Aspects of this topic are discussed in the following places at Britannica.
The typical Hindu temple in northern India, on plan, consists of a small square-shaped sanctuary (called the garbhagṛha, or “womb-room”) housing the main image, preceded by one or more adjoining pillared maṇḍapas (porches or halls), which are connected to the sanctum by an open or closed vestibule (antarāla). The entrance doorway of...
...the sacrificer—participates in the process of reintegration and experiences his spiritual rebirth in the small cella, aptly called the “womb room” (garbhagriha), by meditating on the God’s presence, symbolized or actualized in his consecrated image. The cella is in the centre of the temple above the navel—i.e., the foundation...
...temple. The earliest remains of a Hindu temple, discovered at Sanchi, date to the Gupta period. These extremely simple structures consisted of a shrine room, called a garbhagrha (“womb house,” or sanctum sanctorum), which contained an image of the deity and opened onto a porch. Over the centuries, additional structures were added until the...
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