Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Marundeeswarar Temple

Coordinates:12°59′08″N80°15′41″E / 12.98556°N 80.26139°E /12.98556; 80.26139
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hindu temple in Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India

Marundeeswarar Temple
Marundeeswarar Temple and Tank in the morning sunlight
Religion
AffiliationHinduism
DeityMarundeeswarar (Shiva)
FestivalsPanguni Brahmmotsavam in March- April, Shivrathri in February–March[1]
Location
LocationTiruvanmiyur,Chennai
StateTamil Nadu
CountryIndia
Marundeeswarar Temple is located in Tamil Nadu
Marundeeswarar Temple
Location in Tamil Nadu
Coordinates12°59′08″N80°15′41″E / 12.98556°N 80.26139°E /12.98556; 80.26139
Architecture
TypeTamil architecture
CreatorCholas

Marundeeswarar Temple is a temple dedicated to Hindu deityShiva, located inThiruvanmiyur,Chennai adjacent to the beach ofBay of Bengal. It is one of the 275Paadal Petra Sthalams where two of the most reveredNayanars (Saivite Saints),Appar andTirugnana Sambandar, have glorified the temple with their verses during the 7th century CE. The temple has been widely expanded byChola kings during the 11th century CE.[2] The temple has two seven-tiered gateway towers, a huge tank, with the overall temple area covering 1 acre. The Marundeeswarar temple has been a place of curative worship for people with diseases.

The temple has six daily rituals at various times from5:30 a.m. to 10 p.m., and twelve yearly festivals on its calendar. The present masonry structure was built during theChola dynasty in the 9th century, while later expansions are attributed to Vijayanagar rulers. The temple is maintained and administered by theHindu Religious and Charitable Endowments Department of theGovernment of Tamil Nadu. The latest consecration of the temple after renovation was performed during February 2020. The previous one was in May 2008.

Legend

[edit]
Marundeeswarar shrine

Marundeeswarar is known so because he imparted sageAgastya on curative properties of various herbs and plants.[2] Since then the Marundeeswarar temple has been a place of worship for people with diseases and various problems with their health.[3] It is said that sageValmiki, who wroteRamayana, worshiped Shiva in the temple.[4] Since Valmiki was blessed here, the place was to be known as Thiruvalmikiyur, which is pronounced as 'Thiruvanmikiyur' in Tamil, the name gradually changed to Thiruvanmiyur.[5] There is a place present in Thiruvanmiyur called Valmiki Nagar in his honour. There is also a shrine for the sage on the Western side of the temple on what is presently called the East Coast Road (ECR).[5] Thelingam for whichHanuman performedpooja, the lingam (Meenakshi Sundareswarar) that cured the curse ofIndra, the Lingam for which SaintBharadwaja performed pooja are present here.Markandeyar performed a penance and prayed to Shiva here,Brahma conducted a festival here for Shiva. The presiding deity is also called Palvannanathar asKamadhenu, the sacred cow, is said to have performed oblation on the Sivalingam with her milk. As per another legend, Sun and Moon perform their worship practices daily during sunset on account of which the main shrine is believed to be facing west.[6]

History

[edit]
The temple's rajagopuram (main tower)
Dwajasthambham (sacred mast) near the western entrance of the temple

The road starting from Marundeeswarar temple, now calledECR was an important route during theChola period and was known as Vadagaperuvazhi, connecting the kingdom to places inThanjavur andAndhra Pradesh.[7] Inscriptions can be found in the shrine of Tripurasundari Amman dating back to the 11th century during the period ofRajendra Chola.[4][7] The origins and antiquity of this temple is corroborated by the inscriptions found in other temples in the city namely Kapaleeswarar Temple, Virupaksheeswarar Temple andThiruvidandai which bear testimony to Tiruvanmiyur's existence. A new life has been put into this ancient worshipping place, first in the year 1903 and then in the 1970s. This temple along with theKapaleeswarar Temple and theThiruvottiyur Thyagarajaswamy Temple form the famous Trinity Sea Shore temples of Thondai Mandalam.[6]

Architecture

[edit]
Temple tower
Shrine of presiding deity

The temple is believed to have partial feature ofPallava dynasty and partially withChola art. The temple has two entrances, one from East Coast Road and the other from West Tank Street both adorned by 5-tieredgopuram (gateway tower).[3] The Entrance from the West Tank Street has got three gates whereas the entrance from the East Coast Road has only one gate. The temple occupies an area of about 1 acre – numerous images adorn the pillars of the temple, while stucco figures adorn thegopurams.[3] Themandapam (hall) housing the Somaskanda form of Shiva has 36 massive pillars adorned with carvings.[3] Devasriyan mantapam inside the temple conducts Shaiva Sidhantha lectures every day between 7 pm and 8.30 pm.

The temple has smaller shrines forGanesha,Murugan, there is a shine for 3 Ganeshas who control all three time periods, adjacent to this a vedagama padasalai is situated. The shiva linga is a swayambu (or a natural formation and not built like Kapaleeshwara temple at Mylapore). Hence pure cows milk alone is used for abhishekam. A Thirumurai mandapam has been set up in whichTirumurai are sung daily for the past 11 years. The shrine of Shiva, which has the idols of Shiva in his three forms, Tyagaraja, Marundeeswarar, andNataraja. The last shrine is for Marundeeswarar's consort, GoddessTripura Sundari, who is actually GoddessParvati. Thesamadhi ofPamban Swamigal is also found near the shrine.[5]

Literary mention

[edit]

The temple is reverred in the verses ofTevaram, the 7th century saivite canonical work by the two saint poets namely,Appar andSambandar.[8]

கரையு லாங்கட லிற்பொலி சங்கம்வெள் ளிப்பிவன்
றிரையு லாங்கழி மீனுக ளுந்திரு வான்மியூர்
உரையு லாம்பொரு ளாயுல காளுடை யீர்சொலீர்
வரையு லாமட மாதுட னாகிய மாண்பதே."

Translation:

Tiruvāṉmiyūr where the fish leap in the back water where the strong waves move about, taking from the sea which moves towards the shore the shining conches, and white oysters. Lord who rules over the world, being the meaning of the words please tell me about the dignity of having a beautiful lady who wanders in the mountain.[9]

Another verse explains the devotion towards the goddess of the temple as

விரையார் கொன்றையினாய் விடமுண்ட மிடற்றினனே
உரையார் பல்புகழா யுமைநங்கையொர் பங்குடையாய்
திரையார் தெண்கடல்சூழ் திருவான்மி யூருறையும்
அரையா வுன்னையல்லா லடையாதென தாதரவே.

Translation:

Sivaṉ who wears koṉṟai flowers abundant in fragrance!
who has neck which consumed the poison!
who has many forms of fame which are spoken by devotees!
who has Umai;
a lady of distinction, as a half!
the King who dwells in tiruvāṉmiyūr, surrounded by the clear sea full of waves.
my love will not reach other gods except you.[10]

Arunagirinathar has visited this temple and has sung praises of Subramanya here.

In News

[edit]

The builders of theECR (East Coast Road) had even considered demolition of the temple of Sage Valmiki lying opposite to the Marundeeswarar temple in order to complete the project (of building the ECR). The high court of Tamil Nadu then directed that the temple be in its place and not to disturb it.

TheKumbhabhishekham (coronation after renovation) of the temple was performed on 23 May 2008.[8] The construction of theRajagopuram on the eastern side of temple started 45 years ago, but was completed only before the function following the Government issued orders for completing it at a cost of Rs 45 lakh.[8] Rs 1 crore was spent for improving infrastructure at the temple, which included construction of additional compound wall, Annadanakudam, office complex and amenities for devotees.[8]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^"Festivals of the temple". Marundeeswarar Temple administration. 2014. Retrieved6 January 2016.
  2. ^abHodgetts 2008, p.55
  3. ^abcd"Tamil Nadu Tourism Newsletter March 2009"(PDF). Tamil Nadu Tourism. March 2009. p. 2. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 15 May 2012. Retrieved18 June 2012.
  4. ^abKamath 2002, pp.40-41
  5. ^abcV. 2006, p. 14
  6. ^abAnantharaman, Ambujam (2006).Temples of South India. East West Books (Madras). p. 24.ISBN 978-81-88661-42-8.
  7. ^ab"10 years of East Coast Road: Monumental neglect".The Hindu. 10 March 2012. Retrieved18 June 2012.
  8. ^abcd"'Kumbabhishekam' in progress at Sri Marundheeswarar Temple at Thiruvanmiyur on Friday".The Hindu. 24 May 2008. Archived fromthe original on 26 May 2008. Retrieved18 June 2012.
  9. ^"Second Thirumurai". thevaaram.org. Retrieved18 June 2012.
  10. ^"Third Thirumurai". thevaaram.org. Retrieved18 June 2012.

References

[edit]

External links

[edit]

Gallery

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toMarundeeswarar Temple.
  • Temple tank near East gopura
    Temple tank near East gopura
  • West gopura
    West gopura
  • Shrine of goddess
    Shrine of goddess
  • Flagpost near West entrance
    Flagpost near West entrance
  • Front mandapa
    Front mandapa
  • Vimana of presiding deity
    Vimana of presiding deity
Early history (pre-1500)
Colonial period (1500–1947)
Modern period (1947–present)
Regions
Waterways
Lakes
Islands
Zoological parks
Reserve Forests
Marshlands
Heritage
monuments
Statues
Memorials
Districts
Taluks
Chennai District
Tiruvallur district
Kanchipuram district
Vellore District
Constituencies
Parliamentary
Assembly
Nodal agencies
Business
districts
SEZ
Companies and
institutions
Industry
General
Beaches
Parks
Cinemas
Periodic events
Theme parks
Shopping malls
Clubs
Temples
Churches
Others
Air
Sea
Rail
Railways
Stations
Road
Roads and
expressways
Grade separators
and flyovers
Others
Venues
Teams
Badminton
Cricket
Field hockey
Football
Kabaddi
Tennis
Table tennis
Volleyball
Others
Institutions
Education
Universities
Engineering
Medical
Arts and
science
Research
Hospitals
Hotels
Localities
North
West
Central
South
Hindu temples
Churches
Mosques
Jain temples
Buddhist temples
Gurudwaras
Parsi temples
Synagogues
Authority control databasesEdit this at Wikidata
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Marundeeswarar_Temple&oldid=1256986126"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp