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The
districts of Thanjavur, Kumbhakonam and Nagappattinam (constituting
the erstwhile Thanjauvr district) boast of hundreds of ancient temples.
The town of Thanjavur was the seat of the glorious Chola Empire of
Tamilnadu, and was later on the seat of the Nayaks and the Marathas. True
to art historian Fergusson, the Chola artists conceived like giants and
finished like jewellers.
A 107
paragraph long inscription on the walls of the Vimanam records the
contributions of Raja Raja Chola and his sister Kundavai to the Thanjavur
temple. The temple stands within a fort, whose walls are later additions
built in the 16th century. The towering vimanam is about 200 feet in
height and is referred to as Dakshina Meru. The octogonal Shikharam rests
on a single block of granite weighing 81 tons. It is believed that this
block was carried up a specially built ramp built from a site 6
kilometeres away from here. Huge Nandis dot the corners of the Shikharam,
and the Kalasam on top by itself is about 3.8 meteres in height. Hundreds
of stucco figures bejewel the Vimanam, although it is possible that some
of these may have been added on during the Maratha period. The Shivalingam
- Peruvudaiyar, Rajarajeswaramudaiyar - is a huge one, set in a two
storeyed sanctum, and the walls surrounding the sanctum delight visitors
as a storehouse of murals and sculpture.
Incidents from the lives of the Nayanmars, several of the 108 Bharata
Natyam Dance postures, manifestations of Shiva (Aadalvallaan - Nataraja,
Tripurantaka, Dakshinamurthi etc.) are depicted in sculptured panels or in
exquisite Chola murals. Both the interior, and the exterior walls of the
temple, are replete with images of the kind described above.
Inscriptions refer to Shiva as Dakshina Meru Vitankar and Aadavallan. The
Nandi, which dates back to the Nayak period, is housed in its own mandapam
and it matches up to the grandeur and size of the temple. It is a
monolithic Nandi weighing about 25 tonnes, and is about 12 feet high and
20 feet long.
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