Caves in early Buddhism Buddhist cave temples represent an underground variant of the
Buddhist monastery and temple complex, which dates back to the dwelling of the ascetic
Śramana Movement since the epoch of the
Upanishads (8th to 7th century BC) as well as to urbuddhist meditation sites. The historical
Siddhartha Gautama, even as a young wandering ascetic before attaining enlightenment, retreated to caves for meditation (according to tradition, for example, to the Dungeshwari Cave near
Bodh Gaya in Bihar). As Buddha, he occasionally used a cave near
Rajagriha as a meditation site, as recorded in the
Pali Canon, an early record of Buddha's doctrinal discourses from the 1st century BC (
DN, ch. 16.3, chs. 21 and 25). This cave was identified by the Chinese pilgrim monk
Faxian in the 5th century A.D. as Pippala Cave on Mount Vebhara (Vulture Mountain). The Pali Canon cites natural caves (Pali,
kandara) as common retreats for members of the Buddhist order (
MN, chs. 27, 38, 39 and more), who could meditate there largely shielded from sensory stimuli. The First
Buddhist council, held at Rajagriha shortly after the Buddha's death in the 5th century B.C., is also said by Buddhist tradition to have taken place in a hall outside the Sattapanni cave on the northern slope of Mount Vebhara. Given the principle of "houselessness" of the Buddhist order, the natural protective function of caves contributed to the development of Buddhist cave temples. Cave temples provided better protection against the elements than the homemade freestanding rain huts made of bamboo and mats that served as
refuges during the rainy
monsoon season and were torn down at the end of the monsoon.
The era of Emperor Ashoka , Vihara or (Rock) monastery with antechamber, main hall and cult chapel, about 40 meters long The actual construction of artificial cave temples made of "grown" rock was not initiated until the era of
Maurya emperor Ashoka, who in the 3rd century B.C. donated corresponding, initially still quite elementary facilities for the ascetic community of the
Ajivika (for example, the
Lomas Rishi cave near Barabar). The Buddhists further developed these preliminary forms into elaborate centers of monastic life with increasingly
rich relief decoration. With the support of wealthy Buddhist laymen, they created the basic form of Indian rock architecture during the centuries before and after the birth of Christ, which spread widely along the trade routes during the following millennium. A connection between the older Egyptian, Hittite or Lycian rock architecture of the West and the younger, considerably more numerous Indian rock buildings has not yet been clearly demonstrated.
Context of origin The emergence of Indian cave temple complexes, after restrained beginnings in the 3rd and 2nd centuries BC, took off considerably with the growing prosperity of the artisan classes of western India. A major reason for this was the increased trade with the
Roman Empire since the first century AD. Especially on the Indian artisans (
Skt., m., शूद्र,
shudra), who formed the lower castes within the impermeable
Brahmanical society, Buddhism exercised considerable attraction due to its appreciation also of lay confessors as fully valid aspirants to salvation, due to the de facto devaluation of caste membership (Skt., वर्ण,
varnas) and the rejection of costly
Vedic sacrificial rituals. In contrast to
Hinduism, Buddhism with its monastic communities relied primarily on urban culture. Influential urban merchant guilds donated the money for the construction and endowment of entire monasteries, as endowment inscriptions attest. For their part, the monasteries financed the local merchants through loans. In addition, the endowment of temples in Hinduism and Buddhism counts among the spiritually meritorious acts (Skt.,
puṇya). The competition between different craft guilds for the decoration of their foundations led to a considerable upsurge in Indian rock art, sculpture and painting, especially during the period of the
Gupta dynasty, which ruled over northern and central India from 320 to 650 AD, whose works survived the test of time in the cave temples, many of which were later abandoned. The cave monasteries, which were given to the religious on
permanent loan, were supplied by the lay Buddhist followers of the surrounding villages and settlements, who offered food, medicine and clothing to the begging monks. The daily routine in the Buddhist monasteries was strictly structured. After waking before sunrise, the monks rose with a song or the recitation of an edifying verse, cleaned the monastery, and procured the necessary drinking water. The daily routine also included offering flowers in common assembly, a round of begging to acquire food, a meal, meditation exercises, the study of texts, and attendance at doctrinal presentations.
Building structure and technology : a raja declares the renunciation of the world Strictly speaking, early Buddhist rock architecture is not
temples in a traditional sense of facilities "that appear comparable in terms of their structural form (monumentality, stone construction) or their religious function (dwelling place of a god or goddess)." Early Buddhism does not recognize sanctuaries and structures dedicated to a divine power. Despite the primary function of Buddhist rock buildings as monastic complexes, the generic designation cave temple has become equally accepted for Buddhist and Hindu underground sacred buildings. In the case of Buddhist rock buildings, it ties in with the temple-like structure of the
chaitya hall and its orientation toward a
blessed sacrament. The
Buddhist cave monasteries and cave temples of South, Central, and East Asia are characterized by two central building types: Buildings housing or enclosing Buddhist sacred objects, and buildings of monastic life. • The first type of construction includes the three-nave
basilica-like prayer hall (Chaitya Hall), which serves the meritorious transformation of the bell-shaped central shrine (
stupa). • The second type of construction includes the meditation and residential halls of the Buddhist monks (
vihara) and their ancillary facilities. Common structural elements in the exterior of Buddhist temple and monastery caves include
porticoes (porches), side chapels, columned porches, atria, and open stairways. The Chaitya or Prayer Hall (from Skt.,
caitya-gṛha; Pali,
cetiya, sanctuary) stands in the center of the Buddhist temple complex. The three-nave Chaitya Hall is separated by two rows of columns into a central nave, whose ceiling is a
barrel vault with a wooden or stone ribbed ceiling, and two side
naves. The hall serves to house a usually richly decorated
reliquary casket (Skt., स्तूप,
stūpa; Pali,
thupa, mound, originally in the sense of burial mound) surrounded by a walkway for ritual circumambulation. An elaborate
wooden facade with one or more gates was originally set in front of the Chaitya hall. In conjunction with a horseshoe-shaped window above the hall's entrance gate, the wooden facade caused the stupa niche in the semicircular
apse at the end of the hall to be enveloped in atmospheric lighting effects. In the vicinity of the Chaitya Hall are the monastery rooms. The monks' living quarters (Skt./Pali, n., विहार,
vihāra, abode, residence) include a number of narrow living cells (Skt.,
bhikṣu-gṛha) for two persons each, in addition to common rooms. The monk cells are arranged around a courtyard or central pillared hall (skt., मण्डप,
maṇḍapa). Other elements of monastic construction include
cisterns, magazines, and other ancillary rooms for practical purposes. The cave monasteries of
Mahayana Buddhism, the second main school of Buddhism, which were built between the 5th and 8th centuries CE, contain richly decorated rows of columns as well as cult image chapels or smaller hemispherical stupas. They are decorated with large-scale murals depicting the life and pre-existences of the historical Buddha. In many cases, the layers of paint that decorated the temple complex over large areas were later removed by weathering. In terms of construction, the rock face was first worked vertically across the width of the planned cave. Then the facade was marked and chiselling into the rock from above began. The excavation work proceeded in stages. The top step always reached deepest into the rock. When the back wall was reached, the ceiling was completed, making scaffolding unnecessary. While the stonemasons worked their way down through the rock, cutting out planned columns and sculptures, the facades were completed at the same time. The only tools available to the stonemasons were a pickaxe, hammer and chisel.
Development into a monumental building In view of the increasing strength of the Vedic-Brahman religion, the development of the cave temples led to the expansion of the Buddhist cave temple into a monastic school. Already in Ajanta (caves 6 and 27), a multi-story cave had been carved out of the stone - probably in imitation of non-preserved wooden monastic free buildings. Besides the Chaitya hall and the vihara, a large
chapter house (Dharmashala, Skt.,
dharma, teaching [Buddha's];
shala, place of teaching) occurs, for example, in
Ellora (three-story cave 12, Tin Thal, and cave 11, Do Thal), Bagh (No. 5), Dhamnar (No. 11), and
Kholvi (No. 10). While the Chaitya and temple halls were primarily used for ceremonies such as the
Pradakshina (Skt.), that is, the ritual transformation of the stupa with the intention of acquiring spiritual merit, and the monastic rooms of the viharas were primarily used for meditation and living, the Dharmashala, with long rows of stone benches, is laid out as a large Buddhist teaching and preaching hall. On one level of the Ellora monastic school, up to 30 listeners seated in rows between the pillars could follow the interpretations of a Buddhist teacher.
Distribution in India To date, approximately 1,200 Buddhist, Hindu, and
Jain temple caves are known in India, of which about 1,000 are located in the state of
Maharashtra, others in
Andhra Pradesh, southeast of Maharashtra, and in the northwestern states of
Gujarat,
Rajasthan, and
Madhya Pradesh. The oldest known cave temples originated in the context of the Shramana movement around the 3rd century BCE in the later northeastern state of
Bihar (eight caves at Barabar, Nagarjuni, and Sita Marhi near Rajagriha, now Rajgir). Several archaeologically and touristically intensively developed cave and rock temple complexes of different religious character are included in the
UNESCO World Heritage List: • Ajanta (Buddhist, 2nd century BC-7th century AD, 29 caves), located in the extensive Wagora River Valley and accidentally rediscovered by a British cavalry officer in 1819, • Ellora (Buddhist,
Shivaite-Hindu, Jain, c. 6th-12th century CE, 34 caves), carved out of a basaltic cliff face over 2 kilometers in length, •
Elephanta on Gharapuri Island near
Mumbai (Hindu, 9th-13th century, dating disputed, four caves), all in the Indian state of Maharashtra, • The temple district of
Mamallapuram on the
Coromandel Coast near Chennai,
Tamil Nadu (Hindu, 7th-9th century CE, 17 monolithic rock temples), whose beacons served as navigational aids for Pallava dynasty sailors. More Buddhist cave temples of India: == Hindu cave temples in India ==