Friday, January 18, 2019

Ancient Ajanta Cave Wall Paintings and Inscriptions in Ajanta Cave 10


Summary: The most ancient Ajanta cave wall paintings and Ajanta cave pillar and wall inscriptions occur in the most ancient excavation, Ajanta cave 10.


interior of Ajanta chaitya Cave 10; ; drawn on stone by English watercolourist T.C. (Thomas Colman) Dibdin (Oct. 22, 1810-Dec. 26, 1893) from sketch by Scottish architectural historian James Fergusson (Jan. 22, 1808-Jan. 9, 1886); J. Fergusson's Illustrations of the Rock-Cut Temples of India (1845), Plate III: Not in copyright, via Internet Archive

Perhaps the most accurate, the most ailing ancient Ajanta cave wall paintings appear in the two center-most, oldest cliffside excavations, Ajanta cave 9 and Ajanta cave 10, of the 30 Ajanta Caves.
Reminiscences, studies and traditions broker earliest Ajanta dates of the third or second century B.C., under Maurya (321-185 B.C.) and Satavahana (271 B.C.?-225 A.D.?) imperial patronage. Walter M. Spink, University of Michigan Professor Emeritus in the History of Art at Ann Arbor since 2000, considers Ajanta cave 10 older than cave 9. He discerns the 100.06- by 40.03-foot (30.5- by 12.2-meter) Ajanta cave 10 as roomier, simpler than the 59.84- by 26.38-foot (18.24- by 8.04-meter) Ajanta cave 9.
The eldest enumerations in the 30-cave complex in the horseshoe-shaped glen 249.34 feet (76 meters) above the horseshoe-bending Waghora River express physical location, not excavation date.

A fetching arched façade in front of ground-out steps fashioned from the near-vertical cliffs of the Sahyadri hills glen focuses viewer attention on Ajanta cave 10.
Ajanta cave 10, as one of two less and three more recent chaitya (from Sanskrit चैत्य, "funeral mound, pedestal, pile"), gathers architectural, painted and sculpted artistry. The 2,200-plus-year-old prayer hall harbors the most ancient artistic printing 7.46 miles (12 kilometers) from the Ajanta Caves' namesake village in central-north Maharashtra state, central-west India. It includes the Ajanta Caves' most ancient inscriptions in exterior and interior wall indications that identify their respective patrons in the 2,300-plus-year-old Brahmi script of Sanskrit.
Ajanta cave 10 juxtaposes the patronage judgments that "The façade is the gift of Vasisthiputra Katahadi" and "The wall is the gift of Kanhaka of Bahada."

The sculpted architectural plan of the basilica-like Ajanta cave 10 knows one central, long, nave-like, vaulted entry hall with pillared side aisles and a terminal apse.
Ajanta cave wall paintings led ancient artisans, merchants, monks and patrons along the u-like side lanes to the last of the Ajanta cave 10 sculpted pillars. Another most ancient inscription marks the nearest pillar to the Ajanta cave 10 apse (from Greek ἁψίς, hapsís, "arch") with the Ajanta Caves' most ancient graffiti. Its almost 200-year-old knife-carved notation names John K. Smith, 28th Cavalry Captain for the Madras presidency, the Ajanta Caves' first known European rediscoverer April 28, 1819.
Age, disrepair, geology, mistreatment, traffic, vandalism and weather obscure the Ajanta cave wall paintings in Ajanta cave 10 other than on the left and right walls.

The left wall presents king and retinue the bodhi (Ficus religiosa) tree and relic-preserving stupa (from Sanskrit स्तूप, "dome") of Buddha's (from Sanskrit बुद्ध, "awakened") enlightenment.
The right wall queues up Buddha, historically Siddhartha Gautama (624?-544 B.C.), in bodhisattva (from Sanskrit बोधि, "perfect knowledge" and सत्त्व, "essence") quests as Chaddanta and Sāma. Red-faced, red-footed, white-bodied Chaddanta removed six tusks for Sonuttara to relay to the elephant king's consort, Queen Chullasubhadda, who resented her first husband's other consort, Mahasubhadda. The goddess Bahusodari, swayed by filial piety and royal repentance, saved Prince Suvanna Sāma from King Piliyakkha of Benares' poisoned arrow and stopped his parents' blindness.
Ajanta cave 10, oldest of the Ajanta Caves, teams the most ailing ancient Ajanta cave wall paintings and Ajanta's most ancient cave pillar and wall inscriptions.

Ajanta Cave 10's Sanskrit inscription in Brahmi script, translated as "the facade is the gift of Vasisthiputra Katahadi" by Walter Spink; Ajanta Caves, Maharashtra, central-west India; Sunday, Sep. 11, 2016, 11:31: Ms Sarah Welch, CC BY SA 4.0 International, via Wikimedia Commons

Acknowledgment
My special thanks to talented artists and photographers/concerned organizations who make their fine images available on the internet.

Image credits:
interior of Ajanta chaitya Cave 10; drawn on stone by English watercolourist T.C. (Thomas Colman) Dibdin (Oct. 22, 1810-Dec. 26, 1893) from sketch by Scottish architectural historian James Fergusson (Jan. 22, 1808-Jan. 9, 1886); J. Fergusson's Illustrations of the Rock-Cut Temples of India (1845), Plate III: Not in copyright, via Internet Archive @ https://archive.org/details/gri_33125008543106/page/n16
Ajanta Cave 10's Sanskrit inscription in Brahmi script, translated as "the facade is the gift of Vasisthiputra Katahadi" by Walter Spink; Ajanta Caves, Maharashtra, central-west India; Sunday, Sep. 11, 2016, 11:31: Ms Sarah Welch, CC BY SA 4.0 International, via Wikimedia Commons @ https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:A_Brahmi_script_inscription_at_the_Ajanta_Caves.jpg

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