THE
PRAMBANAN TEMPLE
Prambanan Temple ( also known as Lorojonggrang Temple )
was located at Bokoharjo Village, Prambanan, East of Yogyakarta.
The exact date of when the Lorojonggrang Temple was built
was still in argument. However, there are two opinion of
who builds the Temple. One opinion stated that there was
only one, dynasty, Cailendra Dynasty, before Lorojonggrang
Temple was built. The second opinion stated that there were
two dynasties, Cailendra and Sanjaya Dynasty. Cailendra
Dynasty occupied the Southern part of Central Java, whereas
Sanjaya Dynasty occupied the Northern part. Buddhist Temples
were found mostly in the Southern part of Central Java,
and that the Ciwa Temples (Hindu) were found in Northern
part of Central Java. It seemed that Sanjaya Dynasty existed
before the Cailendra Dynasty with the center of authority
in South Kedu (around Magelang, North of Yogyakarta ). This
statement was based on Canggal Inscription ( 732 A.D. ).
The Sanjaya Dynasty was then pushed to the North by the
Cailendra Dynasty which arrived around 778 A.D. (Kalasan
Inscription). The existence of Sanjaya Dynasty was also
mentioned in Balitung inscription (708 A.D.). In that inscription
it was stated that whenever a King died, the King became
a "Dews" ( God, Devine). Based on the inscription
studies, it showed the sequence of Kings in Sanjaya Dynasty
as follows :
* Sanjaya (732 - 760 A.D.)
* Panangkaran (760 - 780 A.D.)
* Warak (800 - 819 A.D.)
* Garung (819 - 838 A.D.)
* Pikatan (838 - 851 A.D.)
* Kayuwangi (851 - 882 A.D.)
The Rise of Cailendra Dynasty was inscripted in Kalasan
inscription, and was followed by other inscriptions, but
the historical sequence was difficult to be followed and
still a debate. Some inscriptions stated the possibility
that both dynasties built the same holy temples as well
( Kalasan Inscription and short Inscription in Plaosan Temple
). On the short inscription two Kings were mentioned, Rakai
Pikatan from Sanjaya Dynasty and Sri Kaluhunan from the
Cailendra Dynasty. Casparis identified Sri Kaluhunan as
the son of the latest King of Cailendra Dynasty, Samaratungga.
According to Karang Tengah Inscription ( 824 A D. ), Samaratungga
was also called Pramodawardani. The marriage of King and
Queen with different religion ( Buddha and Ciwa/Hindu) seemed
to influence the architecture of Prambanan Temple which
was built by King Pikatan ( Sanjaya Dynasty ). The top of
Prambanan Temple did not have a lingga type ( phallus type)
but instead a ratna type ( ratna = diamond) which looked
like a stupa.
At this point, the King who ordered the building of Lorojonggrang
Temple is not convincing. According to the 856 A.D. inscription
( locality source is unknown, preserved in Jakarta Museum
of Art ) stated that King Jatiningrat was replaced by Dyah
Lokapala. Darmais and Casparis identified Dyah Lokapala
as King Kayuwangi who issued Argapura Inscription ( 863
A.D.) According to Balitung inscription (907 A.D.), Kayuwangi
was the King between 851-882 A.D. The King before Kayuwangi
era was Rakai Pikatan, and thus be concluded that Jatiningrat
was indeed Rakai Pikatan.
The Balitung Inscription also described more detail on the
structural arrangement of temples. On the 11 th line of
the inscription, it stated that temple buildings were categorized
into two kinds: the Ciwagraha (graha = a house) and Ciwalaya.
The main temple (Ciwagraha) was built by the King, and smaller
and lesser temples Ciwalaya ) were built by ordinary people
regardless of social status.
The temples which were built by ordinary people had a row
arrangement with similar height and forms. The main temple
( built by the King ) had its own wall, separated from the
smaller temples. The main gate had a statue of Dwarapala,
and at the east was planted a "Tanjung tree" which
was considered sacred, as a way for God to descend to earth.
Furthermore the temple complex had an irrigation system
and buildings for the priests. When the building of Ciwa
Temple was finished, the flow of a river was diverted passing
alongside the walls of the main temple, separating the main
temple ( Lorojonggrang Temple and the smaller temples.
From the inscriptional readings, it could be concluded that
on the year 856 A.D. (the issuance of the inscription),
Lorojonggrang Temple Buildings had been finished. It was
Rakai Pikatan who built Lorojonggrang Temple. This evidence
was shown by Casparis based on the Lorojonggrang inscription.
There were 50 stones at Lorojonggrang Temple with inscriptions
written in white, black and red color. The name of Rakai
Pikatan was found among the inscription, and that the writing
style found in Lorojonggrang Temple was similar to that
in Plaosan Temple.
A. The Discovery and Restoration of Prambanan Temple
The discovery of Lorojonggrang Temple was reported by C.A.
Lons in 1733. The temple was in ruined condition, abandoned
among grass and tree vegetation. First effort to reveal
the presence of a temple was done in 1885 by cleaning the
site from grasses and shrubs followed by grouping the stones.
This project was supervised by Yzerman, Groneman and van
Erp. The work was continued in 1918.
Grouping and identifying the stones in detail followed by
restructuring Ciwa Temple was done by van Erp. In 1937,
restoration began under the supervision of Bosch, followed
by Stuuerheim, van Ramound and others. The restoration was
finished in December 20, 1953. About 240 temples undergone
restoration, such as two Apit Temples (restored in 1923),
four Kelir Temples, and four Corner Temples (Candi Sudut),
two Perwara Temples, two entrance gates, the South Gate
and the North Gate. The next restoration used the Government
Routine Development Budget. Those restoration included Brahma
Temple ( start restoration in 1978 ), Wisnu Temple (start
restoration in 1982).
B. Structural Description and Arrangement
The Prambanan Temple is a group of Hindu temples, and was
also known as Lorojonggrang Temple. The word Prambanan refers
to the name of a District, Prambanan District, whereas Lorojonggrang
refers to its actual name.
The temple complex has three concentric square
Outer square (222 x 390 meters) surrounded
by a 1 meter boundary wall.
Middle square (110 x 110 meters) surrounded by a 1 meter
boundary wall.
Center square (34 x 34 meters) surrounded by a 1 meter boundary
wall.
All the three squares have gates to connect the other squares.
The outer square do not have temples. Inside the middle
square there are 224 Perwara temples which are arranged
in 4 rows of temples. The first row consists of 68 temples,
followed by the second row (60 temples), the third row (52
temples) and the fourth row (44 temples ). The arrangement
of temples is in such a way that shorter temples lies in
the outside and getting higher toward the center. Inside
the center square are sixteen small and big temples, Some
of them are
Ciwa Temple as the main temple.
Wisnu Temple in the North of Ciwa Temple.
Brahma Temple in the South of Ciwa Temple.
Nandi Temple in front of Ciwa Temple.
Temple A and B lies in front of Wisnu and Ciwa Temple.
Apit Temple lies in the North and the South flanking row
of temples {the West and East row (apit = to flank)} Four
Kelir Temples in front of each gate of the main square.
Four Sudut Temples (sudut = corner) at each of the corner
of the main square.
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