Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Ajanta Caves' has mentioned 'Monastery' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Cave 4: a monastery, or vihara, with its square hall surrounded by monks' cells
Cave 12 plan: an early type of vihara (1st century BCE) without internal shrine Cave 1 plan, a monastery known for its paintings[71] Cave 6: a two-storey monastery with "Miracle of Sravasti" and "Temptation of Mara" painted[72] Cave 16: a monastery featuring two side aisles[72]
A terracotta plaque of Mahishasuramardini, also known as Durga, was also found in a burnt-brick vihara monastery facing the caves on the right bank of the river Waghora that has been recently excavated.
This is an incomplete monastery and only the preliminary excavations of pillared veranda exist.
This monastery is the largest among the Ajanta caves and it measures nearly 970 square metres (10,400xc2xa0sqxc2xa0ft) (35m xc3x97 28m).
Cave 5, an unfinished excavation was planned as a monastery (10.32 xc3x97 16.8 m).
Cave 6 is two-storey monastery (16.85 xc3x97 18.07 m).
Cave 7 is also a monastery (15.55 xc3x97 31.25 m) but a single storey.
Cave 8 is another unfinished monastery (15.24 xc3x97 24.64 m).
It may well be the oldest Mahayana monastery excavated in India, according to Spink.
Cave 11 is a monastery (19.87 xc3x97 17.35 m) from the later 5th century.
According to Archaeological Survey of India (ASI), Cave 12 is an early stage Hinayana (Theravada) monastery (14.9 xc3x97 17.82 m) from the 2nd to 1st century BCE.
Cave 13 is another small monastery from the early period, consisting of a hall with seven cells, each also with two stone beds, all carved out of the rock.
Cave 14 is another unfinished monastery (13.43 xc3x97 19.28 m) but carved above Cave 13.
Cave 15 is a more complete monastery (19.62 xc3x97 15.98 m) with evidence that it had paintings.
[182][183] Cave 16 is a Mahayana monastery and has the standard arrangement of a main doorway, two windows, and two aisle doorways.
[184] The veranda of this monastery is 19.5 m xc3x97 3 m, while the main hall is almost a perfect square with 19.5 m side.
The Cave 17 monastery includes a colonnaded porch, a number of pillars each with a distinct style, a peristyle design for the interior hall, a shrine antechamber located deep in the cave, larger windows and doors for more light, along with extensive integrated carvings of Indian gods and goddesses.
[200] The hall of this monastery is a 380.53 square metres (4,096.0xc2xa0sqxc2xa0ft) square, with 20 pillars.
Cave 20 is a monastery hall (16.2 xc3x97 17.91 m) from the 5th century.
It features the second largest monastery hall (29.3 xc3x97 29.3 m) after Cave 4.
The cave 24 monastery has been important to scholarly studies of the site because it shows how multiple crews of workers completed their objectives in parallel.
Cave 25 is a monastery.
Cave 27 is a monastery and it may have been planned as an attachment to Cave 26.
Cave 28 is an unfinished monastery, partially excavated, at the westernmost end of the Ajanta complex and barely accessible.
Cave 29 is an unfinished monastery at the highest level of the Ajanta complex, apparently unnoticed when the initial numbering system was established, and physically located between Caves 20 and 21.
[246][247] Further tracing and excavations led to a previously unknown Hinayana monastery cave dated to the 2nd and 1st century BCE.
The vihara brick monastery facing the caves at Ajanta.
A burnt-brick vihara monastery facing the caves on the right bank of the river Waghora has been recently excavated.
Buddhist vihara cell structure at the recently excavated brick monastery at Ajanta Coin of Western Satrap Visvasena (293xe2x80x93304), found in the excavations at the monastery Coin of Byzantine Theodosius II (402xe2x80x93450), found in the excavations at the monastery Terracotta plaque of Hindu goddess Mahishasuramardini found on the site