The central pyramid of the complex sits at the rear of the highest of three terraces. Originally, worshippers would have accessed the complex through a gateway at the western or lowest terrace. To the left of the gate is a carving of a monster eating a man, birds in a tree, and a dog, which is thought to be a
chronogram representing 1437 CE, the likely date of the temple's consecration. There is an obvious depiction of
sexual intercourse in relief on the floor at the entrance where it shows a paired
lingam which is represented physiologically by the
phallus and
yoni, which is represented bodily by the
vulva. Genitalia is portrayed on several statues from the site, which is unique among Javanese classical monuments. The main structure of the Sukuh temple is a truncated
pyramid surrounded by
monoliths and meticulously carved life-sized figures. The Sukuh temple does not follow the Hindu architecture of Wastu Vidya because it was built after the Hindu religion had weakened. Temples usually have a rectangular or square shape, but the Sukuh temple is a trapezium with three terraces, with one terrace higher than the others. A stone stairway rises through the front side of the pyramid to its summit. It is not known what the monument's unique shape was intended to symbolize. One suggestion is that it represents a mountain. There is no evidence that the main building supported a wooden structure. The only object recovered from its summit was a 1.82-metre
lingga statue bearing an inscription, which is now in the
National Museum of Indonesia. The statue may once have stood on the platform over the stairway. The
lingga statue has a dedicated inscription carved from top to bottom representing a
vein followed by a chronogram date equivalent to 1440. The inscription translates "
Consecration of the
Holy Ganges sudhi in ... the sign of masculinity is the essence of the world." Reliefs of a
kris blade, an eight-pointed sun, and a
crescent moon decorate the statue. (left) as the blacksmith,
Ganesha (center), and
Arjuna (right) blowing air into the furnace with a tube The wall of the main monument has a relief portraying two men forging a weapon in a
smithy with a dancing figure of Ganesha, the most important Tantric deity, having a human body and the head of an elephant. In Hindu-Java mythology, the smith is thought to possess not only the skill to alter metals but also the key to spiritual transcendence. Smiths drew their powers to forge a
kris from the god of fire and a smithy is considered as a shrine. Hindu-Javanese kingship was sometimes legitimated and empowered by the possession of a
kris. The elephant head figure with a crown in the smithy relief depicts
Ganesha, the god who removes obstacles in
Hinduism. The Ganesha figure, however, differs in some small respects from other usual depictions. Instead of sitting, the Ganesha figure in Candi Sukuh's relief is shown dancing and it has distinctive features including the exposed genitalia, the demonic
physiognomy, the strangely awkward dancing posture, the rosary bones on its neck and holding a small animal, probably a dog. The Ganesha relief in Candi Sukuh has a similarity with the
Tantric ritual found in the
history of Buddhism in Tibet written by
Taranatha. The Tantric ritual is associated with several figures, one of whom is described as the "King of Dogs" (Sanskrit:
Kukuraja), who taught his disciples by day, and by night performed
Ganacakra in a burial ground or
charnel ground. Other statues in Candi Sukuh include a life-sized male figure with his hand grasping his own
penis and three flattened shells of
tortoises. Two large
tortoise statues guard the pyramid entrance and the third one lies at some distance in front of the monument. All of their heads point to the west and their flattened shells may provide
altars for purification rituals and ancestor worship. In Hindu mythology, the tortoise symbolizes the base or support of the World and is an avatar of Vishnu, i.e.
Kurma refers to
Ocean of Milk. ==Gallery==