Ajanta Caves
Ajanta Caves
The Ajanta Caves in Maharashtra,
India are rock-cut cave monuments dating from the second century BC, containing
paintings and sculpture considered to be masterpieces of both Buddhist
religious art and universal pictorial art. By AD 480 the caves at Ajanta were
abandoned. During the next 1300 years the jungle grew back and the caves were
hidden, unvisited and undisturbed until the spring of 1819 when a British
officer in the Madras army entered the steep gorge on the trail of a tiger.
Somehow, deep within the tangled undergrowth, he came across the almost hidden
entrance to one of the caves. Exploring that first cave, long since a home to
nothing more than birds and bats and a lair for other, larger, animals, Captain
Smith wrote his name in pencil on one of the walls. Still faintly visible, it
records his name and the date, April 1819.
The Ajanta Caves are a series of 29 Buddhist cave temples in Ajanta, India, some of which date from the 2nd century
BC. Encompassing both Theravada and Mahayana Buddhist traditions, the Ajanta
caves preserve some of the best masterpieces of Buddhist art in India. Many
visitors explore the Ajanta Caves in conjunction with the nearby Ellora Caves.
History:
The Ajanta Caves were carved in the 2nd century BC out of a horseshoe-shaped cliff along
the Waghora River. They were used by Buddhist monks as prayer halls (chaitya
grihas) and monasteries (viharas) for about nine centuries, and then abruptly abandoned. They fell into
oblivion until they were rediscovered in 1819.
T he sculptures and paintings in the caves detail the Buddha's
life as well as the lives of the Buddha in his previous births, as related in
the allegorical Jataka tales. You will also find in the caves a sort of
illuminated history of the times - court scenes, street scenes, cameos of
domestic life and even animal and bird studies come alive on these unlit walls.
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