File:11th 12th-century Pachala Someshwara Temple Ganesha.jpg
The Pachala temple consists of four shrines, three on the west and one on the east. These four shrines share a common and large rectangular mandapam. The temple is highly ornate and richly carved, though with many signs of intentional damage to face, ears and limbs during 14th- to 18th-century regional wars. The Pachala interior has 70 pillars with intricate carvings depicting mythical legends of Vishnu and Shiva. The garbhagriya (sanctum) is dedicated to Shiva (Someshwara) is in the aniconic form of Linga prepared from a large block of Green Onyx stone. The word "green" is "Pachala" in local language, and this gives the temple the name Pachala Someswara. Facing the sanctum is an intricately carved Nandi (bull).
The image has been donated to the public domain by the photographer (P. Madhusudan). The donation and licensing rights are covered by Ticket 2021010810000756. The uploader (Ms Sarah Welch) has reviewed and modified the images. Any creative rights I have as an uploader, I herewith donate it to public domain and wikimedia commons.(Reusing this file)