108 Divya Desams
23
Chola Nadu
22. Kola-Vāmana24. Thiruchirupuliyur
Thiruvazhundur
Varies
A Temple Record

Thiruvazhundur

HinduVaishnavaDivya Desam
Enter the Record
I.Overview

A Sacred Site

One of 108 Divya Desams. Sri Vaishnava pilgrimage temple in the Chola Nadu region.

मन्त्रOm Namo NarayanayaSacred Mantra
§Sacred Mantra
·

Om Namo Narayanaya

··
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

Dravidian (Pandya-Chola)

1
Gopurams
12m
Height
0
2
Hectares

Vimana / Gopuram

Dravidian vimana over the sanctum — single prakara with modest gopuram

Sanctum Sanctorum

Garbhagriha — Single prakara with modest gopuram

Construction Material

granite

One of 108 Divya Desams

§Plan View

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

SanctumVimana 12mEast GopuramN
Legend
Gopurams (1)
Vimana & Sanctum
IV.Elements

Sacred Elements

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

Sacred Colours

gold
saffron
X.Sacred Story

A Temple Record

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

Somewhere on the Indian subcontinent, Thiruvazhundur — a varies site — one of 108 Divya Desams. Sri Vaishnava pilgrimage temple in the Chola Nadu region.

§Reading the Built Form

Built in the Built in the Dravidian (Pandya-Chola) tradition, the temple's 1 gopurams rise 12 metres into the sky the garbhagriha holds garbhagriha — single prakara with modest gopuram . One of 108 Divya Desams

Om Namo Narayanaya
§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: Om Namo Narayanaya.

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

§Practical Notes

trade_routes:

  • "Tamil Nadu Divya Desam pilgrimage corridor" 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)" trade_routes:
  • "Ancient Tamil Nadu temple trade corridor" vahana: "Garuda (eagle mount)" connected_events:
    • event: "Temple founding and consecration" significance: "Original temple construction and prana-pratishtha ceremony" associated_kings:
  • "Local ruling dynasty" sacred_flowers:
  • lotus
  • tulasi
  • jasmine trade_routes:
  • "Ancient Tamil Nadu temple trade corridor" sacred_flowers:
  • lotus
  • tulasi
  • champaka sacred_trees:
  • peepal
  • bilva (bael)
  • tulasi sacred_animals:
  • Nandi (sacred bull)
  • peacock
  • elephant vahana: "Garuda (eagle mount)" primary_scriptures:
    • title: "Nālāyira Divya Prabandham" type: "stotra" festival_dates:
  • "Maha Shivaratri (Feb–Mar)"
  • "Diwali (Oct–Nov)" trade_routes:
  • "Ancient South Indian temple trade corridor"

Thiruvazhundur

One of the 108 Divya Desams — the sacred abodes of Vishnu glorified in the Naalāyira Divya Prabandham (4,000 Tamil hymns) composed by the 12 Āḻvār saints between the 6th and 9th centuries CE.

Deity

The presiding deity is Sri Devaadhiraja Perumal, worshipped here in a unique mūrti (iconographic form) specific to this temple. The goddess (Thāyār) holds a separate sanctum within the same precinct.

Region

This temple belongs to the Chola Nadu division of the Divya Desam sacred geography.

Architecture & History

The temple architecture follows the South Indian Drāviḍa tradition, with a gopuram (gateway tower), praṅka (circumambulatory path), and sanctum sanctorum. Historical layers span multiple dynasties including the Pallavas, Cholas, and Vijayanagara Nayakas.

Sources

This entry is a canonical stub awaiting enrichment. When expanded, it will contain:

  • Stated sthalapurāṇa (temple legend)
  • Āḻvār pasuram quotations
  • Dynastic construction history
  • ASI or temple trust architectural notes
  • Festival calendar

Wisdom Graph: Divine Associations

MantraOm Namo Narayanaya
Sacred colours
goldsaffron