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The earliest surviving Hindu temples in Java are at the [[Dieng Plateau]] and are the island's earliest known standing stone buildings. The structures were built to honour the god-ancestors, Di Hyang, rather than for the convenience of people.<ref>Schoppert (1997), p. 32</ref> Thought to have originally numbered as many as 400, only 8 remain today. The Dieng structures were small and relatively plain, but architecture developed substantially and just 100 years later the second [[Kingdom of Mataram]] built the [[Prambanan]] complex near [[Yogyakarta]]; considered the largest and finest example of Hindu architecture in Java. The [[World Heritage]]-listed Buddhist monument [[Borobudur]] was built by the [[Sailendra]] Dynasty between 750 and 850 AD, but it was abandoned shortly after its completion as a result of the decline of Buddhism and a shift of power to eastern Java. The monument contains a vast number of intricate carvings that tell a story as one moves through to the upper levels, metaphorically reaching [[Four stages of enlightenment|enlightenment]]. With the decline of the [[Mataram Kingdom]], eastern Java became the focus of religious architecture with an exuberant style reflecting [[Shaivism|Shaivist]], Buddhist and Javanese influences; a fusion that was characteristic of religion throughout Java.
The Javanese temple plan and layout was changed from the centralistic, concentric and formal layout of central Javanese period (8th—10th century) to linear, often
==As historical sources==
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