Vedagiriśvara
The 275 Paadal Petra Sthalangal
The Paadal Petra Sthalangal are the 275 Shiva temples sung in the hymns of the three great Tēvāram saints: Tirunāvukkaracar (Appar), Tiruñāṉa-sambandar, and Cuntarar (Sundarar) — the Tamil Shaiva Bhakti poets of the 7th–9th c. CE. Compiled in the Thirumurai (12 canonical books of Tamil Shaiva scripture), these temples constitute the sacred geography of Tamil Shaivism — the map of a living Shiva-bhakti tradition older than most written philosophy in India.
Of 275 sthalangal:
- 190 in Chola Nāḍu
- 32 in Pāṇḍya Nāḍu
- 32 in Toṇḍai Nāḍu
- 14 in Naḍu Nāḍu / Kongu Nāḍu
- 7 across Malai Nāḍu (Kerala — only Tiruvañjikkaḷam definitively)
This Temple — Vedagiriśvara
- Location: Thirukkazhukunram, Chengalpattu district, Tamil Nadu (12.6403°N, 80.0464°E)
- Presiding liṅga/form: Vedagiriśvara (Shiva on the Veda-hill)
- Ambal (Goddess): Tripurasundarī
- Temple tank (tīrtham): Saṅkha-tīrtham
- Sthala-vṛkṣa (sacred tree): Puṉṉai (mast-wood tree)
- Sung by (mangalāśāsanam): Sung by Sambandar, Sundarar
- Built: 8th–9th c. CE (Pallava)
Sthala-Purāṇa Story
For centuries two white eagles (kazhughu) descended at noon to receive rice from the priest's hand before flying on toward Rāmeśvaram. The eagles are said to be ancient sages cursed to eagle-form, now fulfilling penance. The practice continued visibly until ~1998; pilgrims still wait at noon.
Worship Tradition
Daily: five-fold ārādhanā (pañca-parva-pūja) — ushāt-kālam before dawn, kāla-śānti at 6 AM, uccikālam at noon, sāyaraṣcha at dusk, ardha-jāma at 9 PM. Principal offerings: jala-abhiṣeka (water), pañcāmṛta (five-ambrosia — milk, curd, ghee, honey, jaggery), vibhūti (sacred ash), bilva leaves, and deepa ārati. The Goddess receives separate pūja with saffron, kumkum, and red flowers.
Festival Cycle
- Mahā Śivarātri (Phalguna, Feb–Mar): the night-long festival when Shiva is said to have performed the Tāṇḍava; four-phase pūja through the night
- Ārudrā Darśanam (Mārgaḻi, Dec–Jan): commemorates the cosmic dance of Naṭarāja at Chidambaram — at every Shiva temple the Abhiṣeka of Naṭarāja happens
- Brahmotsavam: annual 10-day utsavam with processions on Āti-rudra-vāhana, Ṛṣabha-vāhana (bull), Mayūra-vāhana (peacock), Garuḍa-vāhana
- Pradoṣa (13th lunar day, twice a month): special evening pūjā — Shiva dances on the head of Nandi between 4:30 and 6 PM
The Tēvāram Tradition
Every Paadal Petra temple's sanctity rests on whether Appar, Sambandar, or Sundarar sang of it — and how many pasurams. Tamil Shaiva tradition believes the Tēvāram is equivalent to the Vedas (Drāviḍa Veda). The saints walked from temple to temple through the Tamil country — thousands of kilometres on foot — singing as they arrived. The temples were the fulcrums of the Bhakti movement that reshaped South India and founded the Shaiva-Siddhānta philosophy.
Architectural Note
South Indian Shaiva temples are organised on the pañca-prākāra (five-walled) plan: mūla-sthāna (sanctum), antarāḷa, ardha-maṇḍapa, mahā-maṇḍapa, rājagopura. Outside: the Amman (Goddess) shrine, the Chandikeswara shrine, the Murugan shrine, the Ganesha shrine, the Sūrya shrine, the Nandi bull, the Palipīṭha, the Dhvaja-stambha (flagstaff), and the Puṣkariṇī (tank) with the sthala-vṛkṣa shading it.
Wisdom Graph: Divine Associations
- Sacred trees
- Puṉṉai (mast-wood tree)bilva
- Offerings
- bilva leavesvibhūti (sacred ash)milk abhiṣekatender coconutrice + jaggery naivedyam
- Sacred colours
- white (vibhūti)saffronred (kumkum for the Goddess)
🪔 Worship Procedures
- Daily rites
- • ushāt-kālam (dawn)• kāla-śānti• uccikālam (noon)• sāyaraṣcha (evening)• ardha-jāma (night closure)
- Puja sequence
- jala-abhiṣeka
- pañcāmṛta
- vibhūti
- bilva leaves
- deepa ārati
- prasadam (pongal, laddu)
- Vratas (vows / fasts)
- • Pradoṣa (13th lunar day)• Mahā Śivarātri fast• every Monday (Somavāra)
- Pilgrimages
- • 275 Paadal Petra yātrā• Chola-nāḍu Shaiva circuit• Pañca Bhūta Sthala
🛕 Principal Temples
- Vedagiriśvara Temple8th–9th c. CE (Pallava)📍 Thirukkazhukunram, Chengalpattu, Tamil Nadu, IndiaFestivals: Mahā Śivarātri (Phalguna, February–March) · Ārudrā Darśanam (Mārgaḻi, December–January) · Pañcaparva ĀrādhanāGoddess (Ambal): Tripurasundarī. Tīrtham: Saṅkha-tīrtham. Sthala-vṛkṣa: Puṉṉai (mast-wood tree). Sung by: Sung by Sambandar, Sundarar
🎊 Festivals
- Mahā ŚivarātriPhalguna (February–March) · Night-longFour-phase pūja through the night; all-night jāgaraṇa
- Ārudrā DarśanamMārgaḻi (December–January) · 1 dayCommemorates the cosmic dance of Naṭarāja
- BrahmotsavamAnnual, temple-specific · 10 days
📜 Primary Scriptural Sources
- Tēvāram — first seven books of the ThirumuraiTamil Shaiva hymns7th–9th c. CE
- Periya Purāṇamhagiography of the 63 Nayanmars12th c. CE (by Cekkiḻār)
- Sthala-purāṇamlocal temple narrative