North Gopuram, entrance to Durgai Amman Temple
Durgai Amman Temple (left) in Thenupuriswarar Temple

Durgai Amman Temple is a Hindu temple dedicated to the goddess Durga located in Thenupuriswarar Temple, Patteeswaram near Kumbakonam, Tamil Nadu, India.

Location

Daughter of Kamadhenu, Patti worshipped the Lord Shiva (Eeswaran) here, so this place got that name Patteeswaram. Though the main god is Siva this temple is known as Durgai Amman Temple.[1] This temple is located at Thenupuriswarar Temple, as a separate shrine. By passing through the Gopuram of the north entrance of Thenupurisvara Temple, Durgai Amman Temple could be reached.

History

Meenakshi was the Ista devata to Pandya dynasty while Durga to Chola dynasty. Mangayarkkarasiyar and Kundavai Pirāttiyār was very fond of her and worshipped her.[2] Goddess Durga was the family deity of Rajaraja I and other Chola kings and they used to worship her and pray fervently to her before fighting a war. She was kept north of Patteeswaram during the Chola reign and was their ‘Kaaval Deivam’, the protecting deities. The kings used to go by her divine decree regarding battle and other state affairs, and respected her arul vaakku, blessings. After the fall of the Cholas, she was consecrated in Thenupurisvara Temple in Patteeswaram.[3]

Speciality

Durga is considered to be the combined force of all Gods to destroy the evil forces. She is considered as Shanta Swarupi (calm or peaceful countenance). She has eight hands on which she is holding conch, discus, bow, arrow, sword, shield, and a parrot. She is in tribanga posture.[1][2] The poses of her eight hands express the following.[2]

Sl NoPostureMeaning
1AbhayamudraAssuring safety to devotee
2ShankhaShow the way
3Sudarshana Chakra (discus)Destroy the enemy
4ArrowGoal the right direction
5ShieldThe shield will protect
6ParrotThe hand holding parrot will tell what would happen

Posture

She is in standing posture. She is found draped in traditional Madisar saree, with lemon and arali garland.[3] She is of six feet height. The standing lion is facing right. She is found with smiling face, as if welcoming the devotees.[4]

Festivals

The temple is full to overcrowding during Rahukalam on Tuesdays, Fridays and Sundays, especially on Aadi Ashadha month. Muthupandhal is the biggest festival of this temple.

Golden chariot

Arrangements are made for making golden chariot in this temple at a cost of 2.00 crores[5]

Kumbhabhishekham

The Kumbhabhishekham of this temple and Thenupuriswarar Temple was held on 29 January 2016.[6][7]

Temple on Kumbhabhishekham day

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.