The history of Hampi’s Virupakshna temple dates back to the 7th century. The Virupaksha-Pampa retreats has been around for a long time. Lord Shiva-related inscriptions date back to the 9th and 10th centuries. The Vijayanagara emperors expanded on what began as a simple edifice with a huge temple complex. The Chalukyan and Hoysala emperors also contributed to the temple’s construction. The paintings on the temple ceilings date from the fourteenth and 16 centuries. At the turn of the century, major rehabilitation and restoration work was conducted, including the repair of the shattered towers of the north and east gopuras.
Apart from the shrine, the Virupaksha temple at Hampi has three ante rooms, a pillared hall, and an open pillared hall. The temple is adorned with delicately carved pillars. The temple complex is surrounded by a pillared cloister, entrance gateways, courtyards, smaller shrines, and other structures. The use of mathematical ideas in the architecture and decorating of the Virupaksha temple in Hampi is one of its most intriguing elements. The construction’s repetitive patterns represent the concept of fractal shapes. The temple has a triangular shape.
According to writings on a stone plaque put next to the pillared hall, Krishnadevaraya, the notable monarch of the Vijayanagara empire, is the principal benefactor to the temple. He was crucial in the construction of the center pillared chamber and the entry point tower, which offers entry to the temple’s inner courtyard. The temple’s halls were utilized for a variety of functions, including viewing programmes of music, dance, theater, and so on.