prakaram

{{Short description|Enclosure walls in Indian architecture}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2019}}

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| caption = Prakaram of Ramanathaswamy temple, the temple with the largest Prakaram

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A prakaram (प्राकारः in Sanskrit), also spelled pragaram or pragaaram) in Indian architecture is an outer part around the Hindu temple sanctum. They may be enclosed or open and are typically enclosed for the innermost prakaram. As per Hindu religious practices, devotees start to come around the outer prakarams to the inner most before entering the sanctum.

File:Prakaram Passage.jpg]]

Most of the historic South Indian cities like Madurai, Srirangam, Sirkali, Thiruvarur and Chidambaram were built around large temples in the center of the city. The streets of the city act as extension of the prakarams of the temple. Ramanathaswamy Temple has outer set of corridors and is reputed to be the longest prakaram in the world.

Temple architecture

Image:Outer Wall SW Ranganatha Swamy Temple Srirangapatna Jan24 A7C 08954.jpg]]

In the Hindu temple, the prakaram is the temple compound around the sanctum. Typically a Hindu temple{{cite book

| first=Francis D.K.

| last= Ching

| year= 1995

| title= A Visual Dictionary of Architecture

| publisher=John Wiley and Sons

| location=New York

| isbn= 0-471-28451-3

| page= 253}} prayer hall is generally built in front of the temple's sanctum sanctorum (garbhagriha).{{cite web

|url=http://www.indoarch.org/arch_glossary.php

|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20031121114804/http://www.indoarch.org/arch_glossary.php

|url-status=usurped

|archive-date=21 November 2003

|title=Architecture of the Indian Subcontinent - Glossary

|access-date=2007-01-08

}} Usually large Hindu temples have one or more prakarams.{{cite web

|url = http://www.art-and-archaeology.com/india/glossary1.html

|title = Glossary of Indian Art

|publisher = art-and-archaeology.com

|access-date = 2007-01-08

|url-status = dead

|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100101092351/http://art-and-archaeology.com/india/glossary1.html

|archive-date = 2010-01-01

}} The Prakaram acts as circumambulatory passage to the devotees to come around the sanctum. Based on the size of the temple, there can be more than one Prakaram with the smaller one enclosed within the larger.{{cite book|title=Beyond The Gopurams: A Woman's Spiritual Journey Through South India|page=622|first=Priti |last=Aisola|publisher=SCB Distributors|year=2014|isbn=9788183283687}} As per Hindu religious practices, devotees start to come around the outer prakarams to the inner most before entering the sanctum. This is indicative of the belief that the devotees have to lose the outermost bondage to the inner most one before attaining divinity. The method is also indicative of reduction of noises in the outer space to the inner most to increase communiion with god.{{cite book|title=மன அமைதிக்கு உதவும் ஆன்மிகம்|publisher=Bharathi Puthakalayam|last=Selvaraj|first=Dr. Kamala|isbn=81-8201-043-8|page=7}} Ramanathaswamy Temple has outer set of corridors is reputed to be the longest in the world, measuring about 6.9 m in height, 400 feet each in the east and west and about 640 feet in the north and the south. The inner corridors are about 224 feet each in the east and the west and about 352 feet each in the north and the south.{{cite book | last=T. | first=Ramamurthy | year=2007 | title=Engineering in Rocks For Slopes Foundations And Tunnels

| place=Delhi | publisher= PHI Learning Private Limited | edition=2bd | isbn=978-81-203-3275-1 |url = https://books.google.com/books?id=Ls1MSleftQ8C&q=rameshwaram+temple&pg=PA28 |ref=T.|page=28}}

Religious significance

The Hindu temple structure resembles the human body with all its subtleties.{{cite book |last=Rao|first=Saligrama Krishna Ramachandra |author2=Rama R. Rao |author3=Kalpatharu Research Academy |title=Āgama-kosha|year=1989|publisher=Kalpatharu Research Academy}}{{cite book |last=Subramuniyaswami |first=Satguru Sivaya |title=Dancing with Siva: Hinduism's Contemporary Catechism |year=2002|publisher=Himalayan Academy |location=India |isbn=0-945497-89-X|ref=Subramuniyaswami|page=810}} The five walls encircling one another are the koshas (sheaths) of human existence.{{cite book |title= Indian architectural theory: contemporary uses of Vastu Vidya|last= Chakrabarti|first=Vibhuti |year= 1998|publisher=Curzon Press|location=Surrey |isbn=0-7007-1113-9|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=Oo-dCM_pp7wC&q=kosha+architecture&pg=PA36|orig-year = 1998| page=36}} The outermost is the Annamaya kosha, symbolizing the material body. The second is Pranamaya kosha, symbolizing the sheath of vital force or prana (breath). The third is Manomaya kosha, symbolizing the sheath of the thoughts, the mana. The fourth is the Vijnanamaya kosha, symbolizing, the sheath of the intellect. The fifth and innermost is the Anandamaya kosha, symbolizing the sheath of bliss.

Temple cities

Most of the historic South Indian cities like Madurai, Srirangam, Sirkali, Thiruvarur and Chidambaram were built around large temples in the center of the city. The streets of the city act as extension of the prakarams of the temple. These squares retain their traditional names of Aadi, Chittirai, Avani-moola and Masi streets, corresponding to the Tamil month names and also to the festivals associated. The temple prakarams and streets accommodate an elaborate festival calendar in which dramatic processions circumambulate the shrines at varying distances from the centre. The temple chariots used in processions are progressively larger in size based on the size of the concentric streets.{{cite book |last1=Selby |first1=Martha Ann |first2=Indira Viswanathan|last2= Peterson |title=Tamil geographies: cultural constructions of space and place in South India |year=2008 |publisher=State University of New York Press |location=New York |isbn=978-0-7914-7245-3|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=B0_lLAechPcC|page=149}} Ancient Tamil classics record the temple as the centre of the city and the surrounding streets.{{cite book|last2=Bardwell|first2= Smith|first1= Holly Baker|last1= Reynolds|title=The city as a sacred center: essays on six Asian contexts: Annual meetings|publisher=BRILL|isbn=978-90-04-08471-1|year=1987|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OsAfAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA18|page=18}} The city's axes were aligned with the four-quarters of the compass, and the four gateways of the temple provided access to it. The wealthy and higher echelons of the society were placed in streets close to the temple, while the poorest were placed in the fringe streets.{{cite book |last=King |first=Anthony D. |title=Buildings and Society: Essays on the Social Development of the Built Environment|year=2005 |publisher=Taylor & Francis e-library |isbn=978-0-203-48075-5|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1HtVU6D2LOUC}}

See also

Notes