Английская Википедия:Chausath Yogini Temple, Bhedaghat
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The Chausath Yogini Temple, Bhedaghat, also called the Golaki Math ("circular lodge"),Шаблон:Sfn is one of India's yogini temples, but exceptionally it has shrines for 81 rather than the usual 64 yoginis. All the same, scholars include it among the 64-yogini temples (चौंसठ chausath meaning 64 in Hindi). The group of 81 (ekashi in Hindi) is a mark of royalty, implying that the temple was founded by a king. The large temple is on a hilltop above the river Narmada in Bhedaghat (Hindi भेड़ाघाट, also transliterated Bheraghat), some 5 km from Jabalpur, Madhya Pradesh.Шаблон:Sfn
Temple
The temple is the largest of the circular yogini temples, some 125 feet in diameter.Шаблон:SfnШаблон:Sfn[1][2] The scholar Shaman Hatley calls it the "most imposing and perhaps best known of the yogini temples".Шаблон:Sfn It has a covered walkway with 81 cells for yoginis around the inside of its circular wall; three niches, two to the west, and one to the southeast remain open as entrances. There is a later shrine in the centre of the courtyard;Шаблон:Sfn the temple was adapted as a Gauri-Shankar temple with the construction of the building in the south-centre of the circle in 1155 CE, at which time the central deities (Bhairava or dancing Shiva) were moved.Шаблон:Sfn The temple was built early in the 11th Century CE by King Yuvaraja II, of the dynasty of the Kalachuris of Tripuri; he lived around 975-1025 CE.Шаблон:Sfn The city of Tripuri was four miles away, just across the Narmada river from the temple. According to the scholar David Gordon White, the temple would have been the Kalachuri dynasty's largest building project.Шаблон:SfnШаблон:Sfn The town's name was formerly Bhairavaghat; yogini temples held an image of either Shiva or Bhairava at their centre.Шаблон:Sfn
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Inside the Yogini temple; the central shrine with shikhara is of later date.
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The circular wall has niches for 81 yoginis.
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Yogini images inside the perimeter wall and walkway
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Plan, giving the outer diameter as 130 feet
Yogini images
The temple contains stone images of the yoginis; among them are Kamada ("Giver of Sexual Love"), whose image includes a yonipuja, worship of the yoni.Шаблон:SfnШаблон:Sfn The 81 images include 8 Matrikas, Mother goddesses, from an earlier time;Шаблон:Sfn one of them is Chandika, who is depicted riding a human corpse in a cremation ground.Шаблон:Sfn Three niches are now occupied by male gods, namely a dancing Ganesh and two Shivad, most likely from the central shrine as originally constructed. The yogini images that once occupied those niches have been lost, like many of the surviving but badly damaged yogini images heavily vandalised. Most of the images have had their faces broken; some survive only from the waist down. One image, that of the horse-faced yogini Erudi, survives in perfect condition.Шаблон:SfnШаблон:Sfn
The scholar of Indian and South Asian art Vidya Dehejia writes that the yoginis form a "statuesque seated group", rather over life-size; she describes them as "mature, voluptuous beauties, generously endowed with ample hips and heavy melon-like breasts".Шаблон:Sfn They are naked down to the waist, adorned with many earrings, necklaces, garlands, armlets, and bracelets. On their hips, they bear a "jewelled girdle" which supports a flimsy ankle-length skirt. Each has a halo and from 4 to 18 arms, both attributes of divinity; their faces are dignified and majestic, unsmiling. The "regal presence" of the yoginis suggests to Dehejia that the yoginis are either acolytes or directly aspects of Devi, the Great Goddess. Both Kamada and Sarvatomukhi are names of Devi; the Sarvatomukhi image has three faces, with large teeth, bristling hair, a garland of skulls, and a terrifying aspect. Each yogini image is carved from a rectangular slab of stone with several smaller figures on the base, an ornate throne, and flying deities above. The slab's base contains a label chiselled into the stone; each slab stands on a stone pedestal.Шаблон:Sfn The smaller figures are mostly in scenes of cremation grounds, with what White calls "flesh-eating ghouls" along with scavenging jackals and birds. Human yoginis and their male counterparts, yogeshvaris, are depicted, but with few or no indications of sexual practices: there are some thin ithyphallic male figures. Many of the human yoginis are shown eating severed human limbs.Шаблон:Sfn
The 81 yoginis are described in the Mula Chakra of the Sri Matottara Tantra, which survives in manuscript form in Nepal. It tells of 9 Matrikas (not the usual 8); each is counted as a yogini, and leads a group of 8 other yoginis, so that there are 9 groups of 9. The inscriptions identify six of the Matrikas as Varahi, Brahmani, Maheshvari, Indrani, and Vaishnavi, along with Chandika who is not usually included as a Matrika but is named in the Mula Chakra. Dehejia suggests that two of the heavily damaged images may be of Chamunda and Mahalakshmi and that image of Kaumari found at another site, Mandla, looks as if it was one of the Bheraghat yoginis.Шаблон:Sfn
References
Sources
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