SUN TEMPLE
This temple was
built in the 13th century by the orissan king
Raja Narasimahadeva. It took 1200 workman over
16 years to build. It is believed that the temple
was no longer used from the early 17th century
when the temple was desecrated by Muslim invaders.
In1904 the sand around the temple base was cleared.
The story of the
temple is that Samba, the son of Krishna, was
cursed to suffer from leprosy for 12 years. Because
Surya cured him, the sun god, he built a temple
dedicated to Surya.
The impressive
temple resembles a huge chariot with 24 huge wheels
being pulled by seven horses. Great pairs of large
intricately carved wheels were carved on both
sides of the 4m high platform that the temple
is on. There are two rows of 12 wheels on each
side of the temple. Some say the wheels represent
the 24 hours in a day and others say the wheels
represent 12 months. The seven horses are said
to symbolize the seven days of the week. There
is a dancing hall here, an audience hall and high
tower. The main tower which, has since collapsed,
was 220ft (70 m) high. The Jagmohan (porch) is
over 120 feet (39 m) high and is filled in and
fortified with rocks to it from collapsing. Both
the tower and porch were built on a high platform.
The temple is covered with many intricately carved
sculptures. Sailors once called this temple the
Black pagoda because it was supposed to draw ships
into the shore and cause shipwrecks.
There are three
impressive chlorite figures of Surya facing different
directions to catch the sun at dawn, noon and
sunset. The three statues of Surya change their
facial expressions from wakefulness in the morning
(south) to weariness towards the end of the day
(north). The main entrance has large statues of
two stone lions crushing elephants. There is a
small shrine dedicated to Mayadevi, the wife of
Surya, in the southwest corner of the enclosure.
At the north part of the enclosure, to the right
of entrance, are a group of elephants. At the
south side is a group of horses rearing and trampling
men. Between the entrance and the main part of
the temple is an intricately carved dancing hall.
All over the base, walls and roof of the temple
are intricate carvings. You can climb down to
the inner sanctum of the temple at the west side
of the temple. All over the temple there are many
erotic carvings.
There is a temple
vicinity of the main temple of nine Planets: Sun,
Moon, Mars, Mercury, Jupiter, Venus, Saturn, Rahu
and Ketu. It is situated to the right of the main
entrance, before you enter main Temple.