Kailasa Temple – Ellora

Kailasa Temple, Ellora

Cave 16: The World’s Largest Monolithic Masterpiece

Construction
Top-Down Carving
Era
8th Century (Rashtrakuta)
Status
UNESCO World Heritage

The Impossible Architecture

Commissioned by King Krishna I, the temple was designed to resemble **Mount Kailash**, the abode of Lord Shiva. Architects started at the summit of the cliff and carved vertically downwards. This meant that any single mistake by a sculptor would have been permanent—there was no way to replace a “broken” stone because the entire temple is one piece of the Earth.

Feature Technical Detail
Dimensions 98 ft high, 145 ft wide, and 195 ft long.
Sculptures Life-sized elephants and panels of Ramayana/Mahabharata.
Engineering Complex drainage system and overhead bridges carved in-situ.
Resilience Survived an attempt by Aurangzeb to destroy it (1682).

Key Highlights


  • Ravana Shaking Kailash: A masterpiece sculpture depicting Ravana attempting to lift the mountain while Shiva remains unmoved.

  • The Elephant Courtyard: Enormous elephants and 15-meter-high victory pillars (*Dhwajasthambas*) carved from the same parent rock.

Location: Sambhajinagar (Aurangabad), Maharashtra

Visitor Info (2026)

  • ✈️ Fly to: Aurangabad Airport (IXU).
  • 🚆 Train: Aurangabad Railway Station.
  • Timings: 6:00 AM – 6:00 PM (Closed on Tuesdays).

Travel Tip

Photography: To get the famous “aerial” view of the whole temple, climb the hill path located to the left of the entrance. It provides the best perspective of the top-down carving technique.

Scroll to Top