A Review on the Archeological and Historical Architecture ‘Shaili’ in Kerala Temple

Exploring the Archeological and Historical Significance of 'Shaili' in Kerala Temple Architecture

Authors

  • Nisar U.
  • Yatish Sachidanand

Keywords:

archeological, historical architecture, Shaili, Kerala Temple, design, structural styles, climate, lifestyle, topography, geology, religion, building materials, culture, economics, politics, heritage, environment, Hindu temples, sanctuaries, Indian sanctuary typology, wood, Dravida tradition, symbolism, spatiality, Vedic religious practices

Abstract

Each culture can mix a kind of design that can run from points of interest to regular homes. History has demonstrated that the different structural styles have created in reaction to atmosphere, way of life, topography and geology of a place, religious logic of the general population and accessibility of building materials. Religion and way of life appear to be the most well-known impacts by and large. Culture, indeed, underlines the imperative part that financial matters, governmental issues, religion, legacy and the common habitat play in forming the constructed condition. Kerala (the southern-most province of India), the place where there is sanctuaries seems remarkable in this setting as the sanctuaries here were the rotate of religious, social, monetary and social existence of each Keralite. The run of the mill Hindu sanctuaries of Kerala emerge from among the Indian sanctuary typology in its frame, auxiliary lucidity, expressive convention, imagery or more all, in its development and craftsmanship in wood. They demonstrate a particular style which is a nearby adjustment of the Dravida or the South Indian convention of sanctuary development, significantly affected by the different geological, religious, social and political variables. The majority of the sanctuaries of Kerala are generally neighborhood organizations of love, wealthy in both substantial and elusive social qualities. The spatiality of Kerala sanctuaries takes after the general Indian philosophical ideas of the inside, hub and the human relatedness to infinite reality, while its execution in the fabricated frame takes after the Vedic religious practices

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Published

2018-05-01

How to Cite

[1]
“A Review on the Archeological and Historical Architecture ‘Shaili’ in Kerala Temple: Exploring the Archeological and Historical Significance of ’Shaili’ in Kerala Temple Architecture”, JASRAE, vol. 15, no. 3, pp. 438–444, May 2018, Accessed: Jul. 17, 2024. [Online]. Available: https://ignited.in/jasrae/article/view/8112

How to Cite

[1]
“A Review on the Archeological and Historical Architecture ‘Shaili’ in Kerala Temple: Exploring the Archeological and Historical Significance of ’Shaili’ in Kerala Temple Architecture”, JASRAE, vol. 15, no. 3, pp. 438–444, May 2018, Accessed: Jul. 17, 2024. [Online]. Available: https://ignited.in/jasrae/article/view/8112