Thirupathiripuliyur

Thirupathiripuliyur is a neighbourhood of Cuddalore, Tamil Nadu, India.[1][2] It is named for the ancient Hindu temple located in the locale, which is named after the Pathiri tree and Puliyur, a tiger-legged saint who obtained absolution in the area.

Thirupathiripuliyur

Thirupapuliyur
Town
Thirupathiripuliyur
Location in Tamil Nadu, India
Coordinates: 11.74846°N 79.74828°E / 11.74846; 79.74828
Country India
StateTamil Nadu
DistrictCuddalore
TalukCuddalore
BlockCuddalore
Languages
  OfficialTamil
Time zoneUTC+5:30 (IST)
Vehicle registrationTN-31

Padaleeswarar Temple

Padaleeswarar temple is among the ancient 274 Siva temples whose history reportedly dates back to more than 2,000 years.

The nearest railway station to the temple is Thirupadiripuliyur. The temple is 0.5km from Thiruppathiripuliyur Railway Station and situated in Cuddalore. This is one of the temples that is a Paadal Petra Sthalam situated in Nadunadu. Here the name of the main deity is Padaleeswarar, and the Goddess is Periyanayaki or Arundhava nayaki.

History

The temple plays a unique role in the history of Hindu religion, art, and architecture.

Pataleeswarar Temple is a Hindu shrine dedicated to Lord Shiva in the town of Cuddalore. It was constructed during the Pallava and Medieval Chola periods. The lord of this temple saved Saint Appar from drowning when he was tied with a stone column and launched into sea as per the orders of the then Pallava king Mahendra Varman. Appar, along with the stone, floated on the sea and safely drifted ashore here at Thirupathiripuliyur by the grace of god. Overwhelmed, he sang the thevaram "Eendralumai enaku endhaiyumai" in praise of the lord.

There is a belief/myth that by worshiping this god one single time is equal to 16 times worshiping the Shiva in Kasi, eight times in Thiruvannamalai, and three times in Chidambaram.

References


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