Professional Documents
Culture Documents
INDIAN_ARCHITECTURE
INDIAN_ARCHITECTURE
INDIAN ARCHITECTURE
4. - "The Stupa and the Cosmic Axis—The Archaeological Evidence," South Asian
Archaeology 1977 (papers from the Fourth International Conference of South
Asian Archaeologists in Western Europe; Naples, Instituto Universitario Orientale
Seminaro di Studi Asiatici, 1979) pp. 799-845; and
10. Boner, A., Sarma, S. R., & Bäumer, B. 1982/2000. Vastusutra Upnishad: The
Essence of Form in Sacred Art. Motilal Banarasidass Publishers Pvt. Ltd. New
Delhi.
11. Bäumer, B. & Das, R. P. 1994. Silparatnakosa. Indira Gandhi National Centre
for the Arts & Motilal Banarasidass Publishers Pvt. Ltd. New Delhi.
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11. Chakrabarti, V. 1999. Indian Architectural Theory: Contemporary Uses of
Vastu Vidya. Oxford University Press. New Delhi. pp 1-18
12. Dagens, B. 1994/2000. Mayamatam (Vols. I & II). Indira Gandhi National
Centre for the Arts & Motilal Banarasidass Publishers Pvt. Ltd. New Delhi
13. ALLCHIN, F.R. 1995. Mauryan architecture and art, in F.R. Allchin (ed.) The
archaeology of Early Historic South Asia: the emergence of cities and states: 222–
73. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
16. CORT, J.E. 2010. World renouncing monks and world celebrating temples and
icons in Jainism, in H.P. Ray (ed.) Archaeology and text: the temple in South Asia:
268–95. Delhi: Oxford University Press.
17. CUNNINGHAM, A. 1879. The stupa of Bharhut ˆ . London: W.H. Allen & Co
18. HARVEY, 1984. The symbolism of the early stupa. The Journal of International
Association of Buddhist Studies 7(2): 67–93.
19. IRWIN, J.C – 1979. The stupa and the cosmic axis: the archaeological evidence,
in M. Taddei (ed.) South Asian archaeology 1977: 799–846. Naples: Istituto
Universitario Orientale.
20. – 1982. The sacred anthill and the cult of the primordial mound. History of
Religions 21: 339–60.
21. – 1983. The ancient pillar-cult at Prayaga (Allahabad): its pre-Asokan origins.
Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Northern Ireland 2: 253–
80.
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22. PARANAVITANA, S. 1946. The stupa in Ceylon (Memoirs of the Archaeological
Survey of Ceylon 5). Colombo: Ceylon Government Press.
23. PIEPER, J. 1991. Arboreal art and architecture in India, in K. Vatsyayan (ed.)
Concepts of space: ancient and modern: 333–41. New Delhi: Indira Gandhi
National Centre for the Arts.
24. PIGGOTT, S. 1943. The earliest Buddhist shrines. Antiquity 17: 1–10.
25. – 1944. Nomad house-sites in the western Himalayas. Man 44: 150–52.
26. Veronique Degroot, Candi, Space and Landscape: A Study on the Distribution,
Orientation and Spatial Organization of Central Javanese Temple Remains (Leiden:
Mededelingen van het Rijksmuseum voor Volkenkunde. 2009)
27. Stella Kramrisch, The Hindu Temple (Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass, 1976).
30. Sonit Bafna, “On the Idea of the Mandala as a Governing Device in Indian
Architectural Tradition.” Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians. 59, no.
1 (2000), 26-49.
32. R. Soekmono, The Javanese Candi: Function and Meaning, (Leiden: E.J. Brill.
1995).
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33. R.E. Jordaan, “The Śailendras, the Status of the Kṣatriya Theory, and the
Development of Hindu-Javanese Temple Architecture,” Bijdragen tot de Taal-,
Land- en Volkenkunde 155, no. 2 (1999), 216.
Leary, J., Darvill, T. and Field, D. (Ed.) (2010) Round Mounds and Monumentality
in the British Neolithic and Beyond. Oxford and Oakville, Oxford Books
35. Sundara, A. (1975)The Early Chamber Tombs of South India: A Study of the
Iron Age Megalithic Monuments of N. Karnataka. Delhi, University Publishers
Fletcher, Sir. Banister, (1992). The History of Architecture, New Delhi CBS
Publishers and Distributors
39. Brown, P., (1942). “Indian Architecture: Buddhists and Hindu Period”, Bombay
Taraporevala & Sons.
40. Hardy, A., (2007). “The Temple Architecture of India”, Great Britain: Wiley.
41. Michell, G., (1988). “The Hindu Temple: An Introduction to its Meaning and
Forms”. Chicago and London: The University of Chicago Press.
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43. Donaldson, T.E., (1985), Hindu Temple of Orissa.
45. Chand D.S. (July-2005). “Orissan Temple Architecture”, Orissa Review. 49-51.
47. Mishra P.S. (2010). “Shape and geometrical study of fractal cosmology
through Orissan Temple Architecture”
48. Menon, S. M. 2016. The “Round Mound” and its Structural Requirements: A
Possible Scenario for the Evolution of the Form of the Stupa. Heritage: Journal of
Multidisciplinary Studies in Archaeology 4 2016.: 26‐46
49. Michell, G. 2014. Temple Architecture and Art Of The Early Chalukyas: Badami,
Mahakuta, Aihole, Pattadakal. Niyogi Books, New Delhi
50. Rajarajan, R. K. K. 2012. Rock‐Cut Model Shrines in Early Medieval Indian Art.
Sharada Publishing House, Delhi.
53. Wagoner, P. B. 2001. Architecture and Royal Authority Under the Early
Sangamas. In Fritz, J. M. and Michell, G. Eds.., New Light on Hampi: Recent
Research at Vijayanagara. Marg Publications, Mumbai, 12‐23.
54. Willis, M. 2009. The Archaeology of Hindu Ritual: Temples and the
Establishment of the Gods. New Delhi, Cambridge University Press.
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55. R.N.Dubey, Shashi Thakkar, Akash Gupta, Seismic Analysis Of The Safety
evaluation of the Taj Mahal,11th world conference of Earthquake Engineering
59. Fergusson, J. & Burgess J. 1880.Cave Temples of India, reprint 1969, Oriental
Books, Delhi.
60. Jadhav, S.V. 1980. Rock‐Cut Cave Temples at Junnar: An Integrated Study,
Ph.D thesis Submitted to University of Poona. (Unpublished).
62. Kumar, Sehdev (2001). A Thousand Petalled Lotus: Jain Temples of Rajasthan,
Abhinav. ISBN 81-7017-348-5.
63. Koch, E., Taj Mahal: architecture, symbolism and urban significance. In
Muqarnas, 2005, vol. 22, 128–149
64. Meneely, J. D., Smith, B. J., Curran, J. and Ruffell, A., Developing a ‘non-
destructive scientific toolkit’ to monitor monuments and sites, Changing World,
Changing Views of Heritage ICOMOS Scientific Symposium – Malta, 2009.
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65. Sharma, R. K., Grover, A. C. and Gupta, H. O., Investigation of cracks
developed in the veneering marble slabs of the Taj Mahal. In Conservation,
Preservation and Restoration: Traditions, Trends and Techniques (eds Kamlakar,
G. and Rao V. Pandit), Birla Archaeological and Cultural Research Institute,
Hyderabad, 1995, vols 229–236
66. Setter, S., The Hoysala Temples (2 vols.) 1992, Bangalore, Kala Yatra
Publications
67. M.A. Dhaky, Encyclopaedia of Indian Temple Architecture South India Upper
Dravidadesa Later Phase, A.D. 973-1326, American Institute of Indian Studies,
Indira Ghandi National Center for the Arts, 1996, New Delhi, Pradeep
Mehendiratta
69. Del Bonta, Robert John, The Hoysala Style: Architectural development and
Artists, 12th and 13th Century, A.D., The University of Michigan, Ph.D., 1975
71. Dhaky, M. A., The Temple Forms in Karnata Inscriptions and Architecture,
1977, New Delhi, Abhinav Publications
73. Daigoro Chihara,, American Institute of Indian Studies, Varanasi, 1975. Hindu
Buddhist Architecture in Southeast Asia
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74. Meister, M. W., “Construction and conception of mandapika shrines of central
India.”, Vols 1 & 2. University of Calcutta, Calcutta, 1946. East and West, New
Series
75. Meister, M., “Mandala and practice in Nagara architecture in northern India,”
Journal of American Oriental Society, 1979, 99(2), 204–219., 1976, 26, 409-418.
76. Bafna, S., “On the idea of the Mandala as a governing device,” Journal of the
Society of Architectural Historians, 2000, 59(1), 26-49.
78. Dhaky, M., “The chronology of the Solanki temples of Gujarat,” Journal of
Madhya Pradesh Itihasa Parishad, 1961, 3, 1-83. , London, 1977.
79. Datta, S., Geometric Delineation in the Nâgara Cella: Study of the temple of
Ranakdevi at Wadhwan
80. Datta, S., Thesis, School of Architecture, CEPT. Vastu Shilpa Foundation,
Ahmedabad, 1993. Modelling Sikhara form in the Maha-gurjara idiom
81. Datta, S., “Infinite Sequences and the Form of Cella Superstructures,” in ,
Michael Ventris Research Report, Institute of Classical Studies, Cambridge and
Architectural Association (AA) London, 1994. The Proceedings of the Third
International Conference on Mathematics and Design
82. Streilein, A., Niederöst, M., “Reconstruction of the Disentis monastery from
high resolution still video imagery with object oriented measurement routines.” ,
Deakin University, Geelong, 2001, 106–112. International Archives of
Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing
83. Debevec, P., C. Taylor, and J. Malik:, “Modeling and rendering architecture
from photographs: A hybrid geometry and image-based approach,” in , Vol. XXII,
Part 5, 1998, 271–277. Proceedings of SIGGRAPH 1996
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84. Datta, S., “On Recovering the Surface Geometry of Temple Superstructures,”
in Bhatt, A., ed., 1996,11–20. Proceedings of the 10th International Conference on
Computer Aided Architectural Design Research in Asia
85. Evans, R., TVB School of Habitat Studies, New Delhi, Volume 2, 2005, 253-258.
The Projective Cast: Architecture and Its Three Geometries, Cambridge, Mass.:
MIT Press, 1995.
87. Acharya, P. (1980). The architecture of the Mansara (Vol. 2). New Delhi:
Manohar Publishers
88. Mehta RJ. Masterpieces of Indian temples. Bombay: D.B. Taraporevala Sons;
1974
89. K. Trivedi. Hindu temples: models of a fractal universe. The Visual Computer 5:
243-258, 1989
90. Ram Raz, Essay on the Architecture of the Hindus (London: Royal Asiatic
Society 1834)
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94. Felix Otter Residential Architecture in Bhoja’s Samaranganasutradhara (Delhi:
Motilal Banarasidass, 2009)
95. Agrawala, V.S., 1980. Sarnath. 3rd Edition, Archaeological Survey of India, New
Delhi.
98. Singh, M. and Arbad, B. R., Characterization of traditional mud mortar of the
decorated wall surfaces of Ellora Caves. Constr. Build. Mater., 2014, 65, 384–395
99. S.P Gupta and S. Vijayakumar. 2010. Temples in India: Origin and
Developmental Stages. D.K. Printwood(P) Ltd., New Delhi
99. Acharya V.A, “Indian Temple Architecture: Form and Spaces” Research Paper,
Department of Architectural and Planning,I.I.T. Roorkee, Roorkee, India, 1991
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103. Shweta Vardia and Paulo B Lourenco.” Building science of Indian temple
architecture”. In the proceedings: The International conference on Rehabilitation
and Restoration of Structures (ICI), IIT Madras, Chennai India. 12-16 February
2013. Pp.167-178.
104. Fletcher, Sir. Banister. 1992. The History of Architecture. New Delhi: CBS
Publishers and distributors
105. Grover S., The Architecture of India: Buddhist and Hindu. Ghaziabad: Vikas
Publishing House Pvt. Ltd., 1988.
107. Acharya P.K., “An Encyclopaedia of Hindu Architecture” London. Q.U.P., 1946
108. Vasudha A Gokhale. Architectural Heritage and Seismic design with reference
to Indian Temple Architecture. In Proceedings: 13th World conference on
Earthquake Engineering, Vancouver, B.C., Canada August 1-6,2004Paper no 2819
112. Long, M. E. & Voute, C. (2008). Borobudur: Pyramid of the Cosmic Buddha.
DK Print World
113. Miksic, J. (1990). Borobudur: Golden Tales if the Buddhas. Tuttle Publishing
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114. Situngkir, H. (2005). "What is the relatedness of Mathematics and Art and
why we should care?". BFI Working Paper Series WPK2005. Bandung Fe Institute.
117. Handa, O.C, Madhu Jain. 2003. ‘Art and Architecture of Uttranchal’, Bhavna
Books and Prints, New Delhi, pp. 166-183.
118. Vatsayayan Kapila, "The Square and Circles of the Indian Art" Roli Books
International., 1983.
119. Volwahsen Andreas, " Living Architecture: India", Macdonald & Co. Ltd.,
London, 1969.
122. Bernier M. Ronald.1982. Temple Arts of Kerala Delhi: Chand and Company.
123. Latha.V. 2005. Cave Temples of the Pandya country Art and Ritual Art
&Ritual, Delhi: Sharada Publishing house.
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124. Poduval, R.V. 1948. Architecture in Travancore in The Arts and Crafts of
Travancore, Kramrisch, Stella, J.H.Cousins and R.Vasudeva Poduval (eds).
Trivandrum: Government of Kerala, (1999, edition), pp.31-46
125. Soundara Rajan.K.V. 1998. Rock-cut Temple Styles early Pandyan Art and the
Ellora Shrines, Mumbai: Somaiya Publication.
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