The Martand Sun Temple was a Kashmiri Hindu temple dedicated to Surya and built during the 8th century CE. Martand is another Sanskrit name for the Hindu Sun-god. Now in ruins, the temple is located five miles from Anantnag in the Indian state of Jammu and Kashmir.
Interestingly the architecture of this temple (according to experts)
is purely indigenous Aryan. The Martand Sun Temple was built by the
third king of the Karkota Dynasty, Lalitaditya Muktapida, in the 8th century CE. It is said to have been built during 725-756 CE.
The foundation of the temple is said to have been around since 370-500
CE, with some attributing the construction of the temple to have begun
with Ranaditya.
Over the course of a year, the temple was completely destroyed by Islamic ruler Sikandar Butshikan in the early 15th century CE.
The Martand temple was built on top of a plateau from where one can view whole of the Kashmir Valley.
From the ruins and related archaeological findings, it can be said it
was an excellent specimen of Kashmiri architecture, which had blended
the Gandharan, Gupta, Chinese, Roman, Syrian-Byzantine and Greek forms of architecture.
The temple has a colonnaded courtyard, with its primary shrine in its
center and surrounded by 84 smaller shrines, stretching to be 220 feet
long and 142 feet broad total and incorporating a smaller temple that
was previously built. The temple turns out to be the largest example of a peristyle in Kashmir,
and is complex due to its various chambers that are proportional in
size and aligned with the overall perimeter of the temple. In accordance
with Hindu temple architecture,
the primary entrance to the temple is situated in the western side of
the quadrangle and is the same width as the temple itself, creating
grandeur. The entrance is highly reflective of the temple as a whole due
to its elaborate decoration and allusion to the deities worshiped
inside. The primary shrine is located in a centralized structure (the
temple proper) that is thought to have had a pyramidal top - a common feature of the temples in Kashmir. Various wall carvings in the antechamber of the temple proper depict other gods, such as Vishnu, and river goddesses, such as Ganga and Yamuna, in addition to the sun-god Surya.
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