Academic literature on the topic 'Gupta Architecture'

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Journal articles on the topic "Gupta Architecture"

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Cecil, Elizabeth A., and Peter C. Bisschop. "Idiom and innovation in the ‘Gupta Period’: Revisiting Eran and Sondhni." Indian Economic & Social History Review 58, no. 1 (January 2021): 29–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0019464620982258.

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To show how kingship was enacted and materialised in specific contexts within the ‘Gupta Ecumene’, writ large, this article presents a detailed analysis of two sites that served as centres for political performance, devotional practice, and artistic production between the fourth and the sixth century CE: Eran and Sondhni in the Indian heartland of Madhya Pradesh. Eran is commonly held to be a key site for the study of Gupta art and architecture and holds several important inscriptions from the beginning to the end of the Gupta period, including one issued by Samudragupta. Sondhni is marked by two inscribed columns of Yaśodharman, a former Gupta subordinate who challenged the imperial rulers using metaphors borrowed from Samudragupta’s Allahabad Pillar Inscription. Examining these two sites in dialogue presents an opportunity to identify a shared cultural realm in which local polities participated and developed a transregional ‘Gupta’ political discourse. This study normalises a Gupta-centred imperial history and, in doing so, participates in a wider departure from dynastic history by emphasising the ways in which localised polities and rulers negotiated the political idioms of their day, challenged them, and created spaces for innovation.
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Rao, Vibha. "Contribution of Science in Gupta dynasty." RESEARCH REVIEW International Journal of Multidisciplinary 6, no. 11 (November 12, 2021): 55–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.31305/rrijm.2021.v06.i11.009.

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The Gupta dynasty is considered the climax period of science and technology in ancient Indian history. During this period, there was unprecedented progress in various branches of science (physics, chemistry, medicine and biology and metallurgy etc.), which are proving useful in modern society as well. The Gupta dynasty has also made an important contribution in mathematics, astrology, in the field of astronomy, metallurgy and technology, the Gupta dynasty is maintaining its own identity. The invention of zero, the value of pi, the use of metal in medicine and surgery are the unforgettable gifts of the Gupta dynasty. The art of making various ornaments from metals and minting coins had developed during this period. The people of this period were well versed in sculpture making art and architecture. The caves of Ajanta and Ellora, Shiva temple of Bhumra, Dashavatar temple of Deogarh, Dhamekh Stupa of Sarnath are some of the best examples. Abstract in Hindi Lanaguage: प्राचीन भारतीय इतिहास में गुप्तकाल को विज्ञान और प्रौद्योगिकी का चरमोत्कर्ष काल माना जाता है । इस काल में विज्ञान के विभिन्न शाखाओ ( भौतिक विज्ञान , रसायन विज्ञान , चिकित्सा व जीव विज्ञान तथा धातु विज्ञान आदि ) में अभूतपूर्व उन्नति हुई जो आधुनिक समाज में भी उपयोगी सिद्ध हो रही है । गणित , ज्योतिष में भी गुप्तकाल का महत्वपूर्ण योगदान रहा है खगोल विज्ञान , धातु विज्ञान व प्रौद्योगिकी के क्षेत्र मे गुप्तकाल अपनी अलग पहचान बनाये हुए है । शून्य का आविष्कार , पाई का मान , चिकित्सा में धातू का प्रयोग तथा शल्य चिकित्सा गुप्तकाल की अविस्मरणीय देन है । धातुओ से विभिन्न आभूषणों का निर्माण व सिक्का ढालने की कला इस काल में विकसित हो चुकि थी । मूर्ति निर्माण कला तथा वास्तुकला में इस काल के लोग पारन्गत थे । अजन्ता व एलोरा की गुफाएं, भूमरा का शिव मन्दिर , देवगढ़ का दशावतार मंदिर , सारनाथ का धमेख स्तूप इसके कुछ उत्कृष्ठ उदाहरण है ।
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Srivastava, Durgesh Kumar. "Architecture during Gupta Period: With Special Reference to Literature and Structural Remains from Archaeological Excavations." Social ION 11, no. 1 (2022): 137–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.5958/2456-7523.2022.00012.x.

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Kuligowski, Waldemar. "„Fuck the context!”. Krytyczny dyskurs regionalny w kontekście badań foresight." Kultura i Społeczeństwo 60, no. 2 (May 23, 2016): 3–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.35757/kis.2016.60.2.1.

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This article is an attempt at a critical and interdisciplinary analysis of the idea of the region. The author reviews and summarizes critical views of the idea in the discourses of architecture (Frampton, Koolhaas, Ibelings), art history (DaCosta, Kauffman, Piotrowski), and social anthropology (Gupta, Ferguson, Malkki, Bhabha). He then focuses on the example of the contemporary discourse on power, in which the concept of ‘region’ still functions in the form of implicit premises about the naturalness of differences and territorial and cultural divisions. The example is analyzed through the findings of the research project ‘Regional Foresight for Wielkopolska’ (2009–2011). The author’s conclusion points to the great dissonance between the discourse of modern humanities and the applied discourse of contemporary policy (including regional policy).
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Komendantskaya, Ekaterina, Dmitry Rozplokhas, and Henning Basold. "The New Normal: We Cannot Eliminate Cuts in Coinductive Calculi, But We Can Explore Them." Theory and Practice of Logic Programming 20, no. 6 (September 22, 2020): 990–1005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1471068420000423.

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AbstractIn sequent calculi, cut elimination is a property that guarantees that any provable formula can be proven analytically. For example, Gentzen’s classical and intuitionistic calculi LK and LJ enjoy cut elimination. The property is less studied in coinductive extensions of sequent calculi. In this paper, we use coinductive Horn clause theories to show that cut is not eliminable in a coinductive extension of LJ, a system we call CLJ. We derive two further practical results from this study. We show that CoLP by Gupta et al. gives rise to cut-free proofs in CLJ with fixpoint terms, and we formulate and implement a novel method of coinductive theory exploration that provides several heuristics for discovery of cut formulae in CLJ.
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Vikas, Kumar. "BANARAS: A PARALLEL SPACE OF THE COSMIC UNIVERSE AND ITS CONTRIBUTION TO ARCHITECTURE." International Journal of Advanced Research 8, no. 10 (October 31, 2020): 936–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.21474/ijar01/11920.

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From its prominent position on the river Ganges , Banaras has borne testimony to a flourishing civilization and the many socio-political turmoil associated with a thriving territory from the ancient kingdoms of Aryans with its mention in Ramayana to the combats of medieval rulers of Mauryan and Gupta dynasty and the never ceasing instability during the dominance of Muslim and British regime.[1] The historical unrest has vanished and the city with its inhabitants of “grin-and-bear-it” attitude endured every phase of this turmoil and adapted to it and commemorated every such change in their stories and culture. Every paradigm shift gave Banaras its own unique Art and Culture which it (Banaras) has assimilated and made it its very own signature be it Food, Fabric, Jewellery, Lifestyle, Mode of communication, Weapons, Architecture, Mythology, Tales, Culture, Cult , Art and much more The citys divine image , its elaborate traditional rituals , its prodigious display of the hand-in-hand existence of art and the mundane activities of life. All give it a peculiar feel, though the city has tried to keep pace with time, it has modernized or commercialised but what has stayed with time is what satiates the quench of a mystic or an explorer of Art and Culture . This write up here is an attempt to bring to words the connection between what the oldest civilizations or cults have left to enrich the Art & culture or other-way-round , how by exploring the existing we are able to get a glimpse into the glorious past that has passed and enriched India .This manuscript is a study and construal of Varanasi from the perspective of one who is close enough to the hindu tradition to see its religious significance and also close enough to art , design and academics to know the understanding that Arts and Varanasi might pose. The journey towards the finalization of this script started with mapping the city and searching for the temples mentioned in various texts and my work is based on two primary sources : the city itself with its multitude of temples , its seasons of pilgrimage , the Akharas , voluminous literature on Banaras and its pandas and lay interpreters.
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Venkateswaran, V. "Linear programming and network modesl, by S. K. Gupta, affiliated East-West Press Pvt. Ltd. New Delhi, 1985, 230 pp." Networks 19, no. 1 (January 1989): 173. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/net.3230190113.

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Willis, Michael D. "Some Notes on the Palaces of the Imperial Gurjara Pratīhāras." Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society 5, no. 3 (November 1995): 351–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1356186300006611.

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The Gurjara Pratīhāras have long been recognised as the leading royal house of northern India during the ninth and tenth centuries. A considerable number of copper plate and stone inscriptions have survived from Pratīhāra times and these have provided the requisite data for a reconstruction of the dynasty's political and social history. Following conventions established in the Gupta period if not before, the copper-plates of the Pratīhāras record grants of villages or land, while stone inscriptions typically recount the building of temples and the provision of gifts to enshrined divinities. A large number of temples from the Pratīhāra age have been preserved; some of these buildings have enjoyed the recent scholarly attention of the team working on the Encyclopaedia of Indian Temple Architecture as well as the Temple Survey of the Archaeological Survey of India. In contrast, palatial architecture is virtually unknown. This is neither surprising nor unusual, there being little left of such buildings in any part of India from before the fourteenth century. This is due to the wide use of perishable building materials, notably wood, brick and stucco. In the case of the Pratīhāra rulers there is also the fact that their capital city of Kannauj (anc. Kānyakubja) has been completely destroyed. That the Pratīhāras were responsible for some building at Kannauj is indicated by the inscription, dated Harṣa year 276 (A.D. 882–3), from the shrine of Garībnāth at Pehowa. This inscription records, among many other things, that a temple of Viṣṇu Garuḍāsana was built by the Brāhmaṇa Bhūvaka on the banks of the river Gaṅgā in Bhojapura near Kānyakubja.
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Tupkari, Jagdish Vishnu, Tabita Joy Chettiakandy, Dimple Padawe, Keshav Kumar, Manisha Sardar, and Nandita Gupta. "Intraoral Soft Tissue Fibrosarcoma: A Case Report and Review." Journal of Contemporary Dentistry 4, no. 2 (2014): 118–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.5005/jp-journals-10031-1080.

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ABSTRACT Adult fibrosarcoma (FS), defined by the World Health Organization as ‘malignant neoplasm composed of fibroblasts with variable collagen production and, in classical cases, a ‘herringbone’ architecture’, is a very rare soft tissue sarcoma. The earlier literature revealed that the adult fibrosarcoma was the most commonly occurring lesion, however the incidence of which has declined dramatically over the past several decades. This is due to evolution in the classification of soft tissue tumors, recognition of its subtypes and increased understanding of the many other mesenchymal and nonmesenchymal tumors. Sarcomas are the rare group of malignancies which accounts for less than 1% of all the body sarcomas of which 5 to 15% occurs in head and neck region. It involves deep soft tissues of extremities, trunk, head and neck. Among the head and neck region, intraoral adult fibrosarcomas are very rare without any sex predilection. A case of primary soft tissue FS in posterior mandible of an 13-year-old female patient is documented here, which will be an addition to the cases reported earlier in the literatures. How to cite this article Tupkari JV, Chettiakandy TJ, Padawe D, kumar k, Sardar M, Gupta N. Intraoral Soft Tissue Fibrosarcoma: A Case Report and Review. J Contemp Dent 2014;4(2):118-123.
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Knepler, James L., Loui N. Taher, Mahesh P. Gupta, Carolyn Patterson, Fred Pavalko, Michael D. Ober, and C. Michael Hart. "Peroxynitrite causes endothelial cell monolayer barrier dysfunction." American Journal of Physiology-Cell Physiology 281, no. 3 (September 1, 2001): C1064—C1075. http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpcell.2001.281.3.c1064.

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Nitric oxide (·NO) attenuates hydrogen peroxide (H2O2)-mediated barrier dysfunction in cultured porcine pulmonary artery endothelial cells (PAEC) (Gupta MP, Ober MD, Patterson C, Al-Hassani M, Natarajan V, and Hart, CM. Am J Physiol Lung Cell Mol Physiol 280: L116–L126, 2001). However, ·NO rapidly combines with superoxide (O[Formula: see text]) to form the powerful oxidant peroxynitrite (ONOO−), which we hypothesized would cause PAEC monolayer barrier dysfunction. To test this hypothesis, we treated PAEC with ONOO− (500 μM) or 3-morpholinosydnonimine hydrochloride (SIN-1; 1–500 μM). SIN-1-mediated ONOO− formation was confirmed by monitoring the oxidation of dihydrorhodamine 123 to rhodamine. Both ONOO− and SIN-1 increased albumin clearance ( P < 0.05) in the absence of cytotoxicity and altered the architecture of the cytoskeletal proteins actin and β-catenin as detected by immunofluorescent confocal imaging. ONOO−-induced barrier dysfunction was partially reversible and was attenuated by cysteine. Both ONOO− and SIN-1 nitrated tyrosine residues, including those on β-catenin and actin, and oxidized proteins in PAEC. The introduction of actin treated with ONOO− into PAEC monolayers via liposomes also resulted in barrier dysfunction. These results indicate that ONOO− directly alters endothelial cytoskeletal proteins, leading to barrier dysfunction.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Gupta Architecture"

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Gupta, Anshu [Verfasser]. "Theory and Measurement Validation of Novel HFSWR Receiver Architecture : Antenna Design, Clutter Suppression and Detection / Anshu Gupta." Hamburg : Helmut-Schmidt-Universität, Bibliothek, 2015. http://d-nb.info/1071845926/34.

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Senate, University of Arizona Faculty. "Faculty Senate Minutes January 22, 2018." University of Arizona Faculty Senate (Tucson, AZ), 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/626508.

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Books on the topic "Gupta Architecture"

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Mishra, Sudhakar Nath. Gupta art and architecture: With special reference to Madhya Pradesh. Delhi: Agam Kala Prakashan, 1992.

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Śrīrāma, Goyala, and Goyal Shankar 1959-, eds. Indian art of the Gupta age: From pre-classical roots to the emergence of medieval trends. Jodhpur: Kusumanjali Book World, 2000.

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Dei, Shashipriya. Development of temple architecture in India: With reference to Orissa in the golden age. Calcutta: Punthi-Pustak, 1998.

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Vats, Madho Sarup. The Gupta temple at Deogarh. New Delhi: Archaeological Survey of India, 1999.

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Vats, Madho Sarup. The Gupta temple at Deogarh. New Delhi: Archaeological Survey of India, 1999.

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Vats, Madho Sarup. The Gupta temple at Deogarh. New Delhi: Archaeological Survey of India, 1999.

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Art and architecture of Post-Gupta period: Central India. Delhi: Bharatiya Kala Prakashan, 2012.

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Mishra, Vineeta. Early architecture of Bihar, from earliest times to the Gupta period. New Delhi: Ramanand Vidya Bhawan, 1992.

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Early classical art of South Asia. Delhi: Bharatiya Kala Prakashan, 2009.

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Dybczyńska-Bułyszko, Anna, 1961- writer of added text, Gorczyca, Łukasz, writer of added text, Stelmach, Bolesław, 1956- writer of added text, and Gutt Romuald 1888-1974, eds. Warszawa Gutta: Romuald Gutt's Warsaw. Warszawa: Fundacja Raster, 2018.

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