Taman Ayun Temple
The temple
of Taman Ayun in Bali's Mengwi district, has long been well known as a tourist
attraction and is about either kilometres from Denpasar on the road to Singaraja
via Bedugul.
The temple can be found on the left hand side of the road very close to the
crossroads in Megnwi at which you must turn right if travelling from Denpasar.
There is tample parking.
The temple
was built by I Gusti Agung Anom, a founder of the Mengwi kingdom in 1934, and
were skilfully and renovated in later years, giving its present appearance which
tourists find so attractive and interesting.
The name itself means beautiful garden.
It is built on a high tableland which is surrounded by ponds.
This gives the effect from afar that the temple is floating on water.
The temple
complex has three ground areas which rise in levels.
In the most external one there is a general purpose hall which is used for religious
ceremonies and for staging of dances.
Close by is a decorative fountain.
In the central grounds is a building called the 'bale pelik' with beautiful carvings with interesting reliefs and statues of the nine gods, Dewa Nawa Sanga.
In the innermost
court, there are twenty nine buildings which function as places for the gods
and goddesses.
There are other buildings which house religious regalia used in the ceremonies.
There are
multi-roofed structures, some of them having eleven roofs called 'meru meru'.
The central section is surrounded by a small pond, thus the whole complex is
symbolic of the great Mandhara Mountain turning in a sea of milk.
Many people visit this temple, not for its antiquity as it was only renovated in 1937, but for its ambience and air of serenity.
The temple
has an ideal recreational garden, the air is cool and the still waters provide
a safe environment for all sorts of aquatic creatures which live in the ponds.
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