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Pop:
220,000 Area Code: 04362
Thanjavur
was the capital of the Chola Empire from the 9th to the 13th centuries.
The Chola dynasty controlled a good part of South India and Sri Lanka.
They celebrated many of their victories by constructing temples, financed
by the defeated party. There are over 70 temples in Thanjavur, the most
important being the famous Brihadeeswara Temple, which is the main reason
to come here. Thanjavur is situated halfway between Tiruchirappalli
(60km) and the coast. It is 35km southwest of Kumbakonam and 334km south
of Chennai.
In
Thiruvaiyaru, 14km away, there is a Carnatic classical musical festival
in January, in honor of the Carnatic music saint, Thyagaraja.
Getting Your Bearings
The Grand Anicut Canal divides the city into a northern and southern part.
The old city is between the Grand Anicut Canal in the south and the Vadavar
River in the north. The Brihadeeswara Temple is in the southwest part
of the old city on Hospital Rd, by the canal. The palace is in the center
of the city, about 1km from the canal.
Most
of the hotels, souvenir shops, and the tourist office are on Gandhiji
Road. The railway station is about half a km south of the canal at the
southern end of Gandhiji Road (Railway Station Road). The bus station
is in the south part of the old city, by the canal.
Information
There is a Tamil Nadu Tourist Office (23107) at the Hotel Tamil Nadu on
Gandhiji Rd (daily 9 am to 4 pm). There is also a Tourist Office across
from the GPO. They organize a temple tour of Thanjavur and the area. Open
Mon to Fri 10 am to 5.30 pm.
The
Canara Bank on South Main Rd is a good place to change travelers cheques.
State Bank of India, Hospital Rd. The Hotel Parisutham change money after
banking hours, but at a bad rate.
The post office is on Gandhiji Rd, near the railway station, and is open
daily 10 am to 4 pm and Sun 10 am to noon. The telegraph office next door
is open 24 hours. Postal Code 643001.
Brihadeeswara Temple
This magnificent Siva temple was built in 1003 AD by King Rajaraja I,
the Chola King. It is considered one of the grandest temples in India.
The main shrine is dedicated to Lord Siva. The story of the temple is
that King Rajaraja, being unable to cure his leprosy, was instructed by
his spiritual teacher to bring a Siva-linga from the Narmada River and
construct a temple for it. He went and got a linga from the river and
then the linga started to grow and became huge. King Rajaraja then had
to build a huge temple to put it in.
This
temple is unique because the vimana (the tower over the altar) soars into
the sky, while the gopurams (the towers over the entrance) are small.
The 14-storey tower of the temple is 64 metres (216 ft) high, making it
the tallest temple in South India. There has been continuous worship at
the temple for more than 1,000 years.
The temple is capped by a single 80 ton (73,700 kg) monolithic solid granite
block. This enormous stone is said to have been moved up an incline that
started 6km from the temple. The sikhara, a spherical dome, is octagonal
and rests on top of this granite block. The shadow of the sikhara never
falls on the ground.
The
temple is entered through a 30m high gopuram guarded by two impressive
dwarapalakas (door guards). You then come to a giant Nandi (bull of Lord
Siva), which is carved out of a single stone. It is considered to be the
second largest in India, next to the one at Lepakshi. It is 3.7m high
(13 feet), 6m long (16 feet), 2.5m wide, and weighs about 25 tons. It
is said that it grew in size every day until a nail was driven in its
back to keep it from growing.
In the inner sanctum is the gigantic Maha-linga, 3.5 metres (10½
feet) high and 7½ m (25 ft) in circumference. It is said that when
the linga was taken from the Narmada River, it kept increasing in size;
which is why the linga is known as Brihadeeswara. There are over 250 lingas
in the temple.
There
are fresco paintings on the ceiling and walls of the inner sanctum dated
to the Chola period. These often cannot be viewed, but there are reproductions
of the paintings in the museum.
There is a 16.5m (55ft) high temple dedicated to Lord Subrahmanya that
is considered to have some of the best carvings in South India. Also here
is a shrine dedicated to Ganesh. There are many Vaishnava sculptures on
the gopurams.
There is a deity in this temple of Jwarahareswara who controls fever.
It is believed if a person has a chronic fever, it will subside if they
offer sandalwood paste to this deity. Many people have experienced this.
Beyond
the western wall of the temple is the giant Seppunaikan Tank. The Siva-ganga
Tank is a sacred tank in the temple courtyard, within a 100-pillar mandapa
(hall). There is a nice garden here.
There are three hallways that encircle the temple. The third hallway is
always open. The inner hallways, where the Siva-linga is located is open
from 6 am to 1 pm and 4 to 8 pm.
Unless
you get special permission from the Archaeological Department of Chennai,
you cannot enter the inner sanction. Non-Hindus can go everywhere
in the enclosure except the room where the Siva-linga is located and the
halls that approach it.
On
the south side of the courtyard is the interesting Archaeological Museum,
which has exhibits that give a good history of the temple’s restoration
and the Chola Empire. There is also a good collection of sculptures. The
museum is open daily 9.30 am to 1 pm and 4 to 7 pm. Chola Temples by C
Sivaramamurti is sold here for Rs 10. It includes a good description of
this temple and the ones in Gangaikondacholapuram and Dharasuram.
Thanjavur Palace
This interesting palace was built partly by the Nayaks around 1550 AD
and partly by the Marathas. The Sangitha Mahal (Durbar
Hall or Hall of Music) on the first floor has a fine auditorium with excellent
acoustics. The grand Durbar Hall was used for public
audiences. The walls and ceiling are intricately painted. The former armory
is 57m (190 ft) high and was used as a lookout. From the top of the bell
tower there is a good view of the area (Rs 2).
In
the Royal Museum are portraits and items used by the
royal family such as weapons, costumes and musical instruments. The museum
is open 9 am to 6 pm; admission Rs 2.
The
Palace contains the Saraswati Mahal Library, which dates
back to 1700. The library has over 40,000 volumes in Sanskrit, Tamil,
Marathi, and English. The volumes are mostly paper manuscripts and palm
leaves. It is closed to the public. There is a museum here with books
from the collection on display. There is a palm leaf that has the entire
Ramayana written on it and a beautifully illustrated Mahabharata.
Open
daily except Wed 10 am to 1 pm and 2 to 5 pm.
The
Art Museum has an excellent collection of bronze deities
and statues, and stone sculptures from the Chola period, dating from the
9th to the 12th century. There is also a collection of Tanjore glass paintings.
The museum is in an audience hall with huge pillars. Open daily 9 am to
1 pm and 3 to 6 pm, except government holidays; admission Rs 3.
Next
to the palace is the Tamil University Museum, which has
a stringed musical instrument collection, beautifully carved silver jewelry
boxes, and a good coin collection. There is also a wood and ivory chess
board that can be converted to a pallanguzhi board.
Schwartz Church
Southeast of the palace, just north of the Sivaganga Tank, is the Schwartz
Church. It was built by Raja Serfoji in 1779 in appreciation of his teacher,
the Danish missionary FC Schwartz who died in 1798.
Shopping
R Govindarajan, 32 Kuthiraikatti St, Karantha, has a good selection of
Tanjore paintings, wood carvings, brass items and antiques. They produce
many of the paintings upstairs.
Poompuhar Handicrafts, Gandhiji Rd, near the Hotel Tamil Nadu, is a government
emporium with a good selection of quality items.
Where to Stay—Lower
Most of the hotels are on Gandhiji Rd, between the railway and bus stations,
or on Trichy Rd, behind the railway station.
There are six big clean railway Retiring Rooms at the station. A double
room is Rs 80 and with A/C Rs 160. It is usually full.
Raja Rest House (30515), by the Hotel Tamil Nadu, has rooms with bath
for Rs 80/120. It has a large, peaceful courtyard and is a friendly place.
It is a very good value and is a recommended budget place. Ask to see
a few rooms.
Ashoka Lodge (30021), 93 Abraham Pandithar St, has nicer rooms on the
second floor than the first, but it isn’t such a good place. Ask
to see a few rooms. Rooms are Rs 100/150 with common bath, with bath for
Rs 150/200 and Rs 500 with A/C.
Sri Mahalakshmi is centrally located.
Hotel Anand, 1 Racquet Court Lane, and Hotel Arun, 24 State Bank Road,
are both nice places.
Hotel Karthik (30116), 73 South Rampart St, opposite the bus stand, has
fairly basic rooms (bring you own sheets) with attached baths with squat
toilets for Rs 90/180.
Hotel Yagappa (30421), off Trichy Rd, near the station, has rooms with
bath for Rs 200/250 and Rs 400/450 with A/C.
Tamil Nadu Lodge (31088), off Trichy Rd, near the station, has rooms for
Rs 75/125.
Hotel Valli (31580), 2948 MK Rd, has rooms with bath for Rs 185/225, Rs
300 with TV and Rs 550 with A/C. They have rooms with 3 to 6 beds. It
has a veg restaurant.
Hotel Tamil Nadu II (20365) is run down. Rooms are Rs 175/275.
Where to Stay—Middle & Higher
Hotel Tamil Nadu, (31421; fax 33970), Gandhiji Road, is one of the best
places to stay. It has both Indian style and western style bathrooms with
hot water in the morning. Most rooms have balconies, set around a courtyard
garden. It was once a Maharaja’s guest house and is a good value
with good service. It has comfortable, clean rooms for Rs 350/400, with
TV Rs 500, and Rs 700 with A/C. It is usually over booked. You can book
in advance at a Tamil Nadu Tourist Office or a Tamil Nadu Hotel in another
city.
Hotel Sangam (34151; fax 36695), Trichy Rd, has A/C rooms for $50/75.
It has a pool and a garden.
Oriental Towers (31467; fax 30770), 2889 Srinivasam Pillai Rd, has rooms
for $45/55. It has good facilities, including a pool.
Pandiyar Residency (30574), Cutchery Rd, is a new place. All rooms have
a TV, and the deluxe rooms have a view of the temple.
Hotel Parisutham (31801; fax 30318), 55 Grand Anicut Canal Rd, is the
best hotel in town, and everything looks neat and clean. It has a good
pool and comfortable A/C rooms with a fridge for $70/95. It also has suites.
Where to Eat
Ananda Bhavan serves good, cheap thali meals (Rs 15). It is near the bus
stand on Gandhiji Rd.
Padma Hotel, Ananda Bhavan, Gandhiji Rd, opposite the Hotel Tamil Nadu,
has simple, good vegetarian meals.
The restaurant on the ground floor in the Hotel Karthik is a good popular
place, with reasonably priced veg meals.
The rooftop Golden Restaurant, Hospital Rd, is a good vegetarian place.
Recommended.
Sathars is a good place, which is open late.
Oriental Tower, 2889 Srinivasam Pillai, has a very good restaurant.
Hotel Parisutham has the very good Geetham vegetarian restaurant in it.
The Les Repas serves both Chinese, Continental and South Indian breakfasts
(Rs 75). It has real good sizzlers (Rs 125) and good thali lunches (Rs
75). Open daily 10 am to 2.30 pm and 7 to 11 pm.
Travel
Air The nearest airport is in Tiruchirappalli (Trichy), 60km
away. It is a small airport with flights to Chennai and Madurai.
Train
There are trains to Chennai (9 hr, 3 daily), Chidambaram (3 hr, 4 daily),
Rameswaram, Madurai (6 hr, 2 daily), Villupuram (for Pondicherry) (6 hr,
190km), Tirupati, Kumbakonam (1 hr) and Tiruchirappalli (1½ hr,
several). The railway station is south of the Anicut Canal, about 2½
km from the center of town.
Chennai Cholan Exp #6854 (9.20 am, 9 hr), the Rameswaram Exp #6702 (8.25
pm, 9½ hr); Chidambaram Cholan Exp #6853 (9.20 am, 2½ hr);
Rameswaram Sethu Exp #6713 (10.30 pm, 7½ hr); Tiruchirappalli Cholan
Exp #6853 (5 pm, 2 hr).
Bus
There are two bus stations in the south part of the old town, near the
junction of Hospital Road and Gandhiji Rd—TTC bus stand and the
Municipal (State) bus stand. Regular buses depart from the local Municipal
bus stand to Kumbakonam (1 hr) and there are buses to Tiruchirappalli.
The
long distance TTC Thiruvalluvar (Mofussil) bus stand is 4km south of the
center of town. Rickshaws into town are around Rs 30 and there are frequent
local bus into center city. Frequent buses go to Madurai (8 hr, 9 daily)
and Tiruchirappalli (1½ hr, 10 daily). There are also buses to
Chennai (9 hr, 20 daily), Tirupati, Chidambaram (9 hr), and Pondicherry
(6 hr, 2 daily). There is a computerized booking office (7.30 am to 9.30
pm).
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