Hindu Architecture in India and Abroad (Manasara Series: Vol. VI)
Book Specification
| Item Code: | IDF749 |
| Author: | Prasanna Kumar Acharya |
| Publisher: | Munshiram Manoharlal Publishers Pvt. Ltd. |
| Language: | English |
| Edition: | 1996 |
| ISBN: | 8121507324 |
| Pages: | 508 (65 Illustration in B/W) |
| Cover: | Hardcover |
| Other Details | 9.7 |
| Weight | 104 kg |
Book Description
From the Jacket:
The city be it Mohenjo daro the earliest or Chandigarh the latest has held Man in thrall from the time it came into existence. Its public edifices, private Mansions, Lofty shrines, renowned schools, famous festivals have attracted people from far and wide. The Indians of old Hindus, Buddhist and Jains were aware that the city is embryo of culture and civilization; for it provided the impetus to poets, dramatists, philosophers and artists to attain immortality through their creations. So they codified all their knowledge and experience in Town-planning and Architecture into treatise known as Manasara for the edification of posterity. He has devoted years of study and research to bring this vast, but almost forgotten, treasure house within easy reach of all. This book Hindu Architecture in India and Abroad is the sixth volume in his Manasara series. It brings out in no uncertain terms that indigenous ideas of design and techniques of construction alone have imparted the qualities unabating vigour and having beauty to the surviving ancient temples, which have withstood the onslaught of vandals, time and nature. The Swastika mansion described in the preface attests to the relevance of the principles enunciated in the Manasara notwithstanding popular notions to the contrary to modern conditions and needs.
| Scope and Sources drawn upon | ix-xiv | |
| Elucidation of the structures built after ancient methods | xiv-xxiv | |
| Acknowledgement of help received | xxv-xxviii | |
| Method of transliteration of Sanskrit words | xxix | |
| List of Illustrations | xxxiii-xxxv | |
| Introduction - Fine Arts | 1-25 | |
| Chapter I | Pre-Vedic Architecture | 27-53 |
| Chapter II | Vedic Architecture | 54-64 |
| Chapter III | Classical or Post-Vedic Architecture | 65-96 |
| Chapter IV | Silpa-Sastras | 97-181 |
| Chapter V | Position of the Manasara in literature | 186-209 |
| Chapter VI | Manasara and Vitruvius | 210-239 |
| Chapter VII | Age of the Manasara | 240-282 |
| Chapter VIII | Hindu Architecture in Border Lands | |
| Tibet | 283-284 | |
| Sikkim | 284 | |
| Nepal | 284-287 | |
| Kashmir | 287-289 | |
| Kangra | 289-290 | |
| Ceylon | 290-293 | |
| Chapter IX | Hindu Architecture in Serindia- Khotan | 294-315 |
| Chapter X | Hindu Architecture in Insulindia | 316-361 |
| Chapter XI | Hindu Architecture in Outer India | |
| China | 362-368 | |
| Japan | 369-371 | |
| Central America | 372-375 | |
| Appendix I | Indo Persian Architecture | 376-407 |
| Appendix II | The Future of Indian Architecture | 408-421 |
| Appendix III | What Other Think | 422-449 |
| Index | 451-508 |
