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  2. Ancient Indian architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_Indian_architecture

    Ancient Indian architecture. Ancient Indian architecture. The Great Chaitya in the Buddhist Karla Caves, Maharashtra, India, c. 120 CE. Rock-cut Hindu temple [ 1] Ancient Indian architecture ranges from the Indian Bronze Age to around 800 CE. By this endpoint Buddhism in India had greatly declined, and Hinduism was predominant, and religious ...

  3. Vastu shastra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vastu_shastra

    Vastu Shastra are the textual part of Vastu Vidya – the broader knowledge about architecture and design theories from ancient India. [8] Vastu Vidya is a collection of ideas and concepts, with or without the support of layout diagrams, that are not rigid. Rather, these ideas and concepts are models for the organisation of space and form ...

  4. Harappan architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harappan_architecture

    Harappan architecture is the architecture of the Bronze Age [1] Indus Valley civilization, an ancient society of people who lived during c. 3300 BCE to 1300 BCE in the Indus Valley of modern-day Pakistan and India . The civilization's cities were noted for their urban planning, baked brick houses, elaborate drainage systems, water supply ...

  5. Architecture of India - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Architecture_of_India

    Indian architecture is rooted in the history, culture, and religion of India. Among several architectural styles and traditions, the best-known include the many varieties of Hindu temple architecture and Indo-Islamic architecture, especially Rajput architecture, Mughal architecture, South Indian architecture, and Indo-Saracenic architecture.

  6. Manasara - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manasara

    The Mānasāra, also known as Manasa or Manasara Shilpa Shastra, is an ancient Sanskrit treatise on Indian architecture and design. [4] Organized into 70 adhyayas (chapters) and 10,000 shlokas (verses), [5] it is one of many Hindu texts on Shilpa Shastra – science of arts and crafts – that once existed in 1st-millennium CE. [6]

  7. Hindu temple architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hindu_temple_architecture

    Architecture of a Hindu temple (Nagara style). These core elements are evidenced in the oldest surviving 5th–6th century CE temples. Hindu temple architecture as the main form of Hindu architecture has many varieties of style, though the basic nature of the Hindu temple remains the same, with the essential feature an inner sanctum, the garbha griha or womb-chamber, where the primary Murti or ...

  8. Indian art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indian_art

    Indian art consists of a variety of art forms, including painting, sculpture, pottery, and textile arts such as woven silk. Geographically, it spans the entire Indian subcontinent, including what is now India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Bhutan , and at times eastern Afghanistan. A strong sense of design is characteristic of Indian ...

  9. Pillars of Ashoka - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pillars_of_Ashoka

    The pillars of Ashoka are a series of monolithic pillars dispersed throughout the Indian subcontinent, erected—or at least inscribed with edicts —by the 3rd Mauryan Emperor Ashoka the Great, who reigned from c. 268 to 232 BC. [ 2] Ashoka used the expression Dhaṃma thaṃbhā ( Dharma stambha ), i.e. "pillars of the Dharma " to describe ...