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Nataraja Temple, Chidambaram

Thillai Nataraja Temple, also referred as the Chidambaram Nataraja Temple, is a Hindu temple dedicated to Nataraja, the form of Shiva as the lord of dance. This temple is located in Chidambaram, Tamil Nadu, India. This temple has ancient roots and a Shiva shrine existed at the site when the town was known as Thillai.[4][5] Chidambaram, the name of the city literally means "stage of consciousness". The temple architecture symbolizes the connection between the arts and spirituality, creative activity and the divine.[6][7][8] The temple wall carvings display all the 108 karanas from the Natya Shastra by Bharata Muni, and these postures form a foundation of Bharatanatyam, an Indian classical dance.[4][6]

Thillai Nataraja Temple
Chidambaram Nataraja Temple
A view of north-side gopuram and pond of the temple
Religion
AffiliationHinduism
DistrictCuddalore District
DeityNataraja (Shiva)
Location
LocationChidambaram
StateTamil Nadu
CountryIndia
Geographic coordinates11°23′58″N 79°41′36″E / 11.39944°N 79.69333°E / 11.39944; 79.69333Coordinates: 11°23′58″N 79°41′36″E / 11.39944°N 79.69333°E / 11.39944; 79.69333
Architecture
TypeDravidian architecture
CreatorCholas, Pandyas
InscriptionsTamil [2][3]
The main gopuram of Chidambaram Natarajar temple

The present temple was built in the 10th century when Chidambaram was the capital of the Chola dynasty, making it one of the oldest surviving active temple complexes in South India. After its 10th-century consecration by the Cholas who considered Nataraja as their family deity,[9] the temple has been damaged, repaired, renovated and expanded through the 2nd millennium. Most of the temple's surviving plan, architecture and structure is from the late 12th and early 13th centuries, with later additions in similar style.[10] While Shiva as Nataraja is the primary deity of the temple, it reverentially presents major themes from Shaktism, Vaishnavism, and other traditions of Hinduism. The Chidambaram temple complex, for example, has the earliest known Amman or Devi temple in South India, a pre-13th-century Surya shrine with chariot, shrines for Ganesha, Murugan and Vishnu, one of the earliest known Shiva Ganga sacred pool, large mandapas for the convenience of pilgrims (choultry, ambalam or sabha) and other monuments.[11][12] Shiva himself is presented as the Nataraja performing the Ananda Tandava ("Dance of Delight") in the golden hall of the shrine Pon Ambalam.[13]

The temple is one of the five elemental lingas in the Shaivism pilgrimage tradition, and considered the subtlest of all Shiva temples (Kovil) in Hinduism.[6] It is also a site for performance arts, including the annual Natyanjali dance festival on Maha Shivaratri.[14]

Legend

Chidambaram is one of the many temple towns in the state which is named after the groves, clusters or forests dominated by a particular variety of a tree or shrub and the same variety of tree or shrub sheltering the presiding deity.[15] The town used to be called Thillai, following Thillaivanam, derived from the mangrove of Tillai trees (Excoecaria agallocha) that grow here and the nearby Pichavaram wetlands.[16][17]

The site became the capital of Cholas in the 10th century, and they renamed it to Chidambaram and built the current temple for their family deity of Nataraja Shiva. The word Chidambaram comes from the Tamil word Chitrambalam (also spelled Chithambalam) meaning "wisdom atmosphere". The roots are citt or chitthu means "consciousness or wisdom", while and ampalam means "atmosphere".[8][18] This composite word comes from its association with Shiva Nataraja, the cosmic dancer and the cultural atmosphere for arts.[8] The word Chidambaram is translated by James Lochtefeld as "clothed in thought".[6][19]

The town and temple name appears in medieval Hindu texts by various additional names such as Kovil (lit. "the temple"), Pundarikapuram, Vyagrapuram, Sirrampuram, Puliyur and Chitrakuta.[20] Additional names for Chidambaram in Pallava era and North Indian texts include Kanagasabainathar, Ponnambalam, Brahmastpuri and Brahmapuri.[21]

Location

The Nataraja temple in Chidambaram is located in the southeastern Indian state of Tamil Nadu. It is about 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) north of the Kollidam River (Kaveri), 15 kilometres (9.3 mi) west from the coast of Bay of Bengal, and 220 kilometres (140 mi) south of Chennai. The closest major airport is about 60 kilometres (37 mi) north in Pondicherry (IATA: PNY). The National Highway 32 (old numbering: NH-45A) passes through Chidambaram. The Tamil Nadu State Transport Corporation and private companies operate services connecting it to major cities in the state.[22] The site is linked to the Indian Railways with daily express trains to South Indian cities.[23]

Chidambaram is a temple town, with the Nataraja complex spread over 40 acres (0.16 km2) within a nearly square courtyard in the center. Its side roads are aligned to the east–west, north–south axis. It has double walls around its periphery with gardens. It has had entrance gateways on all four sides.[24]

History

 
Nataraja – Shiva as the cosmic dancer (centre - sculpture from the temple), inspired the 10th-century Chola kings to rebuild the Chidambaram temple with stone and gold. A silver Nataraja, not Shivalinga, is the principal icon in this temple.[25]

The Nataraja temple has ancient roots, likely following the temple architecture tradition that is found all over South India from at least the 5th century. Textual evidence, such as those of the Sangam tradition, suggest a temple existed here along with Madurai in ancient times,[5] but the town is not named Chidambaram in these pre-5th-century texts.[26] The earliest mention of "dancing god of Chidambaram" as Shiva is found in 6th- and early-7th-century texts by Appar and Sambadar.[26] The Suta Samhita embedded inside Sri Kanda Puranam and variously dated between 7th and 10th century mentions the Chidambaram dance. The surviving Nataraja temple has a structure that is traceable to the early Chola dynasty. Chidambaram was the early capital of this dynasty, and Shiva Nataraja was their family deity. The Chidambaram temple town remained important to the Cholas, albeit with increasing competition from other temple towns when Rajaraja Chola I moved the capital to Thanjavur, built a new city and the massive Brihadeeswarar Temple dedicated to Shiva in the early 11th century, which is now a world heritage site.[5][27][28]

Nataraja Shiva and his "dance of bliss" is an ancient Hindu art concept. It is found in various texts such as Tatva Nidhi which describes seven types of dance and their spiritual symbolism, Kashyapa Silpa which describes 18 dance forms with iconographic details and design instructions, as well as Bharata's ancient treatise on performance arts Natya Shastra which describes 108 dance postures among other things. Reliefs and sculptures of Nataraja have been found across the Indian subcontinent, some dating to the 6th century and earlier such as in Aihole and Badami cave temples.[29][30][note 1]

The Chidambaram temple built on this heritage,[citation needed] yet creatively evolved the idea into forms not found elsewhere. The earliest historically verifiable Shiva temple at Chidambaram is traceable in inscriptions that date to the rule of Aditya Chola I in the early 10th century, and far more during the rule of the 10th-century Chola king Parantaka I.[1][9][note 2] For them, the dancing Shiva was the kula-nayaka (family guide or deity) and Chidambaram was the capital they built.[33] These inscriptions and texts from this period suggest that the significance of the Agama texts and Shaiva Bhakti movement was strengthening within the Chola leadership and thought.[1]

The copper plate inscriptions of Parantaka I (c. 907–955 CE) describe him as the "bee at the lotus feet of Shiva" who built the golden house for Shiva, with Chit-sabha, Hema-sabha, Hiranya-sabha and Kanaka-sabha (all mandapam, pillared pilgrim rest places). He is referred to as "Pon veinda Perumal", which means "one who covered with gold" the Chit-sabha of Chidambaram.[34] Both Aditya I and his Chola successor Parantaka I were active supporters of arts and temple building. They converted many older brick and wooden temples into more lasting temples from cut stone as the building blocks in dozens of places across South India.[35]

Raja Raja Chola I (985–1013 CE) embarked on a mission to recover the hymns of the 63 Nayanmars after hearing short excerpts of the Tevaram in his court.[36] He sought the help of Nambiyandar Nambi, who was a priest in a temple.[37] It is believed that by divine intervention Nambi found the presence of scripts, in the form of cadijam leaves half eaten by white ants in a chamber inside the second precinct in the temple.[36][37] The brahmanas (Dikshitars) in the temple are supposed to have disagreed with the king by saying that the works were too divine, and that only by the arrival of the "Naalvar" (the four saints)—Appar, Sundarar, Tirugnanasambandar and Manickavasagar would they allow for the chambers to be opened. Rajaraja, however, created idols of them and prepared for them to be brought to the temple through a procession. but Rajaraja is said to have prevailed.[36][38] Rajaraja thus became known as Tirumurai Kanda Cholan meaning one who saved the Tirumurai.[38]

In another version of the story, Rajaraja is said to have experienced a dream from lord Shiva telling Rajaraja that the hymns in Thillai Nataraja Temple, Chidambaram are in a state of destruction and to recover the remaining hymns from the chambers. The brahmanas (Dikshitars) in the temple, however, are supposed to have disagreed with the king by saying that the works were too divine to be accessed, and that only by the arrival of the 63 Nayanmars would they allow for the chambers to be opened. Rajaraja, devising a plan, consecrated idols of each of them and prepared for them to be brought into the temple through a procession. It is said that the 63 idols are still present in the Thillai Nataraja Temple. When the vault was opened, Rajaraja is said to have found the room infested with white ants, and that the hymns were salvaged as much as possible.[citation needed]

The temple, according to inscriptions found in South India and Southeast Asia, was also historic recipient of a precious jewel from the king of Angkor who built the Angkor Wat through Chola king Kulothunga, who submitted it to the temple in 1114 CE.[39] Kulothunga I and his son expanded the Chidambaram Nataraja temple expanse sixfold.[40]

Chidambaram temple thrived during the Chola dynasty rule through mid-13th century, along with the later Shiva-based Thanjavur and Gangaikondacholapuram capitals, as well as Vishnu-based Srirangam temple towns. Its facilities infrastructure was expanded. Naralokaviran, the general of king Kulothunga Chola I was responsible for building the steps that lead to Sivaganga water pool, a goddess shrine, a shrine for child saint Thirugnana Sambanthar, temple gardens and a pilgrim road network in and around Chidambaram. He constructed a hall for recitation of Tevaram hymns and engraved the hymns in copper plates.[41] The thousand pillar choultry, with friezes narrating Hindu texts, was built in the late 12th century.[41] Between the second half of the 12th century and the early 13th century, the Chola kings added colorful and high gopura stone gateways as easily identifiable landmarks, starting with the western gopura. Thereafter, about mid 13th century, the Pandya dynasty ended the Chola dynasty.[42] The Hindu Pandyas were liberal supporters of Chidambaram temple, along with other Shiva and Vishnu temples, just like the Chola. Sundara Pandya added the huge eastern gopura at Chidambaram, beginning the colossal gateway tradition.[42] Most of the structure and plans currently seen in the Chidambaram complex, including the mandapas with their pillar carvings, the various shrines with polished granite sculptures, the sacred water pool and the early gopurams are from the 12th and 13th century, attributed to the late Chola and early Pandya kings.[43]

Invasions

 
Subrahmanya shrine in ruins, early 19th century
 
A Mandapam in 1869
 
One of the temple's pillared halls before demolition in the late 19th century.

In the north, the Indian subcontinent had been conquered by the Delhi Sultanate. Muslim armies had begun raiding central India for plunder by the late 13th century. In 1311, when Sultan Alauddin Khilji ordered his general Malik Kafur and his forces to invade southern Hindu kingdoms, he went deeper into the Indian peninsula for loot and to establish annual tribute agreement between the kingdom and the Sultanate.[44] The records left by the court historians of the Delhi Sultanate state that Malik Kafur raided Chidambaram, Srirangam, Madurai and other Tamil towms, destroyed the temples, and the Nataraja temple was one of the sources of gold and jewels booty he brought back to Delhi.[45][46][47]

The temple towns of Tamil Nadu were again targeted for loot in the 1320s. However, when the news of another invasion spread in Tamil lands, the community removed them into the Western Ghats or buried numerous sculptures and treasures in the land and concealed chambers underneath temples sites before the Muslim armies reached them. A large number of these were rediscovered in archaeological excavations at the site in and after 1979, including those in Chidambaram.[48][49][50] According to Nagaswamy, those who buried the temple artworks followed the Hindu Agama texts such as Marici Samhita and Vimanarcanakalpa that recommend ritually burying precious metal murtis as a means of protection when war and robbery is imminent. Over 200 such items have been recovered, including relevant hordes of copper plate inscriptions.[50]

The Islamic invasion in the 14th century, states George Michell – a professor and art historian of Indian architecture, brought an abrupt end to the patronage of Chidambaram and other temple towns.[51] The Delhi Sultan appointed a Muslim governor, who seceded within the few years from the Delhi Sultanate and began the Madurai Sultanate. This Sultanate sought tribute from the temple towns, instead of supporting them. The Muslim Madurai Sultanate was relatively short lived, with Hindu Vijayanagara Empire removing it in the late 14th century.[51] The Vijayanagara rulers restored, repaired and expanded the temple through the 16th century, along with many other regional temples. These kings themselves went on pilgrimage to Chidambaram, and gifted resources to strengthen its walls and infrastructure.[52]

 
An 1847 sketch of gopuram with ruined pillars, published by James Fergusson

The destruction of Vijayanagara Empire in the late 16th century by an alliance of Sultanates, followed within a few decades by entrance of Portuguese, French and British colonial interests brought geopolitical uncertainties to Chidambaram and other temple towns. The Portuguese were already a major Coromandel Coast trading group by the early 17th century, a region to which Chidambaram belonged.[53] The Portuguese began building forts, garrison and churches in Coromandel Coast region after the demise of Vijayanagara, triggering the intervention of the French and the British. By the mid-17th century, the temple complex was within the patronage of Nayakas, who repaired the temple and repainted the frescoes on mandapa ceilings. According to Michell, these restorations likely occurred about 1643 CE during the reign of Shrirangadeva Raya III.[54]

According to British reports, Chidambaram temple town had to bear the "brunt of several severe onslaughts" between the French and the British colonial forces several times particularly in the 18th century.[55]

Legend

The Chidambaram temple legend is contained in the 12th-century text Chidambara-mahatmya. The central episode states that Shiva visits sages in the mythical Pine Forest in the form of a dancer mendicant (Bhikshatana) accompanied by Mohini, Vishnu in his avatar as a beautiful woman. Mohini triggers lustful interest of the sages, while Shiva performs Tandava dance that triggers the carnal interest of the wives of these sages. The sages ultimately realise how superficial their austerities have been. The episode becomes widely known. Two sages named Patanjali (also called Sesha-bodied in the south for his connection to Vishnu) and Vyaghrapada (also called Tiger-footed sage) want to see the repeat performance of this "dance of bliss" in the Thaillai forest, Chidambaram. They set up a Shivalinga, pray, meditate and wait. Their asceticism impresses Shiva who appeared before them in Chidambaram and performed "the dance" against "the wall, in the blessed hall of consciousness". This is how this temple started, according to the mahatmya embedded in the Tamil Sthalapurana.[56] According to Kulke, the late medieval text Chidambaramahatmya may reflect a process of Sanskritisation, where these North Indian named sages with Vedic links became incorporated into regional temple mythology.[26]

According to another Hindu legend, Mahalingaswamy at Thiruvidaimarudur is the centre of all Shiva temples in the region and the Saptha Vigraha moorthis (seven prime deities in all Shiva temples) are located at seven cardinal points around the temple, located in various parts of the state.[57][58] The seven deities are Nataraja in Chidambaram Nataraja Temple at Chidambaram, Chandikeswarar temple at Tirucheingalur, Vinayagar in Vellai Vinayagar Temple at Thiruvalanchuzhi, Muruga in Swamimalai Murugan Temple at Swamimalai, Bhairava in Sattainathar Temple at Sirkali, Navagraha in Sooriyanar Temple at Suryanar Kovil, Dakshinamoorthy in Apatsahayesvarar Temple at Alangudi.[58]

The temple, also called Perumpatrapuliyur in this context, is one of the Nava Puliyur Temples worshipped by Patanjali and Vyaghrapada.[59][60] The other temples are Thirupathiripuliyur, Erukathampuliyur, Omampuliyur, Sirupuliyur, Atthippuliyur, Thaplampuliyur, Perumpuliyur and Kanattampuliyur.

Description

 
Golden Roof, Nataraja Temple in Chidambaram
 
Nataraja temple plan. 1: East gopura; 2: South gopura; 3: West gopura; 4: North gopura; 5: 1000 pillar hall (choultry); 6: Shivaganga pool; 7: Devi temple; 8: Shiva Sanctum + Chit Sabha + Kanaka Sabha; 9: Vishnu shrine.

Architecture

The temple as it stands had a pre-Chola existence and the architecture is Dravidian with the Sanctum Sanctorum closely resembling Kerala or Malabar style structures. Indeed, the royal charters mention the rebuilding of the Sanctum using architects from Kerala.[61] However, the golden roof is a striking example of Vesara architecture with its apsidal shape. Two small structures called the Chit Sabha and Kanak Sabha form the crux of the vast architectural complex.[62] The temple is spread over a 40-acre (16 ha) area, within layers of concentric courtyards. The inner sanctum, its connecting mandapams and pillared halls near it are all either squares or stacked squares or both. The complex has nine gopurams, several water storage structures of which the Shivaganga sacred pool is the largest with a rectangular plan. The temple complex is dedicated to Nataraja Shiva and theological ideas associated with Shaivism concepts in Hinduism. However, the temple also includes shrines for Devi, Vishnu, Subrahmanyar, Ganesha, Nandi and others including an Amman shrine, a Surya shrine complete with Chariot wheels.[62] The plan has numerous gathering halls called sabha, two major choultry called the 100 pillared and 1,000 pillared halls, inscriptions and frescoes narrating Hindu legends about gods, goddesses, saints and scholars.[63][64]

Courtyards

The Nataraja Temple complex is embedded inside four prakarams (prakramas, courtyards). Each of the courtyard has walls that were defensively fortified after the 14th-century plunder and destruction.

 
Courtyard, Nataraja Temple, Chidambaram

The outermost wall around the fourth courtyard has four simple, insignificant gateways. The walls and gateways of the fourth courtyard were added in the 16th century by Vijayanagara rulers after they had defeated the Madurai Sultanate, and this outermost layer was heavily fortified by the Nayakas in the 17th century.[65][66] These face the four large gopurams that are gateways into the third courtyard. These gopurams are also landmarks from afar. Inside the third courtyard, near the northern gopuram, is the Shivaganga tank, the thousand pillar mandapam, the Subrahmanyar (Murugan, Kartikeya) shrine and the shrine for Parvati (as Shivakama Sundari). The other three gateways are closer to the sanctum. The four gopurams pilgrims and visitors to enter the temple from all four cardinal directions. The complex is interconnected through a maze of pathways.[65][66]

The courtyard walls and gateways are made from cut stones with some brick structure added in. The gardens and palm groves are in the fourth courtyard, outside the walls of the third courtyard walls with the four large gopurams. These were restored or added in by the Vijayanagara rulers in the 16th century.[67]

Towers: gopurams

 
 
Two distinct styled gopurams of the Chidambaram temple. The artwork narrates religious and secular stories from Hindu texts.

The temple has nine major gopuram gateways connecting the various courtyards. Four of these are huge and colorful, visible from afar, a symbolic and convenient landmark for pilgrims. These gateway towers or gopurams each have 7 storeys facing the East, South, West and North.[65][66] The first edition of the four gopuram superstructures were likely built between 1150 and 1300 CE. The earliest was likely the western gopuram, which is also the smaller of the four. This is generally dated to about 1150 CE. The eastern gopura was likely completed by about 1200 CE, southern gopura by the mid-13th century, while the northern was added in the late 13th century. The four high gopurams were destroyed, rebuilt, repaired, enlarged and redecorated several times after the 13th century.[65][66] This has made the gopurams difficult to place chronologically, yet useful in scholarly studies of the history of the Nataraja temple.[68]

All gopuras are built of precisely cut large stone blocks all the way to the main cornice. Upon this is a stone, brick and plaster structure with layers of pavilions. Above these talas (storeys) is a Dravidian style barrel vaulted roof, crowned with thirteen kalasa finials. All four are approximately similar in size and 14:10:3 ratio, about 42.7 metres (140 ft) high, 30.5 metres (100 ft) wide and 9.1 metres (30 ft) deep.[66]

Artwork on the gopuram

 
Nataraja Temple gopuram artwork in Chidambaram, Tamil Nadu

Each gopuram is colorful and unique in its own ways. They narrate stories from various Hindu texts, showing religious and secular scenes from the various Hindu traditions. This art is presented in each gopuram with anthropomorphic figure panels and about fifty niches with stone sculptures in every gopuram.[65][66] The scenes include multiple panels about the legend of Shiva-Parvati wedding with Brahma, Vishnu, Saraswati and Lakshmi attending, dancing Ganesha, Shiva in his various aspects, Durga in the middle of her war with a demon, Skanda ready for war, seated Nandi, musicians, dancers, farmers, merchants, sadhu in namaste posture, dancing dvarapalas near the vertical center line and others. The artists and architects who built these gopura may have had a rationale in the relative sequence and position of the artwork with respect to each other and on various levels, but this is unclear and a subject of disagreement among scholars.[65][69][70]

 
The artwork on gopuram showing Parvati-Shiva Kalyanasundara wedding legend. Near the newly weds are Saraswati, Lakshmi, Vishnu and others.

The earliest built western gopuram is the only one with inscriptions below each artwork that identifies what it is. The artwork on it includes Durga fighting the evil, shape shifting buffalo demon and Skanda sitting on peacock and dressed up for war.[66] Other artwork found on the eastern gopuram include Surya, Ganapati, Vishnu, Sridevi (Lakshmi), Tripura Sundari, Brahma, Saraswati, Varuna, Durga, Agni, several rishis, Yamuna goddess, Kama and Rati, Budha, the Vedic sages such as Narada and Agastya, Pantanjali, Somaskanda legend, Ardhanarishvara (half Shiva, half Parvati), Harihara (half Vishnu, half Shiva), several forms of dancing Shiva and others.[71]

The surviving south gopuram called the Sokkaseeyan Thirunilai Ezhugopuram was constructed by a Pandya king identified from the presence of the dynasty's fish emblem sculpted on the ceiling. The Pandyas sculpted two fishes facing each other when they completed gopurams (and left it with one fish, in case it was incomplete).[72] Other artwork found on the southern gopuram include Chandesha, Ganapati, Vishnu, Sridevi (Lakshmi), several Devis, Brahma, Saraswati, Surya, Chandra, Durga, Indra, Agni, several rishis, Ganga and Yamuna goddesses, Kama and Rati, Budha, the Vedic sages such as Narada, Pantanjali, Somaskanda legend, Ardhanarishvara (half Shiva, half Parvati), Harihara (half Vishnu, half Shiva), several forms of dancing and standing Shiva such as Pashupata, Kiratarjuna and Lingobhava, as well as others.[71]

 
The eastern gopura wall shows all 108 dance postures from the Natya Shastra.[73] The other gopuras also have dance images.[74]

The eastern gopuram features the 108 reliefs of Natya Shastra dance postures (22 cm each in a separate niche) and faces the sanctum.[75][76] The eastern gopuram is credited to king Koperunsingan II (1243-1279 CE) as per epigraphical records[77] and was repaired with support from a woman named Subbammal in the late 18th century.

The northern gopuram was repaired and finished by the Vijayanagara king Krishnadevaraya (1509-1530 CE) in the 16th century.[41] The eastern and northern gopura also depicts the wide range of narratives as the southern and western gopuram.[71]

The idols of Pachaiappa Mudaliar and his wife Iyalammal have been sculpted on the eastern gopuram. The Pachaiappa Trust to date has been responsible for various functions in the temple and also maintain the temple car. The eastern gopuram is renowned for its complete enumeration of 108 poses of Indian classical dance – Bharathanatyam, detailed in small rectangular panels along the passage that leads to the gateway.

Shrines

 
The Chidambaram temple complex includes gopura, vimana and the sacred pool

The temple complex has many shrines, most related to Shaivism but elements of Vaishnavism and Shaktism are included. The innermost structures such as the sanctum and the shrines all have square plans, but the gateways do not align except the innermost two courtyards.[65][66]

Shaivism

The sanctum of the temple is set inside the innermost 1st prakara which is a square with about 44 metres (144 ft) side. This prakara is offset towards the west inside the 2nd prakara, which is also a square with about 105 metres (344 ft) side.[65] The Shiva sanctum is unusual as it does not have a Shivalinga, rather it has the Chit Sabha (consciousness gathering, also called chit ambalam) with an image of Shiva Nataraja. This introspective empty space has a curtained space that is 3.5 meter long and 1.5 meter wide. It is called the rahasya (secret) in Hindu texts. It consists of two layers, one red, the other black. According to George Michell, this is a symbolism in Hinduism of "enlightenment inside, illusion outside". It is replaced on the tenth day of the main festivals.[78] The Chidambaram Rahasya is the "formless" representation of Shiva as the metaphysical Brahman in Hinduism, sometimes explained as akasha linga and divine being same as Self (Atman) that is everywhere, in everything, eternally.[79][80][81]

Facing the Chit Sabha is the Kanaka Sabha (also called pon ambalam), or the gathering of dancers. These two sanctum spaces are connected by five silver gilded steps called the panchakshara. The ceiling of the Chit Sabha is made of wooden pillars coated with gold, while copper coats the Kanaka Sabha is copper colored.[82]

 
Durga in the Shivakama Sundari shrine, in her Mahishasuramardini form killing the buffalo demon below her foot.

Shaktism

The main Devi shrine in the Nataraja temple complex is offset towards the north of the sanctum inside the third prakara, and found to the west of the Shivaganga pool. It is called the Shivakama Sundari shrine, dedicated to Parvati. The temple faces east and has an embedded square plan, though the stacked squares created a long rectangular space. The shrine has its own walls and an entrance gateway (gopura). Inside is the dedicated mandapas and brightly colored frescoes likely from the 17th-century Vijayanagara period.[83] These narrate the story of Shiva and Vishnu together challenging the "learned sages, ascetics and their wives" in the forest, by appearing in the form of a beautiful beggar that dances (bhikshatanamurti) and a beautiful girl that seduces (Mohini) respectively. Another set of frescoes are secular depicting temple festivities and daily life of people, while a stretch narrates the story of Hindu saints named Manikkavachakar and Mukunda.[84][85]

The shrine had artwork narrating the Devi Mahatmya, a classic Sanskrit text of Shaktism tradition. However, in 1972, these were removed given their dilapidated state. These were replaced with a different story.[86] Other parts of the paintings and shrine also show great damage.[87]

The sanctum of the Shivakama Sundari shrine is dedicated to Devi, where she is Shiva's knowledge (jnana shakti), desire (iccha sakti), action (kriya sakti) and compassion (karuna sakti).[88] The oldest Shivakama Sundari sculpture at the site representing these aspects of the goddess has been dated to the king Parantaka I period, about 950 CE.[88]

Vaishnavism

The Nataraja temple complex incorporates Vaishnava themes and images like many Hindu temples in South India. A Vishnu shrine, for example, is found inside the sanctum of the temple in its southwest corner. According to George Michell and others, Chola kings revered Shiva with Tyagaraja and Nataraja their family deity, yet their urban Shaiva centers "echo a very strong substratum of Vaishnava traditions". This historic inclusiveness is reflected in Chidambaram with Vishnu Govindaraja in the same sanctum home by the side of Nataraja.[89] After the turmoil of the 14th century when the temple was attacked and looted, there was period when some priests sought to restore only Shaiva iconography according to extant Portuguese Jesuit records. However, the Vijayanagara rulers insisted on the re-consecration of all historic traditions.[90] The temple inscriptions confirm that Vishnu was included along with Shiva in the temple's earliest version, and was reinstalled when the temple was reopened by the Vijayanagara kings.[91][92]

Some texts from the time of king Kulottunga II give conflicting reports, wherein the Shaiva texts state that the king removed the Vishnu image while Vaishnava texts state that they took it away and installed it in Tirupati, sometime about 1135 CE. The scholar Vedanta Desika re-established the co-consecration in 1370 CE, about the time Vijayanagara Empire conquered Chidambaram and northern Tamil lands from the Madurai Sultanate.[91] The current shrine, states Michell, is from 1539 financed by king Achyutaraya and it features a reclining figure of Vishnu.[92]

The Govindaraja shrine is one of the 108 holy temples of Vishnu called divyadesam, revered by the 7th-to-9th-century saint poets of Vaishnava tradition, Alwars.[93] Kulashekhara Alwar mentions this temple as Tillai Chitrakutam and equates Chitrakuta of Ramayana fame with this shrine.[94] The shrine has close connections with the Govindaraja temple in Tirupati dating back to saint Ramanuja of the 11th and 12th centuries.[95][96]

 
 
The circumambulation paths in shrines, the mandapa's moulded plinth and the pilgrim hall pillars of the Nataraja temple are carved with reliefs showing dancers and musicians.

Others

The Nataraja temple has a pre-13th-century Surya shrine. The image is unusual as it depicts a three headed Surya same as Brahma, Shiva and Vishnu, with eight hands holding iconographic items of these deities, along with two lotuses in a pair of hands in front, accompanied by two small female figures possibly Usha and Pratyusha, standing on a chariot drawn by seven horses and Aruna as charioteer.[97][98] The temple also has a significant shrine for Ganesha in the southwest corner and a Subrahmanyar shrine in the northwest corner of the third courtyard.[11][12]

Halls: sabha

The temple has many halls called sabha (lit. "community gathering", also called ambalams or sabhai) inside the complex. Two of these are the Chit Sabha and the Kanaka Sabha inside the sanctum area of the Nataraja shrine, described earlier.[82] The other halls are:

Nritta sabha

Nrithya sabha (also called Nritta Sabha, Natya sabha, or "Hall of Dance") is a "so-called 56-pillared" hall. It is in the south section of the second courtyard that circumambulates the Nataraja sanctum of the complex. This second courtyard is near the temple's flag mast (kodi maram or dwaja sthambam). The 13th-century Nritta Sabha is traditionally considered as the place where Shiva and Kali originally entered into a dance competition.[99] Shiva won with the urdhva-tandava pose that raised his right leg straight up, a posture that Kali refused because she was a woman. The hall is rectangular consisting of three stacked squares, a 15-meter-sided square that is the main hall, which is connected to 4 meters by 8 meters rectangular mukha-mandapa to its north. The hall now has 50 pillars, but evidence suggests that it may have had 56 or more pillars earlier.[99] These pillars are intricately carved from top to bottom. The lower levels have dancers in Natya Shastra mudras accompanied with expressive musicians as if both are enjoying creating the music and the dance. The pillars also have embedded narratives of legends from Hindu texts, such as of Durga fighting the buffalo demon, as well as humorous dwarfs frolicking. Below the kapota, the structures show reliefs of seated people, many in namaste posture, some with a beard and yogi like appearance representing saints and rishis. Nearly 200 of these are still visible, rest appear to have been damaged or eroded over time.[99][100]

The Nritta Sabha platform's base is carved as a chariot, with horses and wheels, as if it is rising out the ground. Historic texts state that the wheels were exquisitely carved and visible in the past, each about 1.25 meter diameter with 28 spokes and 33 medallions, the chariot had 1.55-meter-high (5.1 ft) ornamented horses, on the wheel was a seated rishi as if he was guiding the movement. Only remnants of this structure remains now.[101] The northern niche of the hall is carved with 14 figures in addition to Shiva as Kanakamurti. The Shiva image had been damaged and is now restored. The 14 figures include Surya (sun god), Chandra (moon god) and 12 rishis of which Narada and Tumburu with Vina can be identified, the others have been too damaged to identify but are likely Vedic rishis. Near them are women in seductive postures, some nudes, likely the wives of the rishis.[101] Next to the northern niche with Shiva are two smaller niches, one for Patanjali seated on coiled serpent and another for bald headed Vyaghrapada, the two mythical Chidambaram saints. The western wall also has a niche with a large Shiva image in his Vrisabhantika form. Once again rishis are with him, this time in namaste posture. A few figures are dressed royally like warriors and these may be representation of the Chola kings.[100][101]

The hall's center is an open square, with an ornate inverted lotus ceiling decoration.[102] Around this lotus are 108 coffers, each with two human figures in namaste posture, all oriented to be along the north–south axis likely to suggest the direction to performance artists who would perform live and aligning themselves to the chit sabha in the sanctum.[102]

 
Carved pillars in a temple hall.
 
The damaged 1,000 pillar hall.

Raja sabha: 1,000 pillar hall

Raja sabha or the 1000-pillared hall is to the east of the Shivaganga pool, in the northeast part of the third courtyard. A pillared pathway from the eastern gopuram leads to it. It was a choultry for pilgrims with a convenient access to the pool. The hall's lower mouldings have dance mudras and medieval era musical instruments being played by musicians. The pillars have reliefs. It is now kept closed, except for festivals.

Shatasila sabha: 100 pillar hall

This is northwest of the sanctum, south of the Devi shrine. It is badly damaged and closed to public.

Deva sabha

Deva Sabhai is on the eastern side of the second courtyard. It is called Perampalam, literally "Great Hall" in the inscriptions, which suggests that it is an early structure and was historically important.[103] According to Nanda and Michell, this may be the hall where Shaiva bhakti saints Nayanars came and sang hymns. It may also have hosted royal visits during the Chola era times.[103]

The Deva sabha (divine gathering hall) houses the temple's revered collection of historic bronze sculptures and modern era frescoes. One of the paintings show Parvati seated in a chair, watching the Nrtta sabha hall.[104]

Temple tanks

 
Sacred pool sketched in the 1870s.
 
It is locally called the Sivaganga (சிவகங்கை).

The Chidambaram temple is well endowed with several water bodies within and around the temple complex.

  • Sivaganga tank[105] is in the third corridor of the temple opposite to the shrine of Shivagami. It is accessed by flights of stone steps leading from the shrine.[106]
  • Paramanandha koobham is the well on the eastern side of the Chitsabha hall from which water is drawn for sacred purposes.[107]
 
Temple Tank in Nataraja Temple, Chidambaram
  • Kuyya theertham is situated to the north-east of Chidambaram in Killai near the Bay of Bengal and has the shore called Pasamaruthanthurai.[107]
  • Pulimedu is situated around a kilometer and a half to the south of Chidambaram.[107]
  • Vyagrapatha Theertham is situated on to the west of the temple opposite to the temple of Ilamai Akkinaar.[107]
  • Anantha Theertham is situated to the west of the temple in front of the Anantheswarar temple.[107]
  • Nagaseri tank is situated to the west of the Anantha thirtham.[107]
  • Brahma Theertham is situated to the north-west of the temple at Thirukalaanjeri.[107]
  • Underground channels at the shrine drain excess water in a northeasterly direction to the Shivapriyai temple tank of the Thillai Kali Temple, Chidambaram. Due to poor maintenance, it has not been in use.[108]
  • Thiruparkadal is the tank to the south-east of the Shivapriyai tank.[107]

Inscriptions

Even though the history of the temple goes back to the Prabhandas and Tevaram, that is the Pallava period, the earliest known inscriptions are only that of Rajendra Chola and Kulothunga I followed by Vikrama Chola and other later rulers.[109] The Nataraja temple inscriptions are notable for mentioning a library of manuscripts in temple premises.[110] Two inscriptions dated to the early 13th century mention re-organization of old temple library. According to Hartmut Scharfe, the older library mentioned may date to the early 12th century.[110] The inscriptions, states Scharfe, recite that the temple employed twenty librarians, of which eight copied old manuscripts to create new editions, two verified the copy matched the original and four managed the proper storage of the manuscripts.[110]

There are many Chola inscriptions in the temple, both in Tamil and Sanskrit.[111] These are attributed to Rajendra Chola I (1012-1044 CE), Kulothunga Chola I (1070-1120 CE), Vikrama Chola (1118-1135 CE), Rajadhiraja Chola II (1163 -1178 CE), Kulothunga Chola III (1178-1218 CE) and Rajaraja Chola III (1216-1256 CE).[109] Pandya inscriptions date from Thribhuvana Chakravarthi Veerapandiyan, Jataavarman Thribhuvana Chakravarthi Sundarapaandiyan (1251-1268 CE) and Maaravarman Thribhuvana Chakravarthi Veerakeralanaagiya Kulashekara Pandiyan (1268-1308 CE). Pallava inscriptions are available for king Avani Aala Pirandhaan Ko-pperum-Singha (1216-1242 CE). Vijayanagara Kings mentioned in inscriptions are Veeraprathaapa Kiruttina Theva Mahaaraayar (1509-1529 CE), Veeraprathaapa Venkata Deva Mahaaraayar, Sri Ranga Theva Mahaaraayar, Atchyutha Deva Mahaaraayar (1529-1542 CE) and Veera Bhooopathiraayar. One of the inscriptions from the descendant of Cheramaan Perumal nayanar, Ramavarma Maharaja has been found.

Temple Car

 
The temple car of Natraja used during festival processions.
 
An 1820 painting of Nataraja in a temple chariot.

The Chidambaram temple car is used for processions twice a year, where it is drawn by several thousand devotees during the festivals.[112] There are five temple cars, with the biggest one for Lord Nataraja. The main deity in the sanctum santorum will be taken out on the procession, unlike the other temples where Utsava idols are generally taken out. The four feet idols of Lord Nataraja and Goddess Shivakama Sundari, adorned with precious gem-studded jewellery and flowers, are taken out of the main sanctum amidst a grand number of devotees in a golden platforms. Fifties of men hold the huge wooden log connected to the platform making a circumbulation around the Chitsaba, before being taken out to the temple car. After the procession across four car streets, the deities are taken in a similar fashion to the Rajasabha at night, where Laksharchana happens (chanting the 1000 names of Lord Nataraja by 100 priests; laksha - 1 lakh). The next day, before dawn, the deities are bathed with holy products. Unlike other temples, the holy bathing ritual goes for 4–5 hours which consists of several products like milk, holy ash, turmeric, curd, honey, rose water sugarcane juice, fruits, flowers, coconut water. For every Mahabisheka during Margazhi festival, Swarnabhisheka is done (bath with golden coins). After abisheka, Lord Nataraja and Goddess Shivakama Sundari offers ROYAL DARSHAN to devotees in the Rajasabha (the royal hall). Around late afternoon, the deities are taken inside temple in a grandeur manner, which forms the prime Arudhra Darshan (Margazhi festival) or Uttra Darshan (Aani Thirumanjanam festival). These two annual festivals coincidence with Winter and Summer solstice (of Northern Hemisphere), respectively.

Significance of the architecture

The temple sanctum contains a silver sculpture of Shiva in his Ānanda-tāṇḍava Nataraja aspect. It signifies:

  • The demon under Lord Nataraja's feet signifies that ignorance is under His feet.[113]
  • The fire in His hand (power of destruction) means He is the destroyer of evil.[113]
  • The raised hand (Abhaya or Pataka mudra) signifies that He is the savior of all life forms.[113]
  • The arc of fire called Thiruvashi or Prabhavati signifies the cosmos and the perpetual motion of the earth.
  • The drum in His hand signifies the origin of life forms.[113][114]
  • The lotus pedestal signifies Om, the sound of the universe.
  • His right eye, left eye and third eye signify the sun, moon and fire/knowledge, respectively.
  • His right earring (makara kundalam) and left earring (sthri kundalam) signify the union of man and woman (right is man, left is woman).
  • The crescent moon in His hair signifies benevolence and beauty.[113]
  • The flowing of river Ganges through His matted hair signifies eternity of life.
  • The dreading of His hair and drape signify the force of His dance.[113]

Bhakti movement

There is no reference to the temple in Sangam literature of the 1st to 5th centuries and the earliest mention is found in 6th-century Tamil literature.[115] The temple and the deity were immortalized in Tamil poetry in the works of Thevaram by three poet saints belonging to the 7th century - Thirugnana Sambanthar, Thirunavukkarasar and Sundaramoorthy Nayanar.[116] Thirugnana Sambanthar has composed 2 songs in praise of the temple, Thirunavukkarasar aka Appar 8 Tevarams in praise of Nataraja and Sundarar 1 song in praise of Nataraja. Sundarar commences his Thiruthondar thogai (the sacred list of Lord Shiva's 63 devotees) paying his respects to the priests of the Thillai temple - "To the devotees of the priests at Thillai, I am a devotee". The works of the first three saints, Thirumurai were stored in palm leaf manuscripts in the temple and were recovered by the Chola King Rajaraja Chola[75] under the guidance of Nambiandarnambi.

Manikkavasagar, the 10th-century saivite poet has written two works, the first called Tiruvasakam (The sacred utterances) which largely has been sung in Chidambaram and the Thiruchitrambalakkovaiyar (aka Thirukovaiyar), which has been sung entirely in the temple. Manikkavasagar is said to have attained spiritual bliss at Chidambaram. The Chidambaram Mahatmiyam composed during the 12th century explain the subsequent evolution and de-sanskritization.[115]

Rituals

A unique feature of this temple is the bejeweled image of Lord Nataraja as the main deity. It depicts Lord Shiva as the master of Koothu-Bharata Natyam and is one of the few temples where Lord Shiva is represented by an anthropomorphic murthi rather than the classic, aniconic Lingam.

At Chidambaram, the dancer dominates, not the linga as in other Shiva shrines. The Chitsabha houses a small spatik (crystal) linga (Chandramoulisvara), believed to be a piece that fell from the crescent adorning Lord Shiva's head and installed by Adi Shankara. Daily puja is offered to the spatik linga (six times) and also to a small emerald figure of Nataraja called Ratnasabhapati (once, at 10-30 am). The main sanctum also encloses Chidambara Rahasya - the divine chakra adorned with golden vilva leaves. This remains hidden and only during the pooja times (six times in a day), Rahasya Darshan will be offered to the devotees. Rahasya emanates the vastness and formlessness of Akash, the divinity that is the highest form of Supremacy (ether form of five elements).

Festivals

 
Natyanjali Festival in the temple

A whole year for men is said to be a single day for the gods. Just as six poojas are performed in a day at the sanctum sanctorum, six anointing ceremonies are performed for the principal deity – Nataraja in a year. They are the Marghazhi Thiruvaadhirai (in December–January) indicating the first puja, the fourteenth day after the new moon (Chaturdashi) of the month of Masi (February–March) indicating the second pooja, the Chittirai Thiruvonam (in April–May), indicating the third pooja or uchikalam, the Uthiram of Aani (June–July) also called the Aani Thirumanjanam indicating the evening or the fourth puja, the chaturdasi of Aavani (August–September) indicating the fifth puja and the chaturdasi of the month of Puratasi (October–November) indicating the sixth pooja or Arthajama. Of these the Marghazhi Thiruvaadhirai (in December–January) and the Aani Thirumanjanam (in June–July) are the most important. These are conducted as the key festivals with the main deity being brought outside the sanctum sanctorum in a procession that included a temple car procession followed by a long anointing ceremony.[117] Several hundreds of thousands of people flock the temple to see the anointing ceremony and the ritualistic dance of Shiva when he is taken back to the sanctum sanctorum. Lord Shiva, in his incarnation of Nataraja, is believed to have born on full moon day in the constellation of Ardra, the sixth lunar mansion. Lord Shiva is bathed only 6 times a year, and on the previous night of Ardra, the bath rituals are performed on a grand scale.[118] Pots full of milk, pomegranate juices, coconut water, ghee, oil, sandal paste, curds, holy ashes, and other liquids and solids, considered as sacred offering to the deity are used for the sacred ablution.[118]

Administration

The temple was originally administered by an exclusive group of Brahmins who were called the Thillai Muvayiravar or the Three Thousand of Thillai. Kulottunga Chola I, during his rule, introduced priests from Vengi, his original homeland to perpetuate the myth of the Tillai three thousand in order to legitimize his royal and priestly power.[119] Currently, the temple is managed by a community known as Dikshitars. They live in Chidambaram and also serve as the hereditary trustees of the temple.[120] Every Dikshitar once he is married becomes as of right a trustee and archaka of the temple. A practice unique to the community is that the priests wear the tuft of hair in front of the head similar to the Nambuthiri Brahmans of Kerala.[121]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Dance and performance arts are not unique to Shiva in Hindu texts, including the Tamil literature. Many other deities, including Vishnu, Durga, Krishna, Ganesha, Kartikeya are all envisioned as dancers amongst other things. However, with Shiva the idea is most evolved.[31]
  2. ^ Sharada Srinivasan states that the Nataraja bronze has roots in 7th- to 9th-century Pallava innovations.[32]

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External links

  • Shiva as 'Cosmic Dancer': On Pallava Origins for the Nataraja Bronze, Sharada Srinivasan (2004)
  • The Great Ārdrā Darśanam Festival: Performing Śaiva Ritual Texts in Contemporary Chidambaram, Aleksandra Wenta (2013)
  • The Citamparam Temple Complex and Its Evolution, Paul Younger (1986)

nataraja, temple, chidambaram, thillai, nataraja, temple, also, referred, chidambaram, nataraja, temple, hindu, temple, dedicated, nataraja, form, shiva, lord, dance, this, temple, located, chidambaram, tamil, nadu, india, this, temple, ancient, roots, shiva, . Thillai Nataraja Temple also referred as the Chidambaram Nataraja Temple is a Hindu temple dedicated to Nataraja the form of Shiva as the lord of dance This temple is located in Chidambaram Tamil Nadu India This temple has ancient roots and a Shiva shrine existed at the site when the town was known as Thillai 4 5 Chidambaram the name of the city literally means stage of consciousness The temple architecture symbolizes the connection between the arts and spirituality creative activity and the divine 6 7 8 The temple wall carvings display all the 108 karanas from the Natya Shastra by Bharata Muni and these postures form a foundation of Bharatanatyam an Indian classical dance 4 6 Thillai Nataraja TempleChidambaram Nataraja TempleA view of north side gopuram and pond of the templeReligionAffiliationHinduismDistrictCuddalore DistrictDeityNataraja Shiva LocationLocationChidambaramStateTamil NaduCountryIndiaGeographic coordinates11 23 58 N 79 41 36 E 11 39944 N 79 69333 E 11 39944 79 69333 Coordinates 11 23 58 N 79 41 36 E 11 39944 N 79 69333 E 11 39944 79 69333ArchitectureTypeDravidian architectureCreatorCholas PandyasInscriptionsTamil 2 3 The main gopuram of Chidambaram Natarajar temple The present temple was built in the 10th century when Chidambaram was the capital of the Chola dynasty making it one of the oldest surviving active temple complexes in South India After its 10th century consecration by the Cholas who considered Nataraja as their family deity 9 the temple has been damaged repaired renovated and expanded through the 2nd millennium Most of the temple s surviving plan architecture and structure is from the late 12th and early 13th centuries with later additions in similar style 10 While Shiva as Nataraja is the primary deity of the temple it reverentially presents major themes from Shaktism Vaishnavism and other traditions of Hinduism The Chidambaram temple complex for example has the earliest known Amman or Devi temple in South India a pre 13th century Surya shrine with chariot shrines for Ganesha Murugan and Vishnu one of the earliest known Shiva Ganga sacred pool large mandapas for the convenience of pilgrims choultry ambalam or sabha and other monuments 11 12 Shiva himself is presented as the Nataraja performing the Ananda Tandava Dance of Delight in the golden hall of the shrine Pon Ambalam 13 The temple is one of the five elemental lingas in the Shaivism pilgrimage tradition and considered the subtlest of all Shiva temples Kovil in Hinduism 6 It is also a site for performance arts including the annual Natyanjali dance festival on Maha Shivaratri 14 Contents 1 Legend 2 Location 3 History 3 1 Invasions 3 2 Legend 4 Description 4 1 Architecture 4 2 Courtyards 4 3 Towers gopurams 4 3 1 Artwork on the gopuram 4 4 Shrines 4 4 1 Shaivism 4 4 2 Shaktism 4 4 3 Vaishnavism 4 4 4 Others 4 5 Halls sabha 4 5 1 Nritta sabha 4 5 2 Raja sabha 1 000 pillar hall 4 5 3 Shatasila sabha 100 pillar hall 4 5 4 Deva sabha 4 6 Temple tanks 4 7 Inscriptions 4 8 Temple Car 4 9 Significance of the architecture 4 10 Bhakti movement 5 Rituals 6 Festivals 7 Administration 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Bibliography 12 External linksLegend EditChidambaram is one of the many temple towns in the state which is named after the groves clusters or forests dominated by a particular variety of a tree or shrub and the same variety of tree or shrub sheltering the presiding deity 15 The town used to be called Thillai following Thillaivanam derived from the mangrove of Tillai trees Excoecaria agallocha that grow here and the nearby Pichavaram wetlands 16 17 The site became the capital of Cholas in the 10th century and they renamed it to Chidambaram and built the current temple for their family deity of Nataraja Shiva The word Chidambaram comes from the Tamil word Chitrambalam also spelled Chithambalam meaning wisdom atmosphere The roots are citt or chitthu means consciousness or wisdom while and ampalam means atmosphere 8 18 This composite word comes from its association with Shiva Nataraja the cosmic dancer and the cultural atmosphere for arts 8 The word Chidambaram is translated by James Lochtefeld as clothed in thought 6 19 The town and temple name appears in medieval Hindu texts by various additional names such as Kovil lit the temple Pundarikapuram Vyagrapuram Sirrampuram Puliyur and Chitrakuta 20 Additional names for Chidambaram in Pallava era and North Indian texts include Kanagasabainathar Ponnambalam Brahmastpuri and Brahmapuri 21 Location EditThe Nataraja temple in Chidambaram is located in the southeastern Indian state of Tamil Nadu It is about 5 kilometres 3 1 mi north of the Kollidam River Kaveri 15 kilometres 9 3 mi west from the coast of Bay of Bengal and 220 kilometres 140 mi south of Chennai The closest major airport is about 60 kilometres 37 mi north in Pondicherry IATA PNY The National Highway 32 old numbering NH 45A passes through Chidambaram The Tamil Nadu State Transport Corporation and private companies operate services connecting it to major cities in the state 22 The site is linked to the Indian Railways with daily express trains to South Indian cities 23 Chidambaram is a temple town with the Nataraja complex spread over 40 acres 0 16 km2 within a nearly square courtyard in the center Its side roads are aligned to the east west north south axis It has double walls around its periphery with gardens It has had entrance gateways on all four sides 24 History Edit Nataraja Shiva as the cosmic dancer centre sculpture from the temple inspired the 10th century Chola kings to rebuild the Chidambaram temple with stone and gold A silver Nataraja not Shivalinga is the principal icon in this temple 25 The Nataraja temple has ancient roots likely following the temple architecture tradition that is found all over South India from at least the 5th century Textual evidence such as those of the Sangam tradition suggest a temple existed here along with Madurai in ancient times 5 but the town is not named Chidambaram in these pre 5th century texts 26 The earliest mention of dancing god of Chidambaram as Shiva is found in 6th and early 7th century texts by Appar and Sambadar 26 The Suta Samhita embedded inside Sri Kanda Puranam and variously dated between 7th and 10th century mentions the Chidambaram dance The surviving Nataraja temple has a structure that is traceable to the early Chola dynasty Chidambaram was the early capital of this dynasty and Shiva Nataraja was their family deity The Chidambaram temple town remained important to the Cholas albeit with increasing competition from other temple towns when Rajaraja Chola I moved the capital to Thanjavur built a new city and the massive Brihadeeswarar Temple dedicated to Shiva in the early 11th century which is now a world heritage site 5 27 28 Nataraja Shiva and his dance of bliss is an ancient Hindu art concept It is found in various texts such as Tatva Nidhi which describes seven types of dance and their spiritual symbolism Kashyapa Silpa which describes 18 dance forms with iconographic details and design instructions as well as Bharata s ancient treatise on performance arts Natya Shastra which describes 108 dance postures among other things Reliefs and sculptures of Nataraja have been found across the Indian subcontinent some dating to the 6th century and earlier such as in Aihole and Badami cave temples 29 30 note 1 The Chidambaram temple built on this heritage citation needed yet creatively evolved the idea into forms not found elsewhere The earliest historically verifiable Shiva temple at Chidambaram is traceable in inscriptions that date to the rule of Aditya Chola I in the early 10th century and far more during the rule of the 10th century Chola king Parantaka I 1 9 note 2 For them the dancing Shiva was the kula nayaka family guide or deity and Chidambaram was the capital they built 33 These inscriptions and texts from this period suggest that the significance of the Agama texts and Shaiva Bhakti movement was strengthening within the Chola leadership and thought 1 The copper plate inscriptions of Parantaka I c 907 955 CE describe him as the bee at the lotus feet of Shiva who built the golden house for Shiva with Chit sabha Hema sabha Hiranya sabha and Kanaka sabha all mandapam pillared pilgrim rest places He is referred to as Pon veinda Perumal which means one who covered with gold the Chit sabha of Chidambaram 34 Both Aditya I and his Chola successor Parantaka I were active supporters of arts and temple building They converted many older brick and wooden temples into more lasting temples from cut stone as the building blocks in dozens of places across South India 35 Raja Raja Chola I 985 1013 CE embarked on a mission to recover the hymns of the 63 Nayanmars after hearing short excerpts of the Tevaram in his court 36 He sought the help of Nambiyandar Nambi who was a priest in a temple 37 It is believed that by divine intervention Nambi found the presence of scripts in the form of cadijam leaves half eaten by white ants in a chamber inside the second precinct in the temple 36 37 The brahmanas Dikshitars in the temple are supposed to have disagreed with the king by saying that the works were too divine and that only by the arrival of the Naalvar the four saints Appar Sundarar Tirugnanasambandar and Manickavasagar would they allow for the chambers to be opened Rajaraja however created idols of them and prepared for them to be brought to the temple through a procession but Rajaraja is said to have prevailed 36 38 Rajaraja thus became known as Tirumurai Kanda Cholan meaning one who saved the Tirumurai 38 In another version of the story Rajaraja is said to have experienced a dream from lord Shiva telling Rajaraja that the hymns in Thillai Nataraja Temple Chidambaram are in a state of destruction and to recover the remaining hymns from the chambers The brahmanas Dikshitars in the temple however are supposed to have disagreed with the king by saying that the works were too divine to be accessed and that only by the arrival of the 63 Nayanmars would they allow for the chambers to be opened Rajaraja devising a plan consecrated idols of each of them and prepared for them to be brought into the temple through a procession It is said that the 63 idols are still present in the Thillai Nataraja Temple When the vault was opened Rajaraja is said to have found the room infested with white ants and that the hymns were salvaged as much as possible citation needed The temple according to inscriptions found in South India and Southeast Asia was also historic recipient of a precious jewel from the king of Angkor who built the Angkor Wat through Chola king Kulothunga who submitted it to the temple in 1114 CE 39 Kulothunga I and his son expanded the Chidambaram Nataraja temple expanse sixfold 40 Chidambaram temple thrived during the Chola dynasty rule through mid 13th century along with the later Shiva based Thanjavur and Gangaikondacholapuram capitals as well as Vishnu based Srirangam temple towns Its facilities infrastructure was expanded Naralokaviran the general of king Kulothunga Chola I was responsible for building the steps that lead to Sivaganga water pool a goddess shrine a shrine for child saint Thirugnana Sambanthar temple gardens and a pilgrim road network in and around Chidambaram He constructed a hall for recitation of Tevaram hymns and engraved the hymns in copper plates 41 The thousand pillar choultry with friezes narrating Hindu texts was built in the late 12th century 41 Between the second half of the 12th century and the early 13th century the Chola kings added colorful and high gopura stone gateways as easily identifiable landmarks starting with the western gopura Thereafter about mid 13th century the Pandya dynasty ended the Chola dynasty 42 The Hindu Pandyas were liberal supporters of Chidambaram temple along with other Shiva and Vishnu temples just like the Chola Sundara Pandya added the huge eastern gopura at Chidambaram beginning the colossal gateway tradition 42 Most of the structure and plans currently seen in the Chidambaram complex including the mandapas with their pillar carvings the various shrines with polished granite sculptures the sacred water pool and the early gopurams are from the 12th and 13th century attributed to the late Chola and early Pandya kings 43 Invasions Edit Subrahmanya shrine in ruins early 19th century A Mandapam in 1869 One of the temple s pillared halls before demolition in the late 19th century In the north the Indian subcontinent had been conquered by the Delhi Sultanate Muslim armies had begun raiding central India for plunder by the late 13th century In 1311 when Sultan Alauddin Khilji ordered his general Malik Kafur and his forces to invade southern Hindu kingdoms he went deeper into the Indian peninsula for loot and to establish annual tribute agreement between the kingdom and the Sultanate 44 The records left by the court historians of the Delhi Sultanate state that Malik Kafur raided Chidambaram Srirangam Madurai and other Tamil towms destroyed the temples and the Nataraja temple was one of the sources of gold and jewels booty he brought back to Delhi 45 46 47 The temple towns of Tamil Nadu were again targeted for loot in the 1320s However when the news of another invasion spread in Tamil lands the community removed them into the Western Ghats or buried numerous sculptures and treasures in the land and concealed chambers underneath temples sites before the Muslim armies reached them A large number of these were rediscovered in archaeological excavations at the site in and after 1979 including those in Chidambaram 48 49 50 According to Nagaswamy those who buried the temple artworks followed the Hindu Agama texts such as Marici Samhita and Vimanarcanakalpa that recommend ritually burying precious metal murtis as a means of protection when war and robbery is imminent Over 200 such items have been recovered including relevant hordes of copper plate inscriptions 50 The Islamic invasion in the 14th century states George Michell a professor and art historian of Indian architecture brought an abrupt end to the patronage of Chidambaram and other temple towns 51 The Delhi Sultan appointed a Muslim governor who seceded within the few years from the Delhi Sultanate and began the Madurai Sultanate This Sultanate sought tribute from the temple towns instead of supporting them The Muslim Madurai Sultanate was relatively short lived with Hindu Vijayanagara Empire removing it in the late 14th century 51 The Vijayanagara rulers restored repaired and expanded the temple through the 16th century along with many other regional temples These kings themselves went on pilgrimage to Chidambaram and gifted resources to strengthen its walls and infrastructure 52 An 1847 sketch of gopuram with ruined pillars published by James Fergusson The destruction of Vijayanagara Empire in the late 16th century by an alliance of Sultanates followed within a few decades by entrance of Portuguese French and British colonial interests brought geopolitical uncertainties to Chidambaram and other temple towns The Portuguese were already a major Coromandel Coast trading group by the early 17th century a region to which Chidambaram belonged 53 The Portuguese began building forts garrison and churches in Coromandel Coast region after the demise of Vijayanagara triggering the intervention of the French and the British By the mid 17th century the temple complex was within the patronage of Nayakas who repaired the temple and repainted the frescoes on mandapa ceilings According to Michell these restorations likely occurred about 1643 CE during the reign of Shrirangadeva Raya III 54 According to British reports Chidambaram temple town had to bear the brunt of several severe onslaughts between the French and the British colonial forces several times particularly in the 18th century 55 Legend Edit The Chidambaram temple legend is contained in the 12th century text Chidambara mahatmya The central episode states that Shiva visits sages in the mythical Pine Forest in the form of a dancer mendicant Bhikshatana accompanied by Mohini Vishnu in his avatar as a beautiful woman Mohini triggers lustful interest of the sages while Shiva performs Tandava dance that triggers the carnal interest of the wives of these sages The sages ultimately realise how superficial their austerities have been The episode becomes widely known Two sages named Patanjali also called Sesha bodied in the south for his connection to Vishnu and Vyaghrapada also called Tiger footed sage want to see the repeat performance of this dance of bliss in the Thaillai forest Chidambaram They set up a Shivalinga pray meditate and wait Their asceticism impresses Shiva who appeared before them in Chidambaram and performed the dance against the wall in the blessed hall of consciousness This is how this temple started according to the mahatmya embedded in the Tamil Sthalapurana 56 According to Kulke the late medieval text Chidambaramahatmya may reflect a process of Sanskritisation where these North Indian named sages with Vedic links became incorporated into regional temple mythology 26 According to another Hindu legend Mahalingaswamy at Thiruvidaimarudur is the centre of all Shiva temples in the region and the Saptha Vigraha moorthis seven prime deities in all Shiva temples are located at seven cardinal points around the temple located in various parts of the state 57 58 The seven deities are Nataraja in Chidambaram Nataraja Temple at Chidambaram Chandikeswarar temple at Tirucheingalur Vinayagar in Vellai Vinayagar Temple at Thiruvalanchuzhi Muruga in Swamimalai Murugan Temple at Swamimalai Bhairava in Sattainathar Temple at Sirkali Navagraha in Sooriyanar Temple at Suryanar Kovil Dakshinamoorthy in Apatsahayesvarar Temple at Alangudi 58 The temple also called Perumpatrapuliyur in this context is one of the Nava Puliyur Temples worshipped by Patanjali and Vyaghrapada 59 60 The other temples are Thirupathiripuliyur Erukathampuliyur Omampuliyur Sirupuliyur Atthippuliyur Thaplampuliyur Perumpuliyur and Kanattampuliyur Description Edit Golden Roof Nataraja Temple in Chidambaram Nataraja temple plan 1 East gopura 2 South gopura 3 West gopura 4 North gopura 5 1000 pillar hall choultry 6 Shivaganga pool 7 Devi temple 8 Shiva Sanctum Chit Sabha Kanaka Sabha 9 Vishnu shrine Architecture Edit The temple as it stands had a pre Chola existence and the architecture is Dravidian with the Sanctum Sanctorum closely resembling Kerala or Malabar style structures Indeed the royal charters mention the rebuilding of the Sanctum using architects from Kerala 61 However the golden roof is a striking example of Vesara architecture with its apsidal shape Two small structures called the Chit Sabha and Kanak Sabha form the crux of the vast architectural complex 62 The temple is spread over a 40 acre 16 ha area within layers of concentric courtyards The inner sanctum its connecting mandapams and pillared halls near it are all either squares or stacked squares or both The complex has nine gopurams several water storage structures of which the Shivaganga sacred pool is the largest with a rectangular plan The temple complex is dedicated to Nataraja Shiva and theological ideas associated with Shaivism concepts in Hinduism However the temple also includes shrines for Devi Vishnu Subrahmanyar Ganesha Nandi and others including an Amman shrine a Surya shrine complete with Chariot wheels 62 The plan has numerous gathering halls called sabha two major choultry called the 100 pillared and 1 000 pillared halls inscriptions and frescoes narrating Hindu legends about gods goddesses saints and scholars 63 64 Courtyards Edit The Nataraja Temple complex is embedded inside four prakarams prakramas courtyards Each of the courtyard has walls that were defensively fortified after the 14th century plunder and destruction Courtyard Nataraja Temple Chidambaram The outermost wall around the fourth courtyard has four simple insignificant gateways The walls and gateways of the fourth courtyard were added in the 16th century by Vijayanagara rulers after they had defeated the Madurai Sultanate and this outermost layer was heavily fortified by the Nayakas in the 17th century 65 66 These face the four large gopurams that are gateways into the third courtyard These gopurams are also landmarks from afar Inside the third courtyard near the northern gopuram is the Shivaganga tank the thousand pillar mandapam the Subrahmanyar Murugan Kartikeya shrine and the shrine for Parvati as Shivakama Sundari The other three gateways are closer to the sanctum The four gopurams pilgrims and visitors to enter the temple from all four cardinal directions The complex is interconnected through a maze of pathways 65 66 The courtyard walls and gateways are made from cut stones with some brick structure added in The gardens and palm groves are in the fourth courtyard outside the walls of the third courtyard walls with the four large gopurams These were restored or added in by the Vijayanagara rulers in the 16th century 67 Towers gopurams Edit Two distinct styled gopurams of the Chidambaram temple The artwork narrates religious and secular stories from Hindu texts The temple has nine major gopuram gateways connecting the various courtyards Four of these are huge and colorful visible from afar a symbolic and convenient landmark for pilgrims These gateway towers or gopurams each have 7 storeys facing the East South West and North 65 66 The first edition of the four gopuram superstructures were likely built between 1150 and 1300 CE The earliest was likely the western gopuram which is also the smaller of the four This is generally dated to about 1150 CE The eastern gopura was likely completed by about 1200 CE southern gopura by the mid 13th century while the northern was added in the late 13th century The four high gopurams were destroyed rebuilt repaired enlarged and redecorated several times after the 13th century 65 66 This has made the gopurams difficult to place chronologically yet useful in scholarly studies of the history of the Nataraja temple 68 All gopuras are built of precisely cut large stone blocks all the way to the main cornice Upon this is a stone brick and plaster structure with layers of pavilions Above these talas storeys is a Dravidian style barrel vaulted roof crowned with thirteen kalasa finials All four are approximately similar in size and 14 10 3 ratio about 42 7 metres 140 ft high 30 5 metres 100 ft wide and 9 1 metres 30 ft deep 66 Artwork on the gopuram Edit Nataraja Temple gopuram artwork in Chidambaram Tamil Nadu Each gopuram is colorful and unique in its own ways They narrate stories from various Hindu texts showing religious and secular scenes from the various Hindu traditions This art is presented in each gopuram with anthropomorphic figure panels and about fifty niches with stone sculptures in every gopuram 65 66 The scenes include multiple panels about the legend of Shiva Parvati wedding with Brahma Vishnu Saraswati and Lakshmi attending dancing Ganesha Shiva in his various aspects Durga in the middle of her war with a demon Skanda ready for war seated Nandi musicians dancers farmers merchants sadhu in namaste posture dancing dvarapalas near the vertical center line and others The artists and architects who built these gopura may have had a rationale in the relative sequence and position of the artwork with respect to each other and on various levels but this is unclear and a subject of disagreement among scholars 65 69 70 The artwork on gopuram showing Parvati Shiva Kalyanasundara wedding legend Near the newly weds are Saraswati Lakshmi Vishnu and others The earliest built western gopuram is the only one with inscriptions below each artwork that identifies what it is The artwork on it includes Durga fighting the evil shape shifting buffalo demon and Skanda sitting on peacock and dressed up for war 66 Other artwork found on the eastern gopuram include Surya Ganapati Vishnu Sridevi Lakshmi Tripura Sundari Brahma Saraswati Varuna Durga Agni several rishis Yamuna goddess Kama and Rati Budha the Vedic sages such as Narada and Agastya Pantanjali Somaskanda legend Ardhanarishvara half Shiva half Parvati Harihara half Vishnu half Shiva several forms of dancing Shiva and others 71 The surviving south gopuram called the Sokkaseeyan Thirunilai Ezhugopuram was constructed by a Pandya king identified from the presence of the dynasty s fish emblem sculpted on the ceiling The Pandyas sculpted two fishes facing each other when they completed gopurams and left it with one fish in case it was incomplete 72 Other artwork found on the southern gopuram include Chandesha Ganapati Vishnu Sridevi Lakshmi several Devis Brahma Saraswati Surya Chandra Durga Indra Agni several rishis Ganga and Yamuna goddesses Kama and Rati Budha the Vedic sages such as Narada Pantanjali Somaskanda legend Ardhanarishvara half Shiva half Parvati Harihara half Vishnu half Shiva several forms of dancing and standing Shiva such as Pashupata Kiratarjuna and Lingobhava as well as others 71 The eastern gopura wall shows all 108 dance postures from the Natya Shastra 73 The other gopuras also have dance images 74 The eastern gopuram features the 108 reliefs of Natya Shastra dance postures 22 cm each in a separate niche and faces the sanctum 75 76 The eastern gopuram is credited to king Koperunsingan II 1243 1279 CE as per epigraphical records 77 and was repaired with support from a woman named Subbammal in the late 18th century The northern gopuram was repaired and finished by the Vijayanagara king Krishnadevaraya 1509 1530 CE in the 16th century 41 The eastern and northern gopura also depicts the wide range of narratives as the southern and western gopuram 71 The idols of Pachaiappa Mudaliar and his wife Iyalammal have been sculpted on the eastern gopuram The Pachaiappa Trust to date has been responsible for various functions in the temple and also maintain the temple car The eastern gopuram is renowned for its complete enumeration of 108 poses of Indian classical dance Bharathanatyam detailed in small rectangular panels along the passage that leads to the gateway Shrines Edit The Chidambaram temple complex includes gopura vimana and the sacred pool The temple complex has many shrines most related to Shaivism but elements of Vaishnavism and Shaktism are included The innermost structures such as the sanctum and the shrines all have square plans but the gateways do not align except the innermost two courtyards 65 66 Shaivism Edit The sanctum of the temple is set inside the innermost 1st prakara which is a square with about 44 metres 144 ft side This prakara is offset towards the west inside the 2nd prakara which is also a square with about 105 metres 344 ft side 65 The Shiva sanctum is unusual as it does not have a Shivalinga rather it has the Chit Sabha consciousness gathering also called chit ambalam with an image of Shiva Nataraja This introspective empty space has a curtained space that is 3 5 meter long and 1 5 meter wide It is called the rahasya secret in Hindu texts It consists of two layers one red the other black According to George Michell this is a symbolism in Hinduism of enlightenment inside illusion outside It is replaced on the tenth day of the main festivals 78 The Chidambaram Rahasya is the formless representation of Shiva as the metaphysical Brahman in Hinduism sometimes explained as akasha linga and divine being same as Self Atman that is everywhere in everything eternally 79 80 81 Facing the Chit Sabha is the Kanaka Sabha also called pon ambalam or the gathering of dancers These two sanctum spaces are connected by five silver gilded steps called the panchakshara The ceiling of the Chit Sabha is made of wooden pillars coated with gold while copper coats the Kanaka Sabha is copper colored 82 Durga in the Shivakama Sundari shrine in her Mahishasuramardini form killing the buffalo demon below her foot Shaktism Edit The main Devi shrine in the Nataraja temple complex is offset towards the north of the sanctum inside the third prakara and found to the west of the Shivaganga pool It is called the Shivakama Sundari shrine dedicated to Parvati The temple faces east and has an embedded square plan though the stacked squares created a long rectangular space The shrine has its own walls and an entrance gateway gopura Inside is the dedicated mandapas and brightly colored frescoes likely from the 17th century Vijayanagara period 83 These narrate the story of Shiva and Vishnu together challenging the learned sages ascetics and their wives in the forest by appearing in the form of a beautiful beggar that dances bhikshatanamurti and a beautiful girl that seduces Mohini respectively Another set of frescoes are secular depicting temple festivities and daily life of people while a stretch narrates the story of Hindu saints named Manikkavachakar and Mukunda 84 85 The shrine had artwork narrating the Devi Mahatmya a classic Sanskrit text of Shaktism tradition However in 1972 these were removed given their dilapidated state These were replaced with a different story 86 Other parts of the paintings and shrine also show great damage 87 The sanctum of the Shivakama Sundari shrine is dedicated to Devi where she is Shiva s knowledge jnana shakti desire iccha sakti action kriya sakti and compassion karuna sakti 88 The oldest Shivakama Sundari sculpture at the site representing these aspects of the goddess has been dated to the king Parantaka I period about 950 CE 88 Vaishnavism Edit Main article Govindaraja Perumal Temple The Nataraja temple complex incorporates Vaishnava themes and images like many Hindu temples in South India A Vishnu shrine for example is found inside the sanctum of the temple in its southwest corner According to George Michell and others Chola kings revered Shiva with Tyagaraja and Nataraja their family deity yet their urban Shaiva centers echo a very strong substratum of Vaishnava traditions This historic inclusiveness is reflected in Chidambaram with Vishnu Govindaraja in the same sanctum home by the side of Nataraja 89 After the turmoil of the 14th century when the temple was attacked and looted there was period when some priests sought to restore only Shaiva iconography according to extant Portuguese Jesuit records However the Vijayanagara rulers insisted on the re consecration of all historic traditions 90 The temple inscriptions confirm that Vishnu was included along with Shiva in the temple s earliest version and was reinstalled when the temple was reopened by the Vijayanagara kings 91 92 Some texts from the time of king Kulottunga II give conflicting reports wherein the Shaiva texts state that the king removed the Vishnu image while Vaishnava texts state that they took it away and installed it in Tirupati sometime about 1135 CE The scholar Vedanta Desika re established the co consecration in 1370 CE about the time Vijayanagara Empire conquered Chidambaram and northern Tamil lands from the Madurai Sultanate 91 The current shrine states Michell is from 1539 financed by king Achyutaraya and it features a reclining figure of Vishnu 92 The Govindaraja shrine is one of the 108 holy temples of Vishnu called divyadesam revered by the 7th to 9th century saint poets of Vaishnava tradition Alwars 93 Kulashekhara Alwar mentions this temple as Tillai Chitrakutam and equates Chitrakuta of Ramayana fame with this shrine 94 The shrine has close connections with the Govindaraja temple in Tirupati dating back to saint Ramanuja of the 11th and 12th centuries 95 96 The circumambulation paths in shrines the mandapa s moulded plinth and the pilgrim hall pillars of the Nataraja temple are carved with reliefs showing dancers and musicians Others Edit The Nataraja temple has a pre 13th century Surya shrine The image is unusual as it depicts a three headed Surya same as Brahma Shiva and Vishnu with eight hands holding iconographic items of these deities along with two lotuses in a pair of hands in front accompanied by two small female figures possibly Usha and Pratyusha standing on a chariot drawn by seven horses and Aruna as charioteer 97 98 The temple also has a significant shrine for Ganesha in the southwest corner and a Subrahmanyar shrine in the northwest corner of the third courtyard 11 12 Halls sabha Edit The temple has many halls called sabha lit community gathering also called ambalams or sabhai inside the complex Two of these are the Chit Sabha and the Kanaka Sabha inside the sanctum area of the Nataraja shrine described earlier 82 The other halls are Nritta sabha Edit Nrithya sabha also called Nritta Sabha Natya sabha or Hall of Dance is a so called 56 pillared hall It is in the south section of the second courtyard that circumambulates the Nataraja sanctum of the complex This second courtyard is near the temple s flag mast kodi maram or dwaja sthambam The 13th century Nritta Sabha is traditionally considered as the place where Shiva and Kali originally entered into a dance competition 99 Shiva won with the urdhva tandava pose that raised his right leg straight up a posture that Kali refused because she was a woman The hall is rectangular consisting of three stacked squares a 15 meter sided square that is the main hall which is connected to 4 meters by 8 meters rectangular mukha mandapa to its north The hall now has 50 pillars but evidence suggests that it may have had 56 or more pillars earlier 99 These pillars are intricately carved from top to bottom The lower levels have dancers in Natya Shastra mudras accompanied with expressive musicians as if both are enjoying creating the music and the dance The pillars also have embedded narratives of legends from Hindu texts such as of Durga fighting the buffalo demon as well as humorous dwarfs frolicking Below the kapota the structures show reliefs of seated people many in namaste posture some with a beard and yogi like appearance representing saints and rishis Nearly 200 of these are still visible rest appear to have been damaged or eroded over time 99 100 The Nritta Sabha platform s base is carved as a chariot with horses and wheels as if it is rising out the ground Historic texts state that the wheels were exquisitely carved and visible in the past each about 1 25 meter diameter with 28 spokes and 33 medallions the chariot had 1 55 meter high 5 1 ft ornamented horses on the wheel was a seated rishi as if he was guiding the movement Only remnants of this structure remains now 101 The northern niche of the hall is carved with 14 figures in addition to Shiva as Kanakamurti The Shiva image had been damaged and is now restored The 14 figures include Surya sun god Chandra moon god and 12 rishis of which Narada and Tumburu with Vina can be identified the others have been too damaged to identify but are likely Vedic rishis Near them are women in seductive postures some nudes likely the wives of the rishis 101 Next to the northern niche with Shiva are two smaller niches one for Patanjali seated on coiled serpent and another for bald headed Vyaghrapada the two mythical Chidambaram saints The western wall also has a niche with a large Shiva image in his Vrisabhantika form Once again rishis are with him this time in namaste posture A few figures are dressed royally like warriors and these may be representation of the Chola kings 100 101 The hall s center is an open square with an ornate inverted lotus ceiling decoration 102 Around this lotus are 108 coffers each with two human figures in namaste posture all oriented to be along the north south axis likely to suggest the direction to performance artists who would perform live and aligning themselves to the chit sabha in the sanctum 102 Carved pillars in a temple hall The damaged 1 000 pillar hall Raja sabha 1 000 pillar hall Edit Raja sabha or the 1000 pillared hall is to the east of the Shivaganga pool in the northeast part of the third courtyard A pillared pathway from the eastern gopuram leads to it It was a choultry for pilgrims with a convenient access to the pool The hall s lower mouldings have dance mudras and medieval era musical instruments being played by musicians The pillars have reliefs It is now kept closed except for festivals Shatasila sabha 100 pillar hall Edit This is northwest of the sanctum south of the Devi shrine It is badly damaged and closed to public Deva sabha Edit Deva Sabhai is on the eastern side of the second courtyard It is called Perampalam literally Great Hall in the inscriptions which suggests that it is an early structure and was historically important 103 According to Nanda and Michell this may be the hall where Shaiva bhakti saints Nayanars came and sang hymns It may also have hosted royal visits during the Chola era times 103 The Deva sabha divine gathering hall houses the temple s revered collection of historic bronze sculptures and modern era frescoes One of the paintings show Parvati seated in a chair watching the Nrtta sabha hall 104 Temple tanks Edit Sacred pool sketched in the 1870s It is locally called the Sivaganga ச வகங க The Chidambaram temple is well endowed with several water bodies within and around the temple complex Sivaganga tank 105 is in the third corridor of the temple opposite to the shrine of Shivagami It is accessed by flights of stone steps leading from the shrine 106 Paramanandha koobham is the well on the eastern side of the Chitsabha hall from which water is drawn for sacred purposes 107 Temple Tank in Nataraja Temple Chidambaram Kuyya theertham is situated to the north east of Chidambaram in Killai near the Bay of Bengal and has the shore called Pasamaruthanthurai 107 Pulimedu is situated around a kilometer and a half to the south of Chidambaram 107 Vyagrapatha Theertham is situated on to the west of the temple opposite to the temple of Ilamai Akkinaar 107 Anantha Theertham is situated to the west of the temple in front of the Anantheswarar temple 107 Nagaseri tank is situated to the west of the Anantha thirtham 107 Brahma Theertham is situated to the north west of the temple at Thirukalaanjeri 107 Underground channels at the shrine drain excess water in a northeasterly direction to the Shivapriyai temple tank of the Thillai Kali Temple Chidambaram Due to poor maintenance it has not been in use 108 Thiruparkadal is the tank to the south east of the Shivapriyai tank 107 Inscriptions Edit Even though the history of the temple goes back to the Prabhandas and Tevaram that is the Pallava period the earliest known inscriptions are only that of Rajendra Chola and Kulothunga I followed by Vikrama Chola and other later rulers 109 The Nataraja temple inscriptions are notable for mentioning a library of manuscripts in temple premises 110 Two inscriptions dated to the early 13th century mention re organization of old temple library According to Hartmut Scharfe the older library mentioned may date to the early 12th century 110 The inscriptions states Scharfe recite that the temple employed twenty librarians of which eight copied old manuscripts to create new editions two verified the copy matched the original and four managed the proper storage of the manuscripts 110 There are many Chola inscriptions in the temple both in Tamil and Sanskrit 111 These are attributed to Rajendra Chola I 1012 1044 CE Kulothunga Chola I 1070 1120 CE Vikrama Chola 1118 1135 CE Rajadhiraja Chola II 1163 1178 CE Kulothunga Chola III 1178 1218 CE and Rajaraja Chola III 1216 1256 CE 109 Pandya inscriptions date from Thribhuvana Chakravarthi Veerapandiyan Jataavarman Thribhuvana Chakravarthi Sundarapaandiyan 1251 1268 CE and Maaravarman Thribhuvana Chakravarthi Veerakeralanaagiya Kulashekara Pandiyan 1268 1308 CE Pallava inscriptions are available for king Avani Aala Pirandhaan Ko pperum Singha 1216 1242 CE Vijayanagara Kings mentioned in inscriptions are Veeraprathaapa Kiruttina Theva Mahaaraayar 1509 1529 CE Veeraprathaapa Venkata Deva Mahaaraayar Sri Ranga Theva Mahaaraayar Atchyutha Deva Mahaaraayar 1529 1542 CE and Veera Bhooopathiraayar One of the inscriptions from the descendant of Cheramaan Perumal nayanar Ramavarma Maharaja has been found Temple Car Edit The temple car of Natraja used during festival processions An 1820 painting of Nataraja in a temple chariot The Chidambaram temple car is used for processions twice a year where it is drawn by several thousand devotees during the festivals 112 There are five temple cars with the biggest one for Lord Nataraja The main deity in the sanctum santorum will be taken out on the procession unlike the other temples where Utsava idols are generally taken out The four feet idols of Lord Nataraja and Goddess Shivakama Sundari adorned with precious gem studded jewellery and flowers are taken out of the main sanctum amidst a grand number of devotees in a golden platforms Fifties of men hold the huge wooden log connected to the platform making a circumbulation around the Chitsaba before being taken out to the temple car After the procession across four car streets the deities are taken in a similar fashion to the Rajasabha at night where Laksharchana happens chanting the 1000 names of Lord Nataraja by 100 priests laksha 1 lakh The next day before dawn the deities are bathed with holy products Unlike other temples the holy bathing ritual goes for 4 5 hours which consists of several products like milk holy ash turmeric curd honey rose water sugarcane juice fruits flowers coconut water For every Mahabisheka during Margazhi festival Swarnabhisheka is done bath with golden coins After abisheka Lord Nataraja and Goddess Shivakama Sundari offers ROYAL DARSHAN to devotees in the Rajasabha the royal hall Around late afternoon the deities are taken inside temple in a grandeur manner which forms the prime Arudhra Darshan Margazhi festival or Uttra Darshan Aani Thirumanjanam festival These two annual festivals coincidence with Winter and Summer solstice of Northern Hemisphere respectively Significance of the architecture Edit The temple sanctum contains a silver sculpture of Shiva in his Ananda taṇḍava Nataraja aspect It signifies The demon under Lord Nataraja s feet signifies that ignorance is under His feet 113 The fire in His hand power of destruction means He is the destroyer of evil 113 The raised hand Abhaya or Pataka mudra signifies that He is the savior of all life forms 113 The arc of fire called Thiruvashi or Prabhavati signifies the cosmos and the perpetual motion of the earth The drum in His hand signifies the origin of life forms 113 114 The lotus pedestal signifies Om the sound of the universe His right eye left eye and third eye signify the sun moon and fire knowledge respectively His right earring makara kundalam and left earring sthri kundalam signify the union of man and woman right is man left is woman The crescent moon in His hair signifies benevolence and beauty 113 The flowing of river Ganges through His matted hair signifies eternity of life The dreading of His hair and drape signify the force of His dance 113 Bhakti movement Edit There is no reference to the temple in Sangam literature of the 1st to 5th centuries and the earliest mention is found in 6th century Tamil literature 115 The temple and the deity were immortalized in Tamil poetry in the works of Thevaram by three poet saints belonging to the 7th century Thirugnana Sambanthar Thirunavukkarasar and Sundaramoorthy Nayanar 116 Thirugnana Sambanthar has composed 2 songs in praise of the temple Thirunavukkarasar aka Appar 8 Tevarams in praise of Nataraja and Sundarar 1 song in praise of Nataraja Sundarar commences his Thiruthondar thogai the sacred list of Lord Shiva s 63 devotees paying his respects to the priests of the Thillai temple To the devotees of the priests at Thillai I am a devotee The works of the first three saints Thirumurai were stored in palm leaf manuscripts in the temple and were recovered by the Chola King Rajaraja Chola 75 under the guidance of Nambiandarnambi Manikkavasagar the 10th century saivite poet has written two works the first called Tiruvasakam The sacred utterances which largely has been sung in Chidambaram and the Thiruchitrambalakkovaiyar aka Thirukovaiyar which has been sung entirely in the temple Manikkavasagar is said to have attained spiritual bliss at Chidambaram The Chidambaram Mahatmiyam composed during the 12th century explain the subsequent evolution and de sanskritization 115 Rituals EditA unique feature of this temple is the bejeweled image of Lord Nataraja as the main deity It depicts Lord Shiva as the master of Koothu Bharata Natyam and is one of the few temples where Lord Shiva is represented by an anthropomorphic murthi rather than the classic aniconic Lingam At Chidambaram the dancer dominates not the linga as in other Shiva shrines The Chitsabha houses a small spatik crystal linga Chandramoulisvara believed to be a piece that fell from the crescent adorning Lord Shiva s head and installed by Adi Shankara Daily puja is offered to the spatik linga six times and also to a small emerald figure of Nataraja called Ratnasabhapati once at 10 30 am The main sanctum also encloses Chidambara Rahasya the divine chakra adorned with golden vilva leaves This remains hidden and only during the pooja times six times in a day Rahasya Darshan will be offered to the devotees Rahasya emanates the vastness and formlessness of Akash the divinity that is the highest form of Supremacy ether form of five elements Festivals Edit Natyanjali Festival in the temple A whole year for men is said to be a single day for the gods Just as six poojas are performed in a day at the sanctum sanctorum six anointing ceremonies are performed for the principal deity Nataraja in a year They are the Marghazhi Thiruvaadhirai in December January indicating the first puja the fourteenth day after the new moon Chaturdashi of the month of Masi February March indicating the second pooja the Chittirai Thiruvonam in April May indicating the third pooja or uchikalam the Uthiram of Aani June July also called the Aani Thirumanjanam indicating the evening or the fourth puja the chaturdasi of Aavani August September indicating the fifth puja and the chaturdasi of the month of Puratasi October November indicating the sixth pooja or Arthajama Of these the Marghazhi Thiruvaadhirai in December January and the Aani Thirumanjanam in June July are the most important These are conducted as the key festivals with the main deity being brought outside the sanctum sanctorum in a procession that included a temple car procession followed by a long anointing ceremony 117 Several hundreds of thousands of people flock the temple to see the anointing ceremony and the ritualistic dance of Shiva when he is taken back to the sanctum sanctorum Lord Shiva in his incarnation of Nataraja is believed to have born on full moon day in the constellation of Ardra the sixth lunar mansion Lord Shiva is bathed only 6 times a year and on the previous night of Ardra the bath rituals are performed on a grand scale 118 Pots full of milk pomegranate juices coconut water ghee oil sandal paste curds holy ashes and other liquids and solids considered as sacred offering to the deity are used for the sacred ablution 118 Administration EditThe temple was originally administered by an exclusive group of Brahmins who were called the Thillai Muvayiravar or the Three Thousand of Thillai Kulottunga Chola I during his rule introduced priests from Vengi his original homeland to perpetuate the myth of the Tillai three thousand in order to legitimize his royal and priestly power 119 Currently the temple is managed by a community known as Dikshitars They live in Chidambaram and also serve as the hereditary trustees of the temple 120 Every Dikshitar once he is married becomes as of right a trustee and archaka of the temple A practice unique to the community is that the priests wear the tuft of hair in front of the head similar to the Nambuthiri Brahmans of Kerala 121 See also EditGovindaraja Perumal Temple Mahabalipuram SrirangamNotes Edit Dance and performance arts are not unique to Shiva in Hindu texts including the Tamil literature Many other deities including Vishnu Durga Krishna Ganesha Kartikeya are all envisioned as dancers amongst other things However with Shiva the idea is most evolved 31 Sharada Srinivasan states that the Nataraja bronze has roots in 7th to 9th century Pallava innovations 32 References Edit a b c Karen Pechilis Prentiss 2000 The Embodiment of Bhakti Oxford University Press pp 100 101 ISBN 978 0 19 535190 3 B Natarajan Balasubrahmanyan Ramachandran 1994 Tillai and Nataraja Mudgala Trust pp 24 255 257 473 474 Quote A local Sanskrit inscription found on the eastern wall E Hultsch 1983 South Indian Inscriptions Tamil inscriptions of Rajaraja Rajendra Chola and others in the Rajarajesvara Temple at Tanjavur Government Press p 231 a b Constance Jones James D Ryan 2006 Encyclopedia of Hinduism Infobase Publishing p 107 ISBN 978 0 8160 7564 5 a b c Pal 1988 p 19 a b c d James G Lochtefeld 2002 The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hinduism A M The Rosen Publishing Group p 147 ISBN 978 0 8239 3179 8 Donald Frederick Lakh Edwin J Van Kley 1993 South Asia University of Chicago Press pp 1002 1003 ISBN 978 0 226 46754 2 a b c Chidambaram Encyclopaedia Britannica a b Harle 1994 pp 292 304 311 313 Harle 1994 p 321 a b Harle 1994 pp 321 323 a b Pal 1988 p 36 Ca Ve 1985 Tracy Pintchman 2007 Women s Lives Women s Rituals in the Hindu Tradition Oxford University Press pp 194 195 ISBN 978 0 19 803934 1 Reddy 2013 p 10 T A Gopinatha Rao Kalyan Kumar Dasgupta 1971 Elements of Hindu iconography Volume 1 Part 1 pp 43 Rajarajan R K K 2018 If this is Citambaram Nataraja then where is Tillai Kuttaṉ An Introspective Reading of Tevaram Hymns History Culture and Archaeological Studies Recent Trends Commemoration Volume to Prof M L K Murthy Vol II 613 634 B Natarajan 1974 The city of the cosmic dance Chidambaram Orient Longman p 14 R Ponnammal 108 Thennaga Shivasthalangal in Tamil Giri Trading Agency Private Limited pp 24 35 ISBN 978 81 7950 707 0 Ayyar 1993 p 204 Sakkottai Krishnaswami Aiyangar 1991 South India and Her Muhammadan Invaders Asian Educational Services pp 108 109 ISBN 978 81 206 0536 7 Urban Infrastructure report 2008 Conversion of City Corporate Plan into Business Plan PDF Report Tamil Nadu Urban Infrastructure Financial Services Limited p 23 Chidambaram railway routes Navlinks Indian Railways 2017 John Loud 2004 The Rituals of Chidambaram Institute of Asian Studies pp 7 8 ISBN 978 81 87892 20 5 Pal 1988 p 262 a b c Hermann Kulke Dietmar Rothermund 2004 A History of India Routledge p 145 ISBN 978 0 415 32920 0 Michell George 1988 The Hindu Temple An Introduction to Its Meaning and Forms Chicago University of Chicago Press pp 145 148 ISBN 0 226 53230 5 Thanjavur Encyclopaedia Britannica S R Balasubrahmanyam 1971 pp 287 305 Michell George 2017 Badami Aihole Pattadakal Jaico Reprinted Orig Year 2011 pp 92 93 101 105 ISBN 978 81 8495 600 9 S R Balasubrahmanyam 1971 pp 288 289 Srinivasan Sharada 2004 Shiva as cosmic dancer On Pallava origins for the Nataraja bronze World Archaeology Informa UK Limited 36 3 432 450 doi 10 1080 1468936042000282726821 S2CID 26503807 Dehejia 1990 pp 97 101 S R Balasubrahmanyam 1971 p 3 S R Balasubrahmanyam 1971 pp 3 19 a b c Culter 1987 p 50 a b Cort 1998 p 178 a b Vasudevan 2003 pp 109 110 Hermann Kulke Dietmar Rothermund 2004 A History of India Routledge p 125 ISBN 978 0 415 32920 0 S R Balasubrahmanyam 1979 p 23 a b c Dehejia 1990 pp 99 101 a b S R Balasubrahmanyam 1971 pp 300 302 Harle 1994 pp 321 326 with figures 252 256 Michell 1995 pp 9 10 Quote The era under consideration opens with an unprecedented calamity for Southern India the invasion of the region at the turn of the fourteenth century by Malik Kafur general of Alauddin Sultan of Delhi Malik Kafur s forces brought to an abrupt end all of the indigenous ruling houses of Southern India not one of which was able to withstand the assault or outlive the conquest Virtually every city of importance in the Kannada Telugu and Tamil zones succumbed to the raids of Malik Kafur forts were destroyed palaces dismantled and temple sanctuaries wrecked in the search for treasure In order to consolidate the rapidly won gains of this pillage Malik Kafur established himself in 1323 at Madurai Madura in the southernmost part of the Tamil zone former capital of the Pandyas who were dislodged by the Delhi forces Madurai thereupon became the capital of the Ma bar Malabar province of the Delhi empire Carl W Ernst 2004 Eternal Garden Mysticism History and Politics at a South Asian Sufi Center Oxford University Press p 109 ISBN 978 0 19 566869 8 Sarojini Chaturvedi 2006 A short history of South India Saṁskṛiti p 209 ISBN 978 81 87374 37 4 Abraham Eraly 2015 The Age of Wrath A History of the Delhi Sultanate Penguin Books pp 155 156 ISBN 978 93 5118 658 8 Vidya Dehejia 2007 p 22 Job Thomas 1986 Tiruvengadu Bronzes Cre A pp 18 19 ISBN 9780836420821 a b R Nagaswamy 1987 Archaeological Finds in South India Esalam Bronzes and Copper plates Bulletin de l Ecole francaise d Extreme Orient Vol 76 No 1 pp 1 68 a b George Michell 1993 Temple Towns of Tamil Nadu Marg Publications pp 4 8 95 96 ISBN 978 81 85026 21 3 Michell 1995 pp 14 78 81 158 Donald Frederick Lach Edwin J Van Kley 1998 Asia in the Making of Europe University of Chicago Press pp 1000 1004 ISBN 978 0 226 46767 2 Michell 1995 pp 220 221 Arnold Wright 1914 Southern India Its History People Commerce and Industrial Resources Asian Educational Services pp 462 463 495 496 ISBN 978 81 206 1344 7 Anand 2004 pp 149 152 Tourist guide to Tamil Nadu 2007 Tourist guide to Tamil Nadu Chennai T Krishna Press p 53 ISBN 978 81 7478 177 2 a b Narayanaswami April 1987 Jyothirmaya Mahalingam Om Sakthi in Tamil Coimbatore Om Sakthi Publications 34 5 மர த த வர க ல சம ச ப ரமண யம நவ ப ல ய ர த ர த தல தர சனம த னமண 22 நவம பர 2019 த ல ல ப ர ம ன ல உபத ச க கப பட ட நவப ல ய ர தர சனம ம ட ச ய த த ர ச த தர ப ம Catherine Ella Blanshard Asher Thomas R Metcalf 1994 Perceptions of South Asia s visual past American Institute of Indian Studies New Delhi Swadharma Swarajya Sangha Madras and Oxford amp IBH Pub Co p 182 a b Sahai Surendra 2006 Indian Architecture Hindu Buddhist and Jain Prakash Books p 113 Vivek Nanda George Michell 2004 Chidambaram Home of Nataraja Marg pp 1 17 ISBN 978 81 85026 64 0 Dehejia 1990 pp 97 105 a b c d e f g h Vivek Nanda George Michell 2004 Chidambaram Home of Nataraja Marg pp 12 14 ISBN 978 81 85026 64 0 a b c d e f g h Dehejia 1990 pp 101 105 Dehejia 1990 p 101 Barrett Douglas 1964 James C Harle Temple gateways in South India the architecture and iconography of the Cidambaram gopuras Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies Cambridge University Press 27 2 462 463 doi 10 1017 s0041977x00096063 S2CID 162883647 Dehejia 1990 pp 101 106 with figures James C Harle 1995 Temple Gateways in South India The Architecture and Iconography of the Cidambaram Gopuras Oxford University Press Reprinted Munshiram Manoharlal pp 91 92 ISBN 978 81 215 0666 3 a b c Gerd Mevissen 2004 Vivek Nanda George Michell eds Chidambaram Home of Nataraja Marg pp 86 87 ISBN 978 81 85026 64 0 Encyclopaedia Britannica India 2000 p 64 James C Harle 1995 Temple Gateways in South India The Architecture and Iconography of the Cidambaram Gopuras Oxford University Press Reprinted Munshiram Manoharlal p 52 ISBN 978 81 215 0666 3 Gerd Mevissen 2004 Vivek Nanda George Michell eds Chidambaram Home of Nataraja Marg p 91 with figure 12 ISBN 978 81 85026 64 0 a b Soundara Rajan 2001 National Geographic 2008 p 268 Southern Circle 1903 p 5 George Michell 1993 Temple Towns of Tamil Nadu Marg Publications p 68 ISBN 978 81 85026 21 3 Karen Pechilis 2013 Interpreting Devotion The Poetry and Legacy of a Female Bhakti Saint of India Routledge pp 228 footnote 51 ISBN 978 1 136 50705 2 B R Rajam Aiyar 1996 Rambles in Vedanta Motilal Banarsidass pp 510 512 ISBN 978 81 208 0912 3 Michael Brand 1995 The Vision of Kings Art and Experience in India National Gallery of Australia pp 24 25 ISBN 978 0 642 13039 6 a b Vivek Nanda George Michell 2004 Chidambaram Home of Nataraja Marg pp 15 55 58 ISBN 978 81 85026 64 0 Michell 1995 pp 220 223 George Michell 2013 Southern India A Guide to Monuments Sites amp Museums Roli Books p 374 ISBN 978 81 7436 903 1 Michell 1995 pp 222 233 Michell 1995 pp 222 223 David Smith 2003 The Dance of Siva Religion Art and Poetry in South India Cambridge University Press p 34 ISBN 978 0 521 52865 8 a b David Smith 2003 The Dance of Siva Religion Art and Poetry in South India Cambridge University Press pp 99 135 138 2 ISBN 978 0 521 52865 8 Vivek Nanda George Michell 2004 Chidambaram Home of Nataraja Marg pp 125 126 ISBN 978 81 85026 64 0 T B Balusubramanyan 1961 Chidambaram in Vijayanagara Days Journal of the Bombay Historical Society Vol IV pages 40 53 a b Ayyar 1993 pp 227 228 242 a b Michell 1995 p 79 Sundararajan 2003 p 263 Dubey 1996 p 51 Husken 2009 p 197 Aiyangar 1991 pp 217 221 Vivek Nanda George Michell 2004 Chidambaram Home of Nataraja Marg p 89 ISBN 978 81 85026 64 0 H K Sastri 2003 Indian Images Of Gods And Goddesses Bharatiya Kala Prakashan p 67 ISBN 978 81 86050 99 6 a b c Gerd Mevissen 2002 R Nagaswamy ed Foundations of Indian Art Tamil Arts Academy pp 61 63 a b Gerd Mevissen 1996 Chidambaram N ttasabha Architektur Ikonographie und Symbolik in German Berliner Indologische Studien 9 10 pp 345 384 a b c Gerd Mevissen 2002 R Nagaswamy ed Foundations of Indian Art Tamil Arts Academy pp 62 63 a b Gerd Mevissen 2002 R Nagaswamy ed Foundations of Indian Art Tamil Arts Academy pp 63 64 a b Vivek Nanda George Michell 2004 Chidambaram Home of Nataraja Marg pp 15 16 ISBN 978 81 85026 64 0 David Smith 2003 The Dance of Siva Religion Art and Poetry in South India Cambridge University Press pp 99 100 ISBN 978 0 521 52865 8 Rajarajan R K K 2016 Tirukkuḷam or Teppakkuḷam of South India Jalavastu Pandanus 16 Nature in Literature Art Myth and Ritual 10 2 83 104 Dehejia 1990 p 100 a b c d e f g h Caṇmukam Meyyappan 1992 pp 21 22 C P Ramaswami Aiyar Foundation C P R Environmental Education Centre 2002 Sacred tanks of South India pp 53 OCLC number 56597817 a b P V Jagadisa Ayyar 1982 South Indian Shrines Illustrated Asian Educational Services p 221 a b c Hartmut Scharfe 2002 Education in Ancient India Handbook of Oriental Studies Series BRILL pp 183 184 ISBN 90 04 12556 6 Jack Finegan 1989 An Archaeological History of Religions of Indian Asia Paragon p 170 ISBN 978 0 913729 43 4 V Shanmuganathan 2014 A Remarkable Political Journey Prabhat Prakashan p 121 ISBN 9788184302578 a b c d e f Storl 2004 p 140 Subramuniyaswami 2004 p 848 a b Kulke 2004 p 145 Jones 2007 p 107 Let s Go Inc 2004 p 597 a b Sastri 2002 pp 2 9 Rajeshwari Ghose 1996 The Tyagaraja Cult in Tamilnadu A Study in Conflict and Accommodation Motilal Banarsidass Publishers Private Limited p 288 B Natarajan 1974 The city of the cosmic dance Chidambaram Volume 2 of Southern art series Orient Longman p 128 Viravanallur Gopalier Ramakrishna Ayyar 1946 The Economy of a South Indian Temple Sankara Parvati Prize Essay of the Madras University Annamalai University p 50 Bibliography EditBajwa Jagir Singh Ravinder Kaur 2007 Tourism Management New Delhi S B Nangia ISBN 978 81 313 0047 3 Prasanna Kumar Acharya 2010 An encyclopaedia of Hindu architecture Oxford University Press Republished by Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 7536 534 6 Prasanna Kumar Acharya 1997 A Dictionary of Hindu Architecture Treating of Sanskrit Architectural Terms with Illustrative Quotations Oxford University Press Reprinted in 1997 by Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 7536 113 3 S R Balasubrahmanyam 1971 Early Chola Temples Orient Longman OCLC 221943844 S R Balasubrahmanyam 1979 Later Chola Temples Thomson Press OCLC 6921015 Vinayak Bharne Krupali Krusche 2014 Rediscovering the Hindu Temple The Sacred Architecture and Urbanism of India Cambridge Scholars Publishing ISBN 978 1 4438 6734 4 Alice Boner 1990 Principles of Composition in Hindu Sculpture Cave Temple Period Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 0705 1 Alice Boner Sadasiva Rath Sarma 2005 Silpa Prakasa Brill Academic Reprinted by Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120820524 A K Coomaraswamy Michael W Meister 1995 Essays in Architectural Theory Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts ISBN 978 0 19 563805 9 Dehejia V 1997 Indian Art Phaidon London ISBN 0 7148 3496 3 Adam Hardy 1995 Indian Temple Architecture Form and Transformation Abhinav Publications ISBN 978 81 7017 312 0 Adam Hardy 2007 The Temple Architecture of India Wiley ISBN 978 0470028278 Adam Hardy 2015 Theory and Practice of Temple Architecture in Medieval India Bhoja s Samaraṅgaṇasutradhara and the Bhojpur Line Drawings 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1800 By Los Angeles County Museum of Art University of California Press ISBN 9780520064775 G Vanmikanathan 1971 Pathway to God through Tamil literature Volume 1 Delhi Tamil Sangam Publication Pillai M Rajamanickam 1964 The development of Saivism in South India A D 300 1300 Dharmapuram Adhinam Ramaswamy Vijaya 2007 Historical dictionary of the Tamils United States Scarecrow Press INC ISBN 978 0 470 82958 5 Reddy G Venkatramana 2013 Alayam The Hindu temple An epitome of Hindu Culture Mylapore Chennai Sri Ramakrishna Math p 31 ISBN 978 81 7823 542 4 Knapp Stephen 2005 The Heart of Hinduism The Eastern Path to Freedom Empowerment and Illumination NE iUniverse ISBN 978 0 595 35075 9 M K V Narayan 2007 Flipside of Hindu Symbolism Sociological and Scientific Linkages in Hinduism California Fultus Corporation ISBN 978 1 59682 117 0 Kamalabaskaran Iswari 1994 The light of Arunachaleswarar Affiliated East West Press Pvt Ltd Spear Heidi 2011 The Everything Guide to Chakra Healing Use Your Body s 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equatorial electrojet Amsterdam Overseas Publishers Association ISBN 90 5699 069 1 Encyclopaedia Britannica India 2000 Students Britannica India Volumes 1 5 Hong Kong Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc ISBN 0 85229 760 2 Southern Circle 1903 Epigraphy Madras Archaeological Survey of India Dehejia Vidya 1990 Art of the imperial Cholas USA Columbia University Press ISBN 0 231 07188 4 Vidya Dehejia 2007 Chola Sacred Bronzed of Southern India Harry N Abrams ISBN 978 1 903973 83 7 Caṇmukam Meyyappan 1992 Chidambaram Golden Temple Manivasagar Pathippagam Sastri Natesa S M Natesa Sastri 2003 Hindu feasts fasts and ceremonies New Delhi Asian Educational Services ISBN 81 206 0402 4 Kodayanallur Vanamamalai Soundara Rajan 2001 Concise classified dictionary of Hinduism New Delhi Concept Publishing Company ISBN 81 7022 857 3 Anand Swami P Swami Parmeshwaranand 2004 Encyclopedia of the Saivism New Delhi Sarup amp Sons ISBN 81 7625 427 4 Subramuniyaswami Satguru Sivaya 2004 Merging with Siva Hinduism s contemporary metaphysics USA ISBN 978 0 945497 99 8 Storl Wolf Dieter 2004 Shiva the wild God of power and ecstasy USA Inner Traditions ISBN 978 1 59477 780 6 T A Gopinatha Rao 1993 Elements of Hindu iconography Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 0878 2 Ajay J Sinha 2000 Imagining Architects Creativity in the Religious Monuments of India University of Delaware Press ISBN 978 0 87413 684 5 Burton Stein 1978 South Indian Temples Vikas ISBN 978 0706904499 Burton Stein 1989 The New Cambridge History of India Vijayanagara Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 26693 2 Burton Stein David Arnold 2010 A History of India John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 1 4443 2351 1 Kapila Vatsyayan 1997 The Square and the Circle of the Indian Arts Abhinav Publications ISBN 978 81 7017 362 5 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Thillai Nataraja Temple Chidambaram Shiva as Cosmic Dancer On Pallava Origins for the Nataraja Bronze Sharada Srinivasan 2004 The Great Ardra Darsanam Festival Performing Saiva Ritual Texts in Contemporary Chidambaram Aleksandra Wenta 2013 The Citamparam Temple Complex and Its Evolution Paul Younger 1986 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nataraja Temple Chidambaram amp oldid 1148762199, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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