Prāṇanātheśvara
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 — Prāṇanātheśvara
- Location: Thirumangalakudi (near Kumbakonam), Thanjavur district, Tamil Nadu (10.9631°N, 79.3925°E)
- Presiding liṅga/form: Prāṇanātheśvara (Lord of life-breath)
- Ambal (Goddess): Mangaḷa-nāyaki
- Temple tank (tīrtham): Jñāna-tīrtham
- Sthala-vṛkṣa (sacred tree): Vilvam
- Sung by (mangalāśāsanam): Sung by Sambandar
- Built: 9th–10th c. CE
Sthala-Purāṇa Story
The śikhara Śaṅkarī goddess here is one of the 108 Shakti-pīṭhas. It is also the parihāra sthala for Aṅgāraka (Mars) — pilgrims afflicted by Mars in their horoscope perform pūja here.
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
- Vilvambilva
- 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
- Prāṇanātheśvara Temple9th–10th c. CE📍 Thirumangalakudi (near Kumbakonam), Thanjavur, Tamil Nadu, IndiaFestivals: Mahā Śivarātri (Phalguna, February–March) · Ārudrā Darśanam (Mārgaḻi, December–January) · Pañcaparva ĀrādhanāGoddess (Ambal): Mangaḷa-nāyaki. Tīrtham: Jñāna-tīrtham. Sthala-vṛkṣa: Vilvam. Sung by: Sung by Sambandar
🎊 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