Vijayalaya Choliswaram, photograph
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Entry 077

Vijayalaya Choliswaram

Nartamalai · Pudukkottai · Muttarayar

A small two-chambered Śiva temple high on the Nartamalai hills, built by the Muttarayar chieftains before the Chōḷas, unusual for its circular central shrine.

The Vijayalaya Choliswaram crowns the Nartamalai hills near Pudukkottai, a small two-chambered Śiva temple raised by the Muttarayar chieftains before the Chōḷas. Its circular central shrine and the ring of ruined sub-shrines set it apart, and the hill carries cave temples and an early Vishnu shrine alongside it.

The photographs

Plates · 17

Vijayalaya Choliswaram, photograph
© Amar Ramesh and team · All rights reserved
Vijayalaya Choliswaram, photograph
© Amar Ramesh and team · All rights reserved
Vijayalaya Choliswaram, photograph
© Amar Ramesh and team · All rights reserved
Vijayalaya Choliswaram, photograph
© Amar Ramesh · All rights reserved
Vijayalaya Choliswaram, photograph
© Amar Ramesh · All rights reserved
Vijayalaya Choliswaram, photograph
© Amar Ramesh · All rights reserved
Vijayalaya Choliswaram, photograph
© Amar Ramesh · All rights reserved
Vijayalaya Choliswaram, photograph
© Amar Ramesh · All rights reserved
Vijayalaya Choliswaram, photograph
© Amar Ramesh · All rights reserved
Vijayalaya Choliswaram, photograph
© Amar Ramesh · All rights reserved
Vijayalaya Choliswaram, photograph
© Amar Ramesh · All rights reserved
Vijayalaya Choliswaram, photograph
© Amar Ramesh · All rights reserved
Vijayalaya Choliswaram, photograph
© Amar Ramesh · All rights reserved
Vijayalaya Choliswaram, photograph
© Amar Ramesh · All rights reserved
Vijayalaya Choliswaram, photograph
© Amar Ramesh · All rights reserved
Vijayalaya Choliswaram, photograph
© Amar Ramesh · All rights reserved
01

Architectural

structure & vocabulary

The temple stands on the Nartamalai hills, a set of nine hills near Pudukkottai. It is a small, two-chambered structure ringed by eight smaller sub-shrines in varying stages of dilapidation, thought to have served Durga, the Saptha Matrika and other Śaiva deities.

The central shrine is unusual for its circular plan. The vimāna above carries Śaiva deities in the four directions, elegantly carved. On the base of the dwarapalaka, or door guardian, is an inscription recording its construction.

02

Archaeological

dated & cited

The book places the central shrine and its sculpture well before the 9th century. An inscription on the base of the door guardian states that Sattan Pudi built the stone temple and that Mallan Viduman Tennavan Tamiladiriyan rebuilt it. A Pandya inscription of the 13th century calls the temple by the same name.

Opposite stands a cave temple, the Palliyil Iswaram, dated to the seventh year of the Pallava king Nrupathunga (849 to 875 CE) and built by Sattan Palliyil. A further cave opposite, probably once a Jain cave, later became a Vishnu temple; its empty sanctum is fronted by twelve identical images of Vishnu. Nartamalai was a Muttarayar centre and became a Nagaram, a traders' settlement, in the 10th century CE.

Inscription · Base of the door guardian (dwarapalaka)

Sattan Pudi constructed this stone temple; Mallan Viduman Tennavan Tamiladiriyan rebuilt it.

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