Encyclopaedia of Architecture in the Indian Subcontinent: Medieval and later (from the first Muhammadan invasion onwards)

Encyclopaedia of Architecture in the Indian Subcontinent: Medieval and later (from the first Muhammadan invasion onwards)
Author: Ernest Binfield Havell
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2000
Genre: Architecture
ISBN: 9788173051869

Vol. 1 "is supplementary to my 'Indian architecture: its psychology, structure, and history' [i.e., V. 2] which [deals] with the Muhammadan and British periods, but it has a wider scope as a study of the political, social, religious, and artistic aspects of Indo-Aryan civilisation."-- Pref.

The Art and Architecture of the Indian Subcontinent

The Art and Architecture of the Indian Subcontinent
Author: James C. Harle
Publisher: Yale University Press
Total Pages: 616
Release: 1994-01-01
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9780300062175

Thirty years' research and first-hand knowledge of the area have enabled the author to trace the cultural contacts which have contributed to the rich mosaic of sculpture, temples, mosques, and painting that have gone towards the creation of one of the great civilizations of the world.

Encyclopaedia of Indian Temple Architecture

Encyclopaedia of Indian Temple Architecture
Author: K. M. Suresh
Publisher:
Total Pages: 1052
Release: 2011
Genre: Architecture
ISBN: 9788180902543

This title comprises vast research on the architectural features of Indian temples spread all over the Indian subcontinent. This encyclopaedic study is divided into forty-five chapters which delineate the various characteristics of temple architecture starting from the Gupta period (4th c. A.D.) to the Kashi Visvanatha temple rebuilt by Rani Ahilyabai of Indore (1776 A.D.). The work begins with an insight into the Indus Civilization that flourished in the Indus Valley region (now in Pakistan) with the two most important sites of Mohanjo-daro and Harappa revealing a marked degree of controlled urban planning. As for the temple architecture, the Imperial Guptas had established their sovereignty over almost the whole of northern India and the regular building of structural temples in brick and dressed stone started in their regnal period. The period under their immediate patronage fully deserve the name 'The Golden Age' of Indian art and the culture as aesthetic principles of architecture, sculpture and painting were formulated in their region.

Architecture in the Indian Subcontinent

Architecture in the Indian Subcontinent
Author: Christopher Tadgell
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 1143
Release: 2023-12-01
Genre: Architecture
ISBN: 1003803369

Dedicated to the tracing of continuity across sectarian divides, Christopher Tadgell’s History of Architecture in India (1989) was the first modern monograph to draw together in one volume all the strands of India’s pre-colonial architectural history – from the Vedic and Native traditions of early India, through Hindu, Buddhist, Islamic and secular architecture. This comprehensive revision, Architecture in the Indian Subcontinent: From the Mauryas to the Mughals, expands the structure to acknowledge the great advance in scholarship across this extremely complex subject over the last three decades. An understanding of Indian history and religion is the basis for understanding the complex pattern of relationships in the evolution of architecture in the subcontinent. Therefore, background material covers major invasions, migrations, dynastic conflicts and cultural and commercial connections, the main religious developments and their significance and repercussions, and external architectural precedents. While avoiding the usual division of the subject into ‘Buddhist and Hindu’ and ‘Islamic’ parts in order to trace continuity, the importance of religion, symbolism and myth to the development of characteristic Indian architectural forms in all their richness and complexity is fully explained in this fully illustrated account of the subcontinent’s architecture.