Ishvara Temple, Arasikere

Isvara temple at Arsikere
Religion
AffiliationHinduism
DistrictHassan
DeityShiva
Location
LocationArsikere
StateKarnataka
CountryIndia
Shown within India
Ishvara Temple, Arasikere (Karnataka)
Geographic coordinates13°19′06″N 76°15′36″E / 13.31833°N 76.26000°E / 13.31833; 76.26000
Architecture
TypeHoysala
Creatorunknown, Narasimha II
Completedc. 1220 CE

The Ishvara temple, also referred to as the Ishwara or Isvara temple, is an early 13th-century Hindu temple in Arsikere, Hassan district, Karnataka India. Dedicated to Shiva, it is one of the most notable early Hoysala architecture examples with a rotating circular plan, a domed mandapa with 16-point star shape, a pancatala vimana, and a galaxy of artwork depicting Shaivism, Vaishnavism, Shaktism and Vedic legends of Hinduism.

The Ishvara temple was one among a complex of many Hindu temples in Arasikere. Most of these and their artwork were destroyed and mutilated in or after the 14th-century. Along with the Ishvara temple, a simpler and more damaged double temple (Shivalaya) survives and is to the immediate north of the Ishvara temple within the current compound. This double temple has red-stone pillars. About 200 meters to the southwest of the Ishvara temple is the Sahasrakuta Jinalaya – a ruined and mutilated monument of Jainism.

The Ishvara temple is protected as a monument of national importance by the Archaeological Survey of India.