Saturday, August 28, 2010

Beautiful Kerala Pictures

Beautiful Kerala Pictures - Naturally Amazing Place to Visit


This Knol to take you on nature tour to Kerala, South India. Kerala, South India has enormous potential for nature tours specially for nature lovers and natural beauty lovers. Kerala in South India has it all, hills covered with lavish greens, natural greens, beaches and seashores, Kerala backwaters, acres of coconut palms, rice barges, temples and a lot more. You name it and Kerala has it.

Kerala has got a lot of unique reasons to be called a paradise. An equable climate, sun kissed beaches, emerald backwaters, idyllic hill stations, exotic wildlife, breathtaking waterfalls, Ayurvedic health holidays, enchanting art forms, magical festivals, historical monuments, a mouthwatering cuisine and lot more...... All this gives you a unique knowledge

Blessed by the sun and sacred with natural beauty that defy picture, Kerala’s beaches are truly pleasant. Spend lazy days in quiet consideration, relax in the shade of lush palm groves, take refreshing dips in the blue waters and enjoy a taste of life in paradise.

Kerala’s weather and naturally plentiful supply of herbs are ideally suited to the practice of Ayurvedic treatments and select health resorts and hotels offer special renovation packages designed to give the visitor the full benefits of the tried and tested methodology. The monsoon season, when the air is cool and free from dust, is measured the best time of year for such programmes.



Alleppey

Alleppey

Alleppey

Bekal - Kasargod

Bekal - Kasargod

Canannore

Canannore

Kochi

Kochi

Kochi

Kochi

Ponmudi - Trivandrum

Ponmudi - Trivandrum

Veli lake at Trivandrum

Veli lake - Trivandrum

Idukki

Idukki

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Beautiful Pictures of Spain

Spain beautiful Place to Visit






Sunday, August 22, 2010

Sunday, August 15, 2010

Warangal - Historic Place

Kakatiyas controlled northern Andhra Pradesh around that time and were feudatories of the Hoysalas of southern Karnataka. Their art definitely seems to have been influenced by their suzerains. Hoysalas of course built the famous temples of Belur and Halebid, arguably among the most beautiful sculptural temples of South India.

I like the Warangal the most, probably because it was the most well maintained. There must have been a stunning temple here once. What you see now are various pieces of that temple that have been arranged into some kind of order by the Archeological Society of India. One of the prominent features were the perfectly circular inserts in the pillars that look as if they were lathed. Except they didn't have lathes in the 13th century.

The scultptures show signs of systematic mutilation (right) suggesting that the temple was destroyed by an invading enemy. It is tempting to think of the Muslim invaders as the culprits - Malik Kafur, Ala-ud-din Khilji's general conquered these parts around that time. However my friend RG who accompanied me pointed out that vandalizing temples and monuments of a conquered kingdom was fairly common practice by kings of all religions throughout history. Wendy Doniger, noted Indologist whose "Hindus - An Alternative History" I am reading now, echoes similar sentiments.

Two sculptures standing on either side of a small shrine turned out not to be Dwarapalakas as their position might suggest, but Lord Shiva himself, considering that he had 4 hands, wore an Angavastram that didn't go below the knee and the serpent earrings; clearly the re-arrangement of ASI still needs some work.

The Ramappa temple was very curious in that it had a super-structure that was very much intact, while the base looked like it had been disturbed violently by an earthquake because the temple settled into the ground that couldn't bear the weight of all that granite and basalt. The Ramappa temple had inscriptions that looked fairly close to modern-day Telugu script

The temple complex at Ghanpur was in the worst shape. The highlights there were the leaning temples and the temples with fractal patterns in their vimanas