Architectural Multiplicity: The Modular Construction System of Jaina Temples
Prof. Dr. Julia A.B. Hegewald
5pm Wednesday 27 January 2027
Auditorium, St John's College, University of Oxford
(Free Admission)
Jaina religious practice has been strongly shaped by the ritual of giving (dāna). This leads to large numbers of donations and growing numbers of religious objects, which demand architectural extensions of existing shrines and the regular endowment of new temple buildings to accommodate them. In addition, Jaina ritual is characterised by the veneration of a large number of different sacred objects. These can be figural icons (enlightened humans and divinities), more abstract elements (sacred symbols and objects, visualised mantras, cosmological items, etc.) and sacred scripture, which are all displayed in Jaina sacred architecture. In order to accommodate this large and ever-increasing diversity of revered objects, Jaina temples have continuously been expanded and added to throughout India and during all periods. This has led to the creation of highly complex and multifaceted spatial compositions which visualise the concept of multiplicity on various levels, such as collections of venerated objects, roof structures, sanctums (on horizontal and various superimposed vertical levels), subsidiary shrines and entire walled temple complexes.
Back to overview of Slade Lectures 2027