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"Pristava () is a settlement in the Municipality of Tržič in the Upper Carniola region of Slovenia. References External links *Pristava at Geopedia Category:Populated places in the Municipality of Tržič "
"The Bateshwar Hindu temples (or Batesara, Bateśvar) are a group of nearly 200 sandstone Hindu temples and their ruins in north Madhya Pradesh in post-Gupta, early Gurjara-Pratihara style of North Indian temple architecture. It is about north of Gwalior and about east of Morena town. The temples are mostly small and spread over about site. They are dedicated to Shiva, Vishnu and Shakti - representing the three major traditions within Hinduism. The site is within the Chambal River valley ravines, on the north-western slope of a hill near Padavali known for its major medieval era Vishnu temple. The Bateshwar temples were built between the 8th and the 10th-century. The site is likely named after the Bhuteshvar Temple, the largest Shiva temple at the site. It is also referred to as Batesvar temples site or Batesara temples site. The temples as they now appear are in many cases reconstructed from the fallen stones in a project begun by the Archaeological Survey of India in 2005. History According to Madhya Pradesh Directorate of Archaeology, this group of 200 temples were built during the reign of Gurjara-Pratihara Dynasty. According to Michael Meister, an art historian and a professor specializing in Indian temple architecture, the earliest temples in the Bateshwar group near Gwalior are likely from the 750-800 CE period.Michael W. Meister (1976), Construction and Conception: Maṇḍapikā Shrines of Central India, East and West, Vol. 26, No. 3/4 (September - December 1976), page 415, Figure 21 caption, context: 409-418 The temples were destroyed after the 13th century; it is not clear if this was by an earthquake, or Muslim forces. The site was visited and its ruins reported by Alexander Cunningham in 1882 as a "collection of more than 100 temples large and small to the southeast of Paravali Padavali", the latter with a "very fine old temple".Eastern Rajputana Tour Report, A Cunningham, Archaeological Survey of India, Volume XX, pages 107, 110-112 Bateshwar was notified by Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) as a protected site in 1920. Limited recovery, standardized temple numbering, ruins isolation with photography, and site conservation effort was initiated during the colonial British era. Several scholars studied the site and included them in their reports. For example, the French archeologist Odette Viennot published a paper in 1968 that included a discussion and photographs of the numbered Batesvar temples.O. VIENNOT (1968), Le problème des temples à toit plat dans l'Inde du Nord, Arts Asiatiques, Vol. 18 (1968), École française d’Extrême-Orient, pages 40-51 with Figures 50, 53-56, 76, 80-82 and 88 context: 23-84 (in French) In 2005, the ASI began an ambitious project to collect all the ruins, reassemble them and restore as many temples as possible, under an initiative led by the ASI Bhopal region's Superintending Archaeologist K.K. Muhammed. Under Muhammed's leadership, some 60 temples were restored. Muhammed has continued to campaign for the site's further restoration and calls it "my place of pilgrimage. I come here once in every three months. I am passionate about this temple complex." According to Muhammed, the Bateshwar complex was "built on the architectural principles enunciated in two Sanskrit Hindu temple architecture texts, Manasara Shilpa Shastra composed in the 4th century CE, and Mayamata Vastu Shastra written in the 7th century CE". He followed these texts as his team of over 50 workers collected pieces of the ruins from the site and like a jigsaw puzzle tried to put it back together. The site has been a "massive mounds of rubble" of temple parts, states Subramanian, with "ruins lying everywhere". Dacoit Nirbhay Singh Gujjar and his gang helped Archaeological Survey of India restore the temple complex. Description The site is mentioned in historical literature as Dharon or Paravali, later as Padavali. The local name for the group of temples is Batesvar or Bateshwar temples. Three illustrative floor plans found at the Batesvar site in Madhya Pradesh. According to the Cunningham's report of 1882, the site was a "confused assemblage of more than one hundred temples of various sizes, but mostly small". The largest standing temple was of Shiva, wrote Cunningham, and the temple was locally called Bhutesvara. However, to his surprise the temple had a relief of Garuda on top, leading him to speculate that the temple may have been a Vishnu temple before it was damaged and reused. The Bhutesvara temple had a square sanctum with a side, with a relatively small 20 square feet mahamandapa. The sanctum doorway was flanked by river goddesses Ganga and Yamuna. The tower superstructure was a pyramidal square starting off from a sided square seated on a flat roof, then rhythmically tapering off. The standing temples, stated Cunningham, all had sides made from single slabs set upright, above which sat flat roofs then pyramidal top as a part of their architecture. The site had a water tank cut into the hill rock, with rows of small temples arranged to form a street to the tank. Cunningham also reported seeing Shiva linga inside one of the temples, a trimurti statue, a Ganesha, Shiva and Parvati together around this temple. Next to the Shiva temple was a Vishnu temple, about the same size as the Siva temple, again a square sanctum of side with river goddesses Ganga and Yamuna flanking the doorway on its jambs. In north-northeast corner of the site was a large platform of about length and breadth, with an integrated platform projection of a square with side. Cunningham speculated that this may have been the largest temple at the Bateshvara site before its destruction, and he noted that not a stone remains near the platform to offer further clues as to what the lost temple was like. Cunningham also noted that one of the small temples to the northwest of the Bhuteshwara temple had a short inscription dated Samvat 1107 (1050 CE), thus establishing the floruit for the site. The ASI team ruins identification and restoration efforts since 2005 have yielded the following additional information about the site: *Some of the temples had a Nataraja on the kirti-mukha *Reliefs with "exquisite carving" of Lakulisa *Reliefs of Siva holding the hand of Parvati *Reliefs narrating the legend of Kalyana-sundaram, or the marriage of Shiva and Parvati with Vishnu, Brahma and others attending *Small sculptures of women playing the lute, veena or drums in Vishnu temples, suggesting that music profession in pre-11th century India encouraged women to participate as musicians *Amorous couples in various stages of courtship and intimacy (mithuna, kama scenes) *Secular scenes such as men riding elephants, men wrestling, lions *Friezes with narratives from the Bhagavata Purana such as Krishna leela scenes such as Devaki holding baby Krishna who is suckling her breasts in prison that is guarded by a woman; Baby Krishna draining away the life of the demon with poisoned breasts, etc. According to Gerd Mevissen, the Batesvar temples complex has many interesting lintels, such as one with Navagraha, many with Dashavatara (ten avatars of Vishnu) of the Vaishnavism tradition, frequent display of Saptamatrikas (seven mothers) from the Shaktism tradition. The presence of Navagraha lintel suggests, states Mevissen, that the temple complex must be dated after 600 CE. The diversity of the theological themese at the site suggest that Batesvar (also called Batesara) was once a hub for temple-related arts and artists. Significance According to Michael Meister, the Bateshwar site illustrates the conception and construction of "Mandapika shrine" concept in central India. It is reducing the Hindu temple idea to its basics, in a simple concept that is one step further from the single cave cell design. This design has roots in more ancient Hindu temples found in this region such as one that survives at Mahua and has a Sanskrit inscription that calls the design as sila mandapika (literally, a "stone pandal or pavilion". This has vedi-platform roots that combines the traditional square plan with various combinations of Hindu temple architecture elements. The temples explore a square sanctum mounted on a basement platform (jagati) that is rectangular, states Meister, so as to incorporate a small praggriva (porch). These temples have a "simple pillared wall topped by a broad, flat-edged awning which extends beyond the sanctum to shade the entry as well. The square pillars rest directly on the vedibandha, and are crowned by "leaf capitals, their shafts engraved with decorative medallions. At its best this type has a very individual and decorative quality, still like a wooden or ivory box, intervening bands of meandering foliage especially vital, the whole framed by the flat, deeply shadowed vedibandha mouldings and the crisp chadya (with saw-tooth edge) above", according to Meister. The significance of these temples is that they fuse and experiment with a variety of temple building ideas, such as topping the nagara sikharas that may have been dominant by that time possibly in western India, on the simplest of temple grid plans with more ancient roots in central India.Michael W. Meister (1976), Construction and Conception: Maṇḍapikā Shrines of Central India, East and West, Vol. 26, No. 3/4 (September - December 1976), pages 415-417, context: 409-418 Gallery File:Bateshwar Temple Complex - 1.jpgRuins at the Batesvar site File:Bateshwar Temple Complex - 3.jpgRestored temples File:Bateshwar Temples (16313906851).jpgTwo similar temples, some differences File:Bateshwar Temples (16313836371).jpgWater tank and stacked ruins File:The Ruins of Bateshwar Group of Temples.jpgRuins and different temple styles File:Vishnu Temple, Bateshwar.jpgVishnu temple at Batesvar File:Vishnu Temple at Bateshwar (16129557249).jpgVishnu temple interior from ruins File:Vishnu Temple at Bateshwar (16313711321).jpgVishnu temple, recreated by ASI See also *Siddhachal Caves *Teli ka Mandir References =Bibliography= *Dehejia, V. (1997). Indian Art. Phaidon: London. . *Harle, J.C., The Art and Architecture of the Indian Subcontinent, 2nd edn. 1994, Yale University Press Pelican History of Art, External links * Category:Hindu temples in Madhya Pradesh Category:Morena "
"NonStop Clusters (NSC) was an add-on package for SCO UnixWare that allowed creation of fault-tolerant single-system image clusters of machines running UnixWare. NSC was one of the first commercially available highly available clustering solutions for commodity hardware. Description NSC provided a full single-system image cluster: ;Process migration:Processes started on any node in the cluster could be migrated to any other node. Migration could be either manual or automatic (for load balancing). ;Single process space:All processes were visible from all nodes in the cluster. The standard Unix process management commands (ps, kill and so on) were used for process management. ;Single root:All files and directories were available from all nodes of the cluster ;Single I/O space:All I/O devices were available from any node in the cluster. The normal device naming convention was modified to add a node number to all device names. For example, the second serial port on node 3 would be `/dev/tty01h.3`. A partition on a SCSI disk on node 2 might be `/dev/rdsk/n2c3b0t4d0s3`. ;Single IPC space:The standard UnixWare IPC mechanisms (shared memory, semaphores, message queues, Unix domain sockets) were all available for communication between processes running on any node. ;Cluster virtual IP address:NSC provided a single IP address for access to the cluster from other systems. Incoming connections were load-balanced between the available cluster nodes. The NSC system was designed for high availability—all system services were either redundant or would fail-over from one node to another in the advent of a node crash. The disk subsystem was either accessible from multiple nodes (using a Fibre Channel SAN or dual- ported SCSI) or used cross-node mirroring in a similar fashion to DRBD. History NSC was developed for Tandem by Locus Computing Corporation based on their Transparent Network Computing technology. During the lifetime of the project Locus were acquired by Platinum Technology Inc. The NSC team and product were then transferred to Tandem. Initially NSC was developed for the Compaq Integrity XC packaged cluster, consisting of between two and six Compaq ProLiant servers and one or two Compaq ServerNet switches to provide the cluster interconnect inter-node communication path. In this form NSC was commercialized by Compaq and only supported on qualified hardware from Compaq, and later Fujitsu-Siemens. In 2000 NSC was modified to allow standard Fast Ethernet and later Gigabit Ethernet switches as the cluster interconnect and commercialized by SCO as UnixWare NonStop Clusters 7.1.1+IP. This release of NSC was available on commodity PC hardware, although SCO recommended that systems with more than two nodes used the ServerNet interconnect. After the sale of the SCO Unix business to Caldera Systems it was announced that the long-term goal was to integrate the NSC product into the base UnixWare code but this was not to be, Caldera Systems ceased distribution of NSC, replacing it by the Reliant HA clustering solution and in May 2001 Compaq announced that it would release a GPLed version of the NSC code, which eventually became OpenSSI. References Category:Cluster computing Category:Internet Protocol based network software Category:High-availability cluster computing "