CULTURAL SYNTHESIS IN STONE: ARCHITECTURE AND HERITAGE OF AJMER-MERWARA
- Research Scholar, Department of History, Faculty of Social Sciences and Humanities, Mohanlal Sukhadia University, Udaipur, Rajasthan.
- Research Supervisor, Department of History, Faculty of Social Sciences and Humanities, Mohanlal Sukhadia University Udaipur, Rajasthan.
- Co Supervisor, Prof. Shwetanshu Bhushan, Department of History, Lady Shree Ram college, University of Delhi.
- Abstract
- Keywords
- Cite This Article as
- Corresponding Author
This study will treat these religious and secular antiquities together as a single integrative milieu, its complex cultural landscape created for centuries by the workings of religion,state formation, ecology adaption and social-economic change. These temple-dargah-mosque-Jain-stone-haveli-sarai-lake structures have not only been envisaged as singular entities, independent of one another but are linked to each other in the form of a network that forms the heritage cluster. Drawing on a multi method research approach which integrates quantitative spatial analysis,methodical hovering up of temple architecture from the field,hypothesized image-making history from archival sources and functional mapping of sacred profane territory the article evidences how religious ritual places in Ajmer Merwara became known around certain ecological anchors: such as lakes, hills and trade corridors with secular sites embedded nearby to offer institutional underpinning -administrative through military commercial to civic of those stage sets for ritual. Results reveal a sacred secular interdependence - active religiosity that helps sustaining its influence and persistence in major pilgrimage sites and a dormant secular heritage of passive monuments having suffered from unprotective environment, lack of public attention. The analysis also reveals an accretive urban texture influenced by Chauhan,Sultanate,Mughal, Maratha and British periods producing a palimpsest of artistic idiom and spatial logic along with cultural significance. In presenting Ajmer Merwara as a holistic heritage ecosystem, the paper provides a framework to connect architecture,ecology, governance and community engagement in regional heritage interpretation.
[Pratibha Singh, Pratibha and Shwetanshu Bhushan (2026); CULTURAL SYNTHESIS IN STONE: ARCHITECTURE AND HERITAGE OF AJMER-MERWARA Int. J. of Adv. Res. (Jan). 940-952] (ISSN 2320-5407). www.journalijar.com
India






