temple$82152$ - meaning and definition. What is temple$82152$
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What (who) is temple$82152$ - definition

12TH CENTURY VISHNU TEMPLE COMPLEX IN BELUR, KARNATAKA (HOYSALA EMPIRE ERA)
Chennakeshava temple; Channakesava Temple; Channakeshava temple; Chennakesava Temple; Chennakesava temple; Belur Vishnu temple; Belur temple
  • One of four ceiling dome madanikas, with an inscription on pedestal.
  • Chennakeshava temples and monuments layout.<ref name=rice1/>
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  • Example Belur temple inscription in Sanskrit, written in [[Kadamba script]].<ref name=rice1>[https://archive.org/stream/epigraphiacarnat05mysouoft#page/n175/mode/1up Epigraphia carnatica], B. Lewis Rice, Mysore Government Press, pages 98-129.</ref>
  • Celestial deity with mythical animals carved at the entrance
  • Intricately carved damsel on a pillar at the Sanctum Sanctorum.
  • Stone grill in design
  • Sanctum Sanctorum with stone grills and pillars.
  • Statues on capital support the temple eaves. 38 of the original 40 have survived in Belur.
  • Bands of carvings on one side of the circumambulatory platform.
  • Two styles of light screens used in Kesava temple: geometric artwork (left) and Puranic stories artwork.
  • Ornate lathe turned pillars in ''mantapa''.
  • Artwork at Chennakeshava temple.
  • The temple is famous for its rendering of Mohini, the female avatar of Vishnu.

Temple, North Dakota         
Temple, ND; User:Gatetwelve/Temple, ND; Temple, nd; Temple,North Dakota
Temple is ghost town located in Williams County, North Dakota, United States. There are some remaining structures which include: a small garage, a couple small outbuildings and a couple caved-in houses.
Temple (Latter Day Saints)         
  • Temple]] in Salt Lake City on "[[Temple Square]]" circa 1897
  • Hinckley's]] direction
  • [[Independence Temple]] of [[Community of Christ]] in Independence, Missouri, USA. Dedicated 1994
  • The [[Washington D.C. Temple]] viewed while driving south on the [[Capital Beltway]].
  • Building currently known as the Endowment House, Spring City, Utah.
  • [[Cutlerite]] meetinghouse in [[Independence, Missouri]], which serves the functions of a temple.
  • The [[Kirtland Temple]], owned and maintained by the [[Community of Christ]], was the first temple of the [[Latter Day Saint movement]] and the only temple completed in the lifetime of [[Joseph Smith]]
  • The [[Mesa Arizona Temple]] built in 1919
  • The Preston Temple in the United Kingdom in 2006.
  • rebuilt]] in 2002
PLACE OF WORSHIP OF THE LATTER DAY SAINT MOVEMENT
Temples (Mormonism); Mormon temples; Mormon temple; Mormon Temple; Temple (Mormonism); Temple (Latter Day Saint); Temple mormon
In the Latter Day Saint movement, a temple is a building dedicated to be a house of God and is reserved for special forms of worship. A temple differs from a church meetinghouse, which is used for weekly worship services.
Mesa Arizona Temple         
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THE SEVENTH OPERATING TEMPLE OF THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER-DAY SAINTS (LDS CHURCH)
Arizona Temple; Mesa Temple
The Mesa Arizona Temple (formerly the Arizona Temple; nicknamed the Lamanite Temple) is the seventh operating temple of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Located in the city of Mesa, Arizona, it is the first of six LDS temples built or planned in the state.

Wikipedia

Chennakeshava Temple, Belur

Chennakeshava Temple, also referred to as Keshava, Kesava or Vijayanarayana Temple of Belur, is a 12th-century Hindu temple in, Hassan district of Karnataka state, India. It was commissioned by King Vishnuvardhana in 1117 CE, on the banks of the Yagachi River in Belur also called Velapura, an early Hoysala Empire capital. The temple was built over three generations and took 103 years to finish. It was repeatedly damaged and plundered during wars, repeatedly rebuilt and repaired over its history. It is 35 km from Hassan city and about 220 km from Bengaluru.

Chennakesava (lit, "handsome Kesava") is a form of the Hindu god Vishnu. The temple is dedicated to Vishnu and has been an active Hindu temple since its founding. It is reverentially described in medieval Hindu texts, and remains an important pilgrimage site in Vaishnavism. The temple is remarkable for its architecture, sculptures, reliefs, friezes as well its iconography, inscriptions and history. The temple artwork depicts scenes of secular life in the 12th century, dancers and musicians, as well as a pictorial narration of Hindu texts such as the Ramayana, the Mahabharata and the Puranas through numerous friezes. It is a Vaishnava temple that reverentially includes many themes from Shaivism and Shaktism, as well as images of a Jina from Jainism and the Buddha from Buddhism. The Chennakeshava temple is a testimony to the artistic, cultural and theological perspectives in 12th-century South India and the Hoysala Empire rule.

The Belur temple complex along with the nearby Hindu and Jain Temples at Halebidu have been proposed to be listed under UNESCO World Heritage Sites.