Hoysala-Jain — Karnataka architectural tradition
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Karnataka

Hoysala-Jain

Star-shaped temple geometry meets Jain spatial philosophy

ManasaraKashyapa Shilpa Shastra

About Hoysala-Jain

The Hoysala-Jain tradition of Karnataka fuses the star-shaped temple geometry of the Hoysala dynasty with Jain metaphysical principles of spatial purity. Derived from Manasara and the Kashyapa Shilpa Shastra, it goes beyond physical placement to associate each directional zone with a dharmic quality — compassion, renunciation, knowledge — that shapes how the occupant interacts with the space. Star-shaped floor plans maintain an open Brahmasthan at the geometric centre while creating intricate subsidiary zones. Some Jain temples under this school face South (Dakshina-mukhi), a practice considered inauspicious in most other traditions. Ideal for families with Kannada or Jain heritage and architecture students drawn to Hoysala temple geometry.

At a Glance

Region
Karnataka
Key Texts
Manasara, Kashyapa Shilpa Shastra
Patterns
1,333 patterns covered
Era
Classical to present

What Makes It Unique

1

Star-shaped plans maintaining open Brahmasthan

2

Dharmic associations for directions (not just physical)

3

Some Jain temples face South (Dakshina-mukhi acceptable)

Terminology in Hoysala-Jain

Each tradition uses its own regional terminology. Here are some key terms from Hoysala-Jain:

ವಾಸ್ತು ಪುರುಷ ಮಂಡಲ ಪದವಿನ್ಯಾಸ — ನಕ್ಷತ್ರೆ ಮಂಡಲ (Vastu Purusha Mandala , Padavinyasa , Nakshatre Mandala star mandala, Hoysala)Deity: Brahma
ಅಡುಗೆ ಮನೆ ಅಗ್ನಿ ಮೂಲೆ ಒಲಿಗೆ (Adige Mane , Agni Moole , Olige oven)Deity: Agni
ಯಜಮಾನ ಕೊಣೆ ನೈಋತ್ಯ ಮೂಲೆ ಮಲ ಕೊಣೆ (Yajamana Kone master's room, Nairutya Moole SW corner, Mala Kone sleeping room)Deity: Nairuti
ದೇವರ ಮನೆ ಈಶಾನ್ಯ ಜಿನಾಲಯ (Devara Mane God's room, Ishanya NE, Jinalaya Jain: Tirthankara shrine)Deity: Ishana
ಮುಖ್ಯ ಬಾಗಿಲು ಹೊರಗೆ ಹೊಸಲಿಗೆ — ದ್ವಾರ (Mukhya Bagilu main door, Horage entrance, Hosalige threshold, Dvara gateway)Deity: Brahma

Who Is This For?

Families with Kannada or Jain heritage

Anyone building in Karnataka

Architecture students of Hoysala temple geometry

9 Free Patterns

Explore these patterns completely free — all traditions visible, full remedies, full classical sources.

RP-001🔓 Free
★★★

The Vastu Purusha Mandala

Hoysala-Jain: ವಾಸ್ತು ಪುರುಷ ಮಂಡಲ ಪದವಿನ್ಯಾಸ — ನಕ್ಷತ್ರೆ ಮಂಡಲ (Vastu Purusha Mandala , Padavinyasa , Nakshatre Mandala star mandala, Hoysala) — Karnataka blends Agama and Jain influences on the Mandala. Hoysala temples use star-shaped plans that still respect the underlying Mandala grid — the stellate form is a decorative overlay, not a violation. Jain tradition interprets the Mandala as representing Samavasarana (the cosmic assembly hall of the Tirthankara).

All·All
RP-003🔓 Free
★★★

The Kitchen and the Fire Corner

Hoysala-Jain: ಅಡುಗೆ ಮನೆ ಅಗ್ನಿ ಮೂಲೆ ಒಲಿಗೆ (Adige Mane , Agni Moole , Olige oven) — Adige Mane in Agni Moole. Karnataka practice blends Agama and Jain influences. In Jain households, the kitchen has elevated sanctity — approaching pooja-room-level purity requirements. Hoysala-era domestic architecture in Belur, Halebidu, and Shravanabelagola demonstrates this directional principle in both Hindu and Jain residential contexts, reflecting the dual-tradition architectural legacy of Karnataka.

SE·Fire
RP-004🔓 Free
★★★

The Master Bedroom and Earth

Hoysala-Jain: ಯಜಮಾನ ಕೊಣೆ ನೈಋತ್ಯ ಮೂಲೆ ಮಲ ಕೊಣೆ (Yajamana Kone master's room, Nairutya Moole SW corner, Mala Kone sleeping room) — Master bedroom in Nairutya Moole (SW corner). Hoysala architects made the SW foundation stones the largest — literally the heaviest corner of the building. Jain Vastu uniquely associates SW with Dharma and moral stability — not just physical heaviness but ethical grounding.

SW·Earth
RP-005🔓 Free
★★★

The Pooja Room and the Divine Corner

Hoysala-Jain: ದೇವರ ಮನೆ ಈಶಾನ್ಯ ಜಿನಾಲಯ (Devara Mane God's room, Ishanya NE, Jinalaya Jain: Tirthankara shrine) — Ishanya is the purest zone. In Jain tradition, the Jinalaya (Tirthankara shrine) is placed in the NE when possible. Hoysala temples oriented the deity sanctum to receive NE morning light — domestic architecture follows the same principle for pooja rooms. The pooja room must be maximally separated from bathroom/toilet.

NE·Water
RP-006🔓 Free
★★★

The Main Entrance and Prana

Hoysala-Jain: ಮುಖ್ಯ ಬಾಗಿಲು ಹೊರಗೆ ಹೊಸಲಿಗೆ — ದ್ವಾರ (Mukhya Bagilu main door, Horage entrance, Hosalige threshold, Dvara gateway) — East-facing entrances follow Hoysala temple tradition. Jain homes may have the Derasar entrance as a separate sacred door in the NE. The main entrance Pada position is verified against Kashyapa Shilpa principles. Doorway height should be proportional to the building's total height.

N/E/NE·Varies
RP-012🔓 Free
★★★

The Bathroom and Waste

Hoysala-Jain: ಬಚ್ಚಲ ಮನೆ ಶೌಚಾಲಯ ವಾಯವ್ಯ ಮೂಲೆ (Bachchal Mane bathroom, Shouchalaya toilet, Vayavya Moole NW corner) — Bathroom in the NW (Vayavya Moole) or West (Paschima). Jain Vastu is exceptionally strict about separating the toilet from the kitchen and pooja room — specific minimum distances are prescribed. The toilet must be as far from the NE Jinalaya (shrine) as architecturally possible. Jain purity (Shuddhi) standards extend to the placement of all waste-generating spaces.

W/NW·Mixed
ED-001🔓 Free
★★★

The Main Door Direction

Hoysala-Jain: ಮುಖ್ಯ ಬಾಗಿಲು (Mukhya Bāgilu) — Mukhya Baagilu should face Uttara (North) or Purva (East). Hoysala temple entrances faced East by canonical requirement. In Jain households, the entrance direction carries additional dharmic significance — the door represents the threshold between samsara (worldly life) and the path to moksha.

N/E/NE·Air
SE-001🔓 Free
★★★

Exposed Beam Over Bed

Hoysala-Jain: Uttira (ಉತ್ತಿರ — beam), Stambha (ಸ್ತಂಭ — column/pillar), Malguvike Kone (ಮಲಗುವಿಕೆ ಕೊಠಡಿ — bedroom) — Malguvike Kone (bedroom) must have an unobstructed ceiling. Hoysala temple architecture demonstrates precise beam-to-column proportion rules (Stambha-Uttira Parimana) that were applied to domestic construction. Jain Vastu specifies that beams (Uttira) should span from wall to wall at room edges, never crossing over the central floor area where sleeping or sitting occurs.

All·Earth
WF-005🔓 Free
★★★

Kitchen Sink and Stove Relationship

Hoysala-Jain: Olige (ಒಲಿಗೆ — stove), Neeru Paatre (ನೀರು ಪಾತ್ರೆ — water vessel), Agni Moole (ಅಗ್ನಿ ಮೂಲೆ), Adige Mane (ಅಡುಗೆ ಮನೆ — kitchen) — Olige (stove) in Agni Moole, Neeru Paatre (water vessel/sink) in Ishanya Moole — diagonal separation in the Adige Mane (kitchen). In Jain households, the fire-water separation carries additional sanctity — fire and water are both sacred elements that must not contaminate each other. The kitchen approaches pooja-room-level purity.

SE/NE·Water/Fire
FR-002🔓 Free
★★★

Headboard Direction — South or East

Hoysala-Jain: undefined (Dakṣiṇa Śiras, Pūrva Śiras, Uttara Śiras) — Karnataka follows the South-head standard. Jain households add the consideration that the head should never point toward a kitchen or toilet — directional purity combines with functional purity. Hoysala-era bedroom chambers show consistent South-oriented bed alcoves. Jain monks sleeping in Basadis (monasteries) maintain strict East-head orientation for spiritual advancement.

S/E·Magnetic
PL-001🔓 Free
★★★

The Square Plot Ideal

Hoysala-Jain: Chatursra Nele (ಚತುಸ್ರ ನೆಲೆ — square ground), Mandala Nele (ಮಂಡಲ ನೆಲೆ — mandala ground) — Chatursra Nele is the ideal in both Hoysala and Jain traditions. Hoysala star-temples are inscribed within squares — the stellate form is a decorative elaboration on an underlying square geometry. Domestic plots follow the same principle: the outer boundary must be square, even if the building within has ornamental projections.

All·Earth

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