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| Main Spiritual Guides Page > Main India Page> Tamil Nadu > Madurai | ||||
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Madurai
Pop:
1,200,000 Area Madurai is the second largest city in Tamil Nadu, next to Chennai. This interesting city has a good atmosphere and is a popular place to visit. It is one of the oldest cities in India, over 2,500 years old. Madurai is situated on the banks of the Vaigai River. The
highly impressive Meenakshi Temple is in the center of the old town
and is the main reason why people come here. An average of 10,000
people visit daily. The foundation of the town and temple were built
by the Pandyan king, Kulasekhara. It is a place of pilgrimage specifically
meant for the devotees of Lord Siva, therefore it is called Saivaksetra,
the place where Lord Siva is worshiped. Sri Chaitanya came here on
his South India tour. Madurai was invaded by the Delhi Sultanate in the 14th century and for a short time became a Sultanate under Malik Kafur. Then it came under the control of the Vijayanagar kingdom in the 15th and 16th centuries. During this time the Meenakshi Temple was greatly expanded and some of the temple towers were built. From 1599, Madurai was ruled by the Nayak dynasty. Tirumala Nayak (1623-59) built the Raja Gopuram and Teppakkulam Tank. In
1736 the East India Company took control of Madurai. They torn down
the city’s walls and filled in its moat. The moat used to be
located where the Veli streets are now and this marks the boundaries
of the old city. Information There is a daily Tour to Rameswaram that departs at 7.30 am and returns around 6 pm. It goes to most of the major places and is a convenient way to visit Rameswaram. You can arrange this tour with local travel agencies. The tour bus picks you up at your hotel. The GPO is at the corner of N Veli St and Scott Rd. The poste restante (No 8) is open 10 am to 5 pm. You can send faxes from here. There are bookshops on West Veli St including Malligai Bookshop, 11 W Veli St. Higginbothams Book Shop (24528), W Veli St, has a decent selection. Hospital:
Government Hospital (532-535), Panagal Rd, across
the Vaigai River. Better is the private Jawahar Hospital (42023)
14 Main Rd, KK Nagar, north bank of the Vaigai River. Internet facilities at Mahizham Internet Browsing Centre, 80-A, 3rd Floor, Nethaji Road (web site: http://www.koolal.com). Foreigners'
Reporting Office (344007), is near the Southern Tower of
the Sri Meenakshi Temple. There are ATM at UTiI Bank, at Madhurai Junction station, Canara Bank, West Perumal Maistry St and HDFC, West Veli St.
Meenakshi Temple The temple has a hall with a thousand pillars (actually 985). There is an interesting art gallery and museum in this hall. The museum can be visited while the temple is closed in the afternoon, between 1 and 4 pm. The temple is open daily 5 am to 12.30 pm and 4 to 9.30 pm. Outside the Meenakshi Amman Shrine there is temple music between 6 and 7.30 pm and 9 and 10 pm. Every night at around 9.30 pm there is a dramatic ceremony during which Lord Siva is carried into the bedroom of Parvati. He is taken back to his temple around 6 am each morning. The
inner sanctums are restricted to Hindus only, but everyone can go
anywhere else on the temple grounds. It is interesting to visit the
temple both during the day and at night, as the dark corridors, with
lamps burning here and there, are very impressive. Meenakshi means “one who has eyes like a fish.” Just as a mother fish has to just glance on her spawn to develop life in them, so in the same way her worshiper’s spiritual life comes alive when goddess Meenakshi glances at them. Temple
Information The main section of the temple is closed between 1 and 4 pm, even for taking pictures. But the halls in the eastern part of the temple, including the 1,000 Pillar Hall and the Ashta Shakti Mandapa, are open during this time. Non-Hindus
are not allowed in the inner sanctum. There is a Jewel House next
to where the vehicles of Meenakshi and Sundareswar are kept. This
impressive collection of jewelry can sometimes be seen for a donation. The eastern gopuram, built in the 13th century by Maravarman Sundara Pandyan, is the oldest tower. The eastern gate, which in most temples is the main gate, is never used. The reason for this is that one of the priests of the temple jumped off this gopuram when the Palace officials levied taxes on the temple servants. After this incident, the tax was immediately stopped. The gate is supposed to be haunted by his ghost. People instead enter to the left of the eastern tower directly in line with the entrance to the Meenakshi Temple. There are beautiful sculptures of Ganesh and Subrahmanya on the sides of this entrance. There is also a scene of Sri Meenakshi’s wedding. This entrance leads to the Ashta Shakti Mandapa (Eight Goddesses Hall), where there is an interesting market. There are sculptured pillars decorated with carvings of the eight Shaktis (goddesses) and Siva’s 64 miracles performed at Madurai. There are also paintings in this hall that depict the birth of Sri Meenakshi. A small hall connects the Ashta Shakti Mandapa to a large hall (43m by 33.5m) called the Meenakshi Naicker Mandapa. In the small hall there are 2.4m (8 ft) tall statues of a hunter and Parvati. The Meenakshi Naicker Mandapa has 110 pillars, each of which is 6.7 m (22 ft) high. On each pillar is a figure of a yali, which is like a combined lion and elephant. There is a 7.5m (25 ft) high Thiruvatchi (frame of lamps) that contains 1,008 lamps. Going straight from the Ashta Shakti Mandapa, you enter the seven-storey Chitrai (artistic) Gopuram, which has 730 sculptures on it. This leads to the Mudali Pillai Mandapa. This hall has scenes from the Puranas on its walls. The Portramaraikulam Tank (Golden Lotus Tank), also called Swarnapushpakarini, is where Tamil literature was presented and then put in the tank. The manuscripts (in the past they were written on leaves) that floated were considered great works of literature, and if they sank, they were dismissed. Pilgrims either bathe, or wash their feet and hands in the tank before entering the inner sanctum. The tank is 50m by 36m (165 by 120 ft). On the west side of the golden tank by the Meenakshi shrine is the Oonjal Mandapa, or Swing Mandapa, which has a swing where the two presiding deities are worshiped every Friday (6 to 7 pm). The six main Subrahmanya temples are painted on the walls of this Mandapa. Next to this is the Kilikootu Mandapa, the hall of parrots. There used to be parrots here that chanted the name of Meenakshi, but now you won't find any parrots. It has beautiful sculptures of the Pandavas, Vali, and Sugreeva (the king of the monkeys). There is a Yali here that has a stone ball that revolves in its mouth. Next to the Kilikootu Mandapa is the main entrance to the Meenakshi shrine, also known as Amman Koyil, or “mother temple.” The roof of the main shrine is covered with gold. Across the corridor and next to the tank is the small Rani Mangammal Mandapa, which has an 18th century painting showing the marriage of Meenakshi and Sundareswar. In the hallway there are also sculptures from the Ramayana and Mahabharata. Walking north from the Meenakshi shrine brings you to the Sundareswara shrine. By the doorway between these two shrines is a huge 2.4m (8 ft) tall monolithic Ganesh, Mukuruni Vinayaka, said to have been found when the Mariamman Teppakkulam tank was excavated. In front of the Sundareswar shrine are carvings of the Navagraha (nine planets). Next to this is the Kambathadi Mandapa, where there are carvings of the ten incarnations of Vishnu and the wedding of Meenakshi. At the entrance of the Sundareswar Temple are 3.6m (12 ft) tall dwarapalakas (door-guards). In the southern part of this temple are shrines dedicated to Saraswati (the Goddess of Learning) and the 63 Nayanmars (important devotees of Siva). In the southwest corner is the utsava-murti (the deity taken out of the temple for processions). In the north section one can see Durga, Siddhi and Lakshmi (goddess of fortune), as well as an ancient Kadamba tree and a well. In the northwest corner is Kasi Visvanath. There is a tunnel in this enclosure which is said to have once been connected to the Thirumalai Nayak Palace. In the next enclosure is a Lord Nataraja shrine, where Lord Siva is dancing with his right foot raised. If after leaving the Sundareswar Temple you go straight (east), you come to the Vira Vasantharayar Mandapa, which has 46 pillars and a large Nandi, the bull carrier of Lord Siva. There is a large arch of lights in this mandapa. The Thousand Pillar Mandapa was built in the 16th century. Each pillar is intricately carved. It is a huge hall, 75m (250 ft) by 72m (240 ft). There is a large deity of Nataraja (dancing Siva) at the far end of the hall. There is an interesting museum and musical pillars in this hall. The musical pillars are just inside the entrance to the right. The museum is open 8 am to 8 pm. When you exit this hall you come to the Thirukkalyana Mandapa. This is where the marriage ceremony of Sri Meenakshi is performed each year in April/May. Between the north gopuram and the Thousand Pillar Hall on North Adi Street there are five musical pillars, each made of 22 rods carved out of a single block of granite. Each of the rods of the pillars produces a different note when struck. Near
the pillars is a mandapa with 16 pillars called Tattu Chutur
Mandapa, built in 1172. Mariamman
Teppakkulam Tank The
audience hall, Swarga Vilasam (Celestial Pavilion),
has a 20m-high dome without a single girder or rafter to support it.
It has excellent stucco work on its domes and arches. There are more
than 200 columns, some over 12m high. Museum
& Government Museum Next to the museum is the Gandhi Memorial Library, which has reference material and books which are about, and by, Mahatma Gandhi. Admission: Daily: 10am-1pm, 2pm-5pm. Camera/Video Rs 10/50. There is a small garden in front of the palace dedicated to Gandhi. It contains a replica of the hut in which Gandhi stayed between 1936 and 1946 and a memorial pillar where the ashes of Mahatma Gandhi were placed. The Government Museum has local archeological exhibits, 19th century weapons, good bronze sculptures, paintings, musical instruments and stamps. Open daily except Fri 9 am to 5 pm; free. To
get here you can take buses #1, #2 or #3 from the State bus stand
to the telecommunications tower. From there it is a half km walk. For
12 days in late January or early February there is the Teppam
(Float) Festival, during which Sri Meenakshi and
Lord Sundareswar ride on decorated boats (Floats) around the Mariamman
Teppakkulam Tank. It is a very popular festival. During the Avanimoola
Festival (Aug/Sept), temple carts are pulled around the streets of
the city.
Alagar Koil (Azhagarkovil) Temple Koorattalwar,
the chief disciple of Ramanuja, got back his eyesight by worshipping
the deity here. There are temples on the hill dedicated to Siva, Bhairava, Subrahmanya, and Vinayaka (Ganesh). This place is one of the places dear to Subrahmanya. Non-Hindus
are not allowed in the temple, but converted Hindus may be allowed
to enter the temple. You take bus #44 from the State bus stand on
West Veli St to get here. Thirupparankunram
is 8km southeast of Madurai, on the main railway line. From Madurai,
buses #4A, #5 and #32 from the State (PRC) bus stand come here. This
is the birthplace of Tirukkottiyur Nambi (Goshtipurna), one of Ramanuja’s
five gurus. He initiated Ramanuja into the secret of the sacred mantra.
It is said that Ramanuja received the secret mantra from Tirukkottiyur
Nambi after 18 visits. Sri Ramanuja then publicly explained the inner
meaning of the mantra from the temple tower to all the Vaishnavas
who had assembled there. Parameswari Stores, 21 E Chitrai St, outside the southern gopuram of the Meenakshi Temple, has good silk-cotton mixture products. Madurai Gallery (34064), at Cottage Expo Crafts, 19 N Chitrai St, has handicraft products and good jewelry. Handloom Society Hall, 24 W Chitrai St, has high quality handmade cottons. Khadi Emporium, Town Hall Rd, has good wooden carvings and gift items. Cooptex Sales Emporium, W Chitrai St, has saris and good fabrics. If you know of information that is not listed here, or if you would like to help update our listings, please e-mail us at:
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