108 Divya Desams
65
Chera Nadu
64. Yoga-Narasiṁha of Thirukaḍigai66. Thiruvithuvakodu (Abhayapradhaya)
Navā-mukunda
ThirunavayaKerala
9th–12th c. CE
earth
A Temple Record

Navā-mukunda

Thirunavaya — Vishnu at the confluence of Bharatappuzha

HinduVaishnavaSri Vaishnava
Enter the Record
I.Overview

A Sacred Site

In Thirunavaya, Kerala, there stands Navā-mukunda — navā-mukunda is the presiding Vishnu of Thirunavaya, one of the 108 Divya Desams — the sacred geography of temples sung by the twelve Āḻvār saint-poets of Tamil Vaishnavism (7th–9th c. CE). Goddess: Malarmangai-thāyār. Tīrtham: Bharatappuzha river / Nila-tīrtham. Vimāna: Nava-mukunda-vimāna. Sung by Nammāḻvār — 11 pasurams.

मन्त्रOṁ Namo Nārāyaṇāya / Oṁ Namo Bhagavate VāsudevāyaSacred Mantra
§Sacred Mantra
·

Oṁ Namo Nārāyaṇāya / Oṁ Namo Bhagavate Vāsudevāya

··
Thirunavaya — Vishnu at the confluence of Bharatappuzha · The Sacred Syllable

Recite softly. Let the syllables settle. The mantra is the shortest path between the devotee and the divine.

II.Architecture

The Built Form

Kerala (Dravidian-wooden hybrid)

2
Gopurams
12m
Height
0
2
Hectares

Vimana / Gopuram

Dravidian vimana over the sanctum — sloped copper-tiled roof over sanctum

Sanctum Sanctorum

Garbhagriha — Sloped copper-tiled roof over sanctum

Construction Material

granite base with copper/wood superstructure

Navā-mukunda is the presiding Vishnu of Thirunavaya, one of the 108

§Plan View

An architectural reading of Navā-mukunda — a top-down plan derived from the temple's recorded data.

SanctumVimana 12mEast GopuramSouth GopuramN
Legend
Gopurams (2)
Vimana & Sanctum
IV.Elements

Sacred Elements

The colours, creatures, and offerings that mark this site.

Sacred Colours

saffron
yellow (pīta)
green (tulasī)

Sacred Flowers

tulasī (holy basil)lotus

Sacred Offerings

tulasī garlandpuliyodara (tamarind rice)sakkarai pongalcurd ricemilk
VI.Texts

Sacred Texts

  1. Nālāyira Divya Prabandham

    Type: Tamil hymn collection (4000 verses by 12 Āḻvārs)

  2. Sthala-purāṇam of this temple

    Type: local temple text

VII.Trade

Trade Routes

  1. Kerala temple corridor (Malabar coast)

IX.Rituals

Worship & Rituals

Daily Rites

  1. viśvarūpa-darśana (5 AM)

  2. kāla-śānti

  3. uccikāla pūjā

  4. sāyaraṣcha

  5. arrdha-jāma (night pūja)

Offering Sequence

  1. 01

    tulasī garland

  2. 02

    milk abhiṣeka

  3. 03

    puliyodara naivedyam

  4. 04

    arati

  5. 05

    tīrtham + śaṭhāri (crown of Nammāḻvār)

X.Sacred Story

A Temple Record

An editorial reading of the site, woven from its architectural, historical, and scriptural data.

In Thirunavaya, Kerala, Navā-mukunda — a 9th–12th c. ce site — navā-mukunda is the presiding Vishnu of Thirunavaya, one of the 108 Divya Desams — the sacred geography of temples sung by the twelve Āḻvār saint-poets of Tamil Vaishnavism (7th–9th c. CE). Goddess: Malarmangai-thāyār. Tīrtham: Bharatappuzha river / Nila-tīrtham. Vimāna: Nava-mukunda-vimāna. Sung by Nammāḻvār — 11 pasurams.

§Reading the Built Form

Built in the Built in the Kerala (Dravidian-wooden hybrid) tradition, the temple's 2 gopurams rise 12 metres into the sky the garbhagriha holds garbhagriha — sloped copper-tiled roof over sanctum . Navā-mukunda is the presiding Vishnu of Thirunavaya, one of the 108

Oṁ Namo Nārāyaṇāya / Oṁ Namo Bhagavate Vāsudevāya
§A Visitor's Approach

01Walk the pradakshina path. Let the silence settle.

02Look up. The vimana above the sanctum is the temple's vertical sermon — each tier a step toward the divine.

03Chant the mantra softly: Oṁ Namo Nārāyaṇāya / Oṁ Namo Bhagavate Vāsudevāya.

04The tradition here is hindu. Sit. Listen. The darshan is its own teaching.

§Practical Notes

connected_events:

  • event: "Alvar hymns and Divya Prabandham composition" significance: "One of the 108 Divya Desams hymned by the 12 Alvars (6th–9th c. CE)" vahana: "Garuda (eagle mount)" connected_events:
  • event: "Medieval temple construction" significance: "Temple constructed during the medieval period (10th–12th c. CE)" associated_kings:
  • "Local ruling dynasty" sacred_trees:
  • peepal
  • bilva (bael)
  • tulasi sacred_animals:
  • Nandi (sacred bull)
  • peacock
  • elephant vahana: "Garuda (eagle mount)" festival_dates:
  • "Maha Shivaratri (Feb–Mar)"
  • "Diwali (Oct–Nov)"

Navā-mukunda

The 108 Divya Desams

The 108 Divya Desams are the 108 sacred abodes of Vishnu sung in the Tamil hymns of the 12 Āḻvārs. Compiled by Nāthamuni in the 9th c. CE as the Nālāyira Divya Prabandham (4,000 verses), these temples constitute the sacred geography of Tamil Vaishnavism and are the foundational map for the Śrīvaiṣṇava sampradāya (Rāmānuja, 11th c.).

108 is the canonical count — 106 on earth, plus Tirupparkadal (the milk-ocean, Vishnu's cosmic abode) and Paramapadam (Vaikuṇṭha, the eternal realm) — making 108 complete.

This Temple — Navā-mukunda

  • Location: Thirunavaya, Malappuram district, Kerala (10.8833°N, 75.9833°E)
  • Presiding deity: Navā-mukunda
  • Consort / Thāyār: Malarmangai-thāyār
  • Temple tank (tīrtham): Bharatappuzha river / Nila-tīrtham
  • Vimāna (sanctum tower): Nava-mukunda-vimāna
  • Mangalāśāsanam: Sung by Nammāḻvār — 11 pasurams
  • Built: 9th–12th c. CE

Sthala-Purāṇa Story

Sacred site of the Māmāṅkam festival — the medieval 12-yearly sovereignty-assembly of the Zamorins of Calicut. One of three riverside tīrthas at the confluence of the Nila (Bharatappuzha).

Worship Tradition

Daily: viśvarūpa-darśana (pre-dawn), kāla-śānti, uccikāla pūjā, sāyaraṣcha (evening), ardha-jāma (night closure). Principal offerings: tulasī garland (never fresh flowers for the central deity, only tulasī), puliyodara (tamarind rice), sakkarai pongal (jaggery rice), milk abhiṣeka. Pilgrims receive tīrtham (holy water) and the śaṭhāri — Nammāḻvār's crown placed briefly on the head, signifying servitude to the Lord.

Festival Cycle

  • Vaikuṇṭha Ekādaśī (Mārgaḻi, Dec–Jan): the holiest day. The Paramapada-vāsal (gate of Vaikuṇṭha) is opened and devotees who pass through attain mokṣa
  • Brahmotsavam: annual 10-day utsavam with Vishnu paraded on different vāhanas each day — Śeṣa, Garuḍa, Haṃsa, Hanumanta, Siṃha, Chariot
  • Garuḍa Sevai: Vishnu on his eagle-mount, most darśana-rich of all processions
  • Dhanur-māsa (Mārgaḻi): entire month is holy; pilgrims come for pre-dawn neyyavaḷikku darśana

The Āḻvār Tradition

This temple is hallowed because Āḻvār saint-poets sang of it in their Divya Prabandham pasurams. The Āḻvārs were 12 Tamil Vaishnava saint-poets (7th–9th c. CE) whose corpus of 4,000 verses is considered by Śrīvaiṣṇavas to be equivalent to the Vedas in Tamil (Drāviḍa Veda). Each temple's sanctity rests on how many Āḻvārs sang of it and how many pasurams — this is the mangalāśāsanam.

Architectural Note

The vimāna (sanctum tower) over the mūlasthāna is the temple's signature: Nava-mukunda-vimāna. Each Divya Desam's vimāna has a unique name and symbolism — the celestial archetype of Vishnu's abode manifesting on earth.

Sthalapurana (Temple Legend)

The sacred history of this shrine is recounted in local Sthalapurana texts and the Divya Prabandham hymns.

Wisdom Graph: Divine Associations

MantraOṁ Namo Nārāyaṇāya / Oṁ Namo Bhagavate Vāsudevāya
Sacred flowers
tulasī (holy basil)lotus
Sacred plants
tulasī
Offerings
tulasī garlandpuliyodara (tamarind rice)sakkarai pongalcurd ricemilk
Sacred colours
saffronyellow (pīta)green (tulasī)

📖 Stories

  • How Navā-mukunda came to be worshipped here
    Sacred site of the *Māmāṅkam* festival — the medieval 12-yearly sovereignty-assembly of the Zamorins of Calicut. One of three riverside tīrthas at the confluence of the Nila (Bharatappuzha).
    Divya Prabandham pasurams + sthala-purāṇam

🪔 Worship Procedures

Daily rites
viśvarūpa-darśana (5 AM)
kāla-śānti
uccikāla pūjā
sāyaraṣcha
arrdha-jāma (night pūja)
Puja sequence
  1. tulasī garland
  2. milk abhiṣeka
  3. puliyodara naivedyam
  4. arati
  5. tīrtham + śaṭhāri (crown of Nammāḻvār)
Vratas (vows / fasts)
Ekādaśī fast
Cāturmāsya
Dhanur-māsa (Mārgaḻi) early darśana
Pilgrimages
108 Divya Desam yatra (traditional South Indian Vaishnava pilgrimage)
Nava Tirupati
Pañca-ranga circuit

🛕 Principal Temples

  • Navā-mukunda Temple9th–12th c. CE
    📍 Thirunavaya, Malappuram, Kerala, India
    Festivals: Vaikuṇṭha Ekādaśī (December–January) · Brahmotsavam (10 days, annual) · Garuḍa Sevai · Nācciyār Tirukolai
    Goddess: Malarmangai-thāyār. Tīrtham: Bharatappuzha river / Nila-tīrtham. Vimāna: Nava-mukunda-vimāna. Sung by Nammāḻvār — 11 pasurams

🎊 Festivals

  • Vaikuṇṭha Ekādaśī
    Mārgaḻi (December–January) · 1 day (primary)
    The gate of Vaikuṇṭha (Paramapadam) is opened; all pilgrims who pass through it are said to attain mokṣa
  • Brahmotsavam
    Annual (temple-specific) · 10 days
    Principal utsavam with processions on different vāhanas each day (Hanumanta, Garuḍa, Śeṣa, Haṃsa, etc.)

📜 Primary Scriptural Sources

  • Nālāyira Divya PrabandhamTamil hymn collection (4000 verses by 12 Āḻvārs)7th–9th c. CE
  • Sthala-purāṇam of this templelocal temple text