectural design found in Nepal. The
super structure is a tall curvilinear or pyramidal tower whose
surface is broken up vertically into five to nine section. The
final section consists of a bell-shaped part at the top. The
Krishna temple in Patan, consecrated by king Siddhi Narsingh Malla,
is the finest specimen of the relatively less popular Shikhara
style. |
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