Among the earliest rock-cut monuments are those of Bhaja, near Lonavla, where time and weather have decayed the original woodwork of the facade, widening it into a great open archway? Bhaja is very obviously a translation of wooden architecture and craft into a more durable material: stone. The simple curve of the horseshoe arch suggests that this distinctive feature was still at a very early stage in its formation. The sloping pillars in the main cave and the sculptures in one of the viharas (monasteries) are fascinating features.
Solemn, it is the largest of the kind in India. The stupa (mound covering a Buddhist relic) is a plain dome, as at Bedsa. Amazingly, the wooden beams on the ceiling have remained intact for 2000 years and here at Kerala we can study the carpenter’s art as it was twenty centuries ago. A rare phenomenon indeed!
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