In a magnificent position on the slopes of Gunung Lawu, 900m above
the Solo plain, Candi Sukuh is one of Java’s most enigmatic and striking
temples. It’s not a large site, but it has a large, truncated pyramid
of rough-hewn stone, and there are some fascinating reliefs and statues.
It’s clear that a fertility cult was practised here: several explicit
carvings have led it to be dubbed the ‘erotic’ temple. It’s a quiet,
isolated place with a strange, potent atmosphere.
Built in the
15th century during the declining years of the Majapahit kingdom, Candi
Sukuh seems to have nothing whatsoever to do with other Javanese Hindu
and Buddhist temples. The origins of its builders and strange sculptural
style (with crude, squat and distorted figures carved in the wayang
style found in East Java) remain a mystery and it seems to mark a
reappearance of the pre-Hindu animism that existed 1500 years before.
At
the gateway before the temple are a large stone lingam and yoni.
Flowers are still often scattered here, and locals believe these symbols
were used to determine whether a wife had been faithful, or a
wife-to-be was still a virgin. The woman had to wear a sarong and jump
across the lingam – if the sarong fell off, her infidelity was proven.
Other interesting cult objects include a monument depicting Bima, the
Mahabharata warrior hero, with Narada, the messenger of the gods, both
in a stylised womb. Another monument depicts Bima passing through the
womb at his birth. In the top courtyard three enormous flat-backed
turtles stand like sacrificial altars. A 2m lingam once topped the
pyramid, but it was removed by Sir Stamford Raffles in 1815 and now
resides in the National Museum in Jakarta.
If you’re driving here
note that there are almost no signposts to help direct you to the site
and you have to pay a small fee to pass through the kampung of Kemuning.
Virtually
all travellers get here on a tour from Solo or Yogyakarta. Public
transport is very tricky: take a bus bound for Tawangmangu from Solo as
far as Karangpandan (7000Rp), then a Kemuning minibus (3000Rp) to the
turn-off to Candi Sukuh; from here it’s a steep 2km walk uphill to the
site or a 10,000Rp ojek ride. For around 40,000Rp, ojeks will take you
to both Sukuh and Cetho.
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