Agniswarar Temple, Kanjanur

Agniswarar Temple
Agniswarar Temple
Location in Tamil Nadu
Geography
Coordinates 11°3′57″N 79°29′45″E / 11.06583°N 79.49583°E / 11.06583; 79.49583Coordinates: 11°3′57″N 79°29′45″E / 11.06583°N 79.49583°E / 11.06583; 79.49583
Country India
State Tamil Nadu
District Thanjavur
Location Kanjanur
Culture
Primary deity Agniswarar(Shiva)
Consort Karpagambigai(Parvathi)
Temple tank Agni Theertham, Parasara Theertham
Poets Appar
Architecture
Architectural styles Dravidian architecture

The Agniswarar Temple is a Hindu temple in the village of Kanjanur, 18 kilometres north-east of Kumbakonam. The presiding deity is Sukra (Venus). However, the main idol in the temple is that of "Agniswarar" or Shiva. In concordance with the Saivite belief that Shiva is all-pervading, Sukra is believed to be located within the stomach of the idol of Shiva.

The Temple

The temple was built by the Medieval Cholas and renovated by the kings of the Vijayanagar Empire. The temple has a 5-tier rajagopuram surrounded by two prakarams(closed precincts of a temple). The temple is revered by the verses of Appar and hence referred as Padal petra stalam.

Legend

Legend is that Siva blessed Parasara muni(sage) here with cosmic dance.

Navagraha

Kanjanur is one of the nine Navagraha sthalas located in the Cauvery Delta region dedicated to planet Venus, called Sukra. Unlike other Navagraha temples, the main deity, Agniswarar in the form of lingam depicts Lord Sukra.[1]r

Notes

  1. "Navagraha temples". Thanjavur District Administration. Retrieved 2013-07-07.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 1/8/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.