thumb|Negeshvara (near) and Chennakeshava (far), Hoysala dynasty, 11th century. thumb| Ornate ceiling in Chennakesava temple, 11th century. thumb|Keshava temple, 11th century thumb|Kedareshvara temple, Hoysala dynasty, 11th century. thumb|Chennakeshava temple, 11th century.
thumb|Negeshvara (near) and Chennakeshava (far), Hoysala dynasty, 11th century. thumb| Ornate ceiling in Chennakesava temple, 11th century. thumb|Keshava temple, 11th century thumb|Kedareshvara temple, Hoysala dynasty, 11th century. thumb|Chennakeshava temple, 11th century.
Vesara is a hybrid form of Indian temple architecture that combines Dravidian Southern Indian site layouts with shape details characteristic of the Nagara style of North India. This fusion style likely originated in the historic architecture schools of the Dharwad region. It is common in the surviving temples of the later Chalukyas and Hoysalas in the Deccan region, particularly Karnataka. According to Indian texts, Vesara Style was popular in central India, particularly in between the Vindhya Range and the Krishna River. It is one of six major types of Indian temple architecture found in historic texts, the others being Nagara, Dravida, Bhumija, Kalinga, and Varata.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).