Nice to hear this Mr. Chirag. I do hope the video helped you. :-) Do subscribe and there are other interesting videos too on Rameshwaram, Spiti Vallley if you are interested.
Glad you liked it ma'am. Do share the video in your network please. There is another video related to Arjuna Penance, I am sure you will like that too. Just 6 minutes video in the Mahabalipuram playlist.
3:04 It's wrong for you to say that today this can't be done ..... we have today far superior technology ( incomparable ). Though it is magnificent and a great art of it's time but certainly today we can create this at a much faster rate and with better finish.
The question is also will it last for generations to come as these monuments have still managed to survive for so many centuries with attacks from both nature and plunderers?
@@Wanderer_fyi Surviving from attack is another thing. Unless proctected, it can be destroyed in no time. With today's technology we don't have to even go there to do it . Protection from nature : In this domain we have also excelled. Can be made stronger than ever. Question is willingness to do it today. And in this case there is not much Earlier kings used to legitimize their authority through these magnificent monuments but today this is shifted somewhere else.
Yes. Willingness to do is also a point. I dont know whether our ancestors did it to leave a legacy for the future generation, but currently the willingness to build or leave for the future generation is a big question as everyone is more interested to amass money for his generation to come alone. I dont know sir, though you say the current technology makes it better and stronger, and may be more finer but it does require a hell lot of maintenace which was not the case earlier. To me those old buildings/monuments still look more beautiful. This is definitely an interesting debate and I do want to see what our generation can contribute for the future? May be I am more paranoid or skeptical here of our current generation which I am also part of it and hence this strong viewpoint of mine. :-)
@@Wanderer_fyi Built by Pallava in the 7-8 century AD. Initially they were tribes but later on, they got into the varna system by Brahmanas who placed them in the Kshatriya category. Brahamans legitimatized the position by creating stories that they are a lineage of Ram/Krishna times and in return, brahmans used to get lands & villages in grant These things happened with so many other kings of that time also ( Chalukyas etc. ) There was nothing godly about them as such. They wanted to rule and some benefited and some were subjugated to heinous crimes. Romanticism about the past is not good. In your assertion regarding maintenance => We have outclassed ancient times in terms of technology, so there is nothing sort of thing that they know and we don't. It's a matter of choice whether we want to do it or not Today our generation is contributing to various domains ( AI, Biotech, Space, Quantum computing and Medicine are few gems among them ) When we read history, we should not be prejudiced about whether people were like this or that. It's not wise to make assertions of false glory. We should be very rational and see things as they were. Today, maybe what we are doing can be regarded as bad or somewhat stupid by our future generation when they have advanced. Our emotions should not guide the truth. Truth is truth regardless of what we think of it or want it to be. Every generation has to see rationally in their time.
एक बार पत्थर निकालने के बाद, श्रमिकों ने हथौड़े और छेनी से कई छेद किए। पानी से लथपथ लकड़ी के कीलों को छिद्रों में डाला गया था, जहां उन्होंने विस्तार किया और चट्टान को विभाजित किया। चूना पत्थर और अन्य नरम चट्टान के साथ कांस्य के औजारों का उपयोग किया जाता था
Karanji. Thank You and sorry for the late response. इस उत्तर के लिए धन्यवाद। महाबलीपुरम के ऊपर और भी वीडियोस है और उम्मीद है आपने उन्हें देखा होगा। अगर जानकारी पसंद आयी है तो चैनल को सब्सक्राइब कीजिये और वीडियो को अपने नेटवर्क में शेयर कीजिये।
Yes sir. one possible way. But the question remains is how did they generate so much pressure in absence of electricity? Sometimes these questions are so intriguing and keeps us guessing.
Questions worth pondering over.Great Rakesh
Class 6th History Chapter 10 me ye Monolith Temple ka topic hai aur isko mai dekhne aa gya. Thank you Sir
Nice to hear this Mr. Chirag. I do hope the video helped you. :-) Do subscribe and there are other interesting videos too on Rameshwaram, Spiti Vallley if you are interested.
Dear Rakesh, fabulous work, loved every bit of it.
Thank you very much for the kind words and it means a lot.
Interesting n useful info... Excellent ❤❤
Glad you liked it ma'am. Do share the video in your network please. There is another video related to Arjuna Penance, I am sure you will like that too. Just 6 minutes video in the Mahabalipuram playlist.
3:04 It's wrong for you to say that today this can't be done ..... we have today far superior technology ( incomparable ). Though it is magnificent and a great art of it's time but certainly today we can create this at a much faster rate and with better finish.
The question is also will it last for generations to come as these monuments have still managed to survive for so many centuries with attacks from both nature and plunderers?
@@Wanderer_fyi
Surviving from attack is another thing. Unless proctected, it can be destroyed in no time. With today's technology we don't have to even go there to do it .
Protection from nature : In this domain we have also excelled. Can be made stronger than ever.
Question is willingness to do it today. And in this case there is not much
Earlier kings used to legitimize their authority through these magnificent monuments but today this is shifted somewhere else.
Yes. Willingness to do is also a point. I dont know whether our ancestors did it to leave a legacy for the future generation, but currently the willingness to build or leave for the future generation is a big question as everyone is more interested to amass money for his generation to come alone.
I dont know sir, though you say the current technology makes it better and stronger, and may be more finer but it does require a hell lot of maintenace which was not the case earlier. To me those old buildings/monuments still look more beautiful.
This is definitely an interesting debate and I do want to see what our generation can contribute for the future? May be I am more paranoid or skeptical here of our current generation which I am also part of it and hence this strong viewpoint of mine. :-)
@@Wanderer_fyi
Built by Pallava in the 7-8 century AD. Initially they were tribes but later on, they got into the varna system by Brahmanas who placed them in the Kshatriya category.
Brahamans legitimatized the position by creating stories that they are a lineage of Ram/Krishna times and in return, brahmans used to get lands & villages in grant
These things happened with so many other kings of that time also ( Chalukyas etc. )
There was nothing godly about them as such. They wanted to rule and some benefited and some were subjugated to heinous crimes. Romanticism about the past is not good.
In your assertion regarding maintenance =>
We have outclassed ancient times in terms of technology, so there is nothing sort of thing that they know and we don't.
It's a matter of choice whether we want to do it or not
Today our generation is contributing to various domains ( AI, Biotech, Space, Quantum computing and Medicine are few gems among them )
When we read history, we should not be prejudiced about whether people were like this or that.
It's not wise to make assertions of false glory. We should be very rational and see things as they were.
Today, maybe what we are doing can be regarded as bad or somewhat stupid by our future generation when they have advanced.
Our emotions should not guide the truth. Truth is truth regardless of what we think of it or want it to be. Every generation has to see rationally in their time.
एक बार पत्थर निकालने के बाद, श्रमिकों ने हथौड़े और छेनी से कई छेद किए। पानी से लथपथ लकड़ी के कीलों को छिद्रों में डाला गया था, जहां उन्होंने विस्तार किया और चट्टान को विभाजित किया। चूना पत्थर और अन्य नरम चट्टान के साथ कांस्य के औजारों का उपयोग किया जाता था
Karanji. Thank You and sorry for the late response. इस उत्तर के लिए धन्यवाद। महाबलीपुरम के ऊपर और भी वीडियोस है और उम्मीद है आपने उन्हें देखा होगा। अगर जानकारी पसंद आयी है तो चैनल को सब्सक्राइब कीजिये और वीडियो को अपने नेटवर्क में शेयर कीजिये।
the work of pallava king
Not sure if you have seen this video ua-cam.com/video/llrpbwAGti4/v-deo.html on Shore Temple
From a very fast ray of water
Yes sir. one possible way. But the question remains is how did they generate so much pressure in absence of electricity? Sometimes these questions are so intriguing and keeps us guessing.
👏👏👏