Symbolism of Hindu Temple in Kerala - 1
Symbolism of Hindu Temple in Kerala - 1
Symbolism of Hindu Temple in Kerala - 1
Tatjana Vorinski
Professor: Kala Choyimanikandiyil
Manipal
Institute
&Planning
Manipal, 2012.
of
technology,
Manipal
School
of
Architecture
Contents
Introduction................................................................................................................ 4
Symbolism of temples today: changes?.....................................................................5
Education?............................................................................................................... 5
Distribution of wealth?............................................................................................ 6
Changes in living habits.......................................................................................... 7
Hindu religion............................................................................................................. 8
Concepts.............................................................................................................. 8
Philosophy.......................................................................................................... 10
Mythology.......................................................................................................... 12
Rituals................................................................................................................ 13
Space manifest of religion: Vastu Shastra.............................................................15
Nature and architecture..................................................................................... 17
Human body and architecture............................................................................19
Comparative analysis of architecture of two temples............................................21
Padmanabhaswamy temple...............................................................................22
Krishna Temple at Guruvayur............................................................................. 23
Culture of Kerala....................................................................................................... 23
Origins and influence............................................................................................ 23
Activity manifest of culture in temples meeting point of art and religion...........23
Comparative analysis of activities of two temples................................................24
-originally........................................................................................................... 24
-present time...................................................................................................... 24
Conclusion: Symbolism of temples...........................................................................24
References................................................................................................................ 25
eReferences.............................................................................................................. 25
Introduction
Study that investigates boundaries between religion and culture with their physical
manifestation in form of temple architecture in Kerala state. What is the role of
temples in modern India?
1http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Padmanabhaswamy_Temple
2 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guruvayur_Temple
Education?
If there is one vital element that had disappeared from temples in
recent times, it is the facilities for learning and meditation. Knowledge
has always been Hinduism's forte and almost all the ancient temples
had specially dedicated space for encouraging arts and literature. All
pursuits for perfection, whether its in arts or literature or philosophy,
had always been encouraged in Hinduism at all times. Even the
concept of God and its need & existence had been debated and
deliberated on a daily basis within the premises of ancient temples.
From such profound openness and quest in search of absolute truth is
Each modern temple should have a dedicated place for spending some
time on reading and meditation. It is common practice to sit down
somewhere in the temple premises before leaving. But nowadays most
people spend such time looking at others' business or gossiping. This
modern habit can easily be turned into custom to spend some time in
the temple library or meditation hall. All types of religious literature in
the form of books and periodicals could be made available at these
facilities. It would be all the more better if good facilities for meditation
and teaching meditation to children are also provided. This way, youll
be able to find a complete cross section of the Hindu society visiting
this temple without any reservations whatsoever.
Distribution of wealth?
Leaders of the Hindu community want the wealth to be invested in the
temple, while many intellectuals, including former supreme court judge VR
Krishna Iyer, have suggested it should be used for the public good. 5
This part of an last year article regarding wealth found in Kerala temple
in Thiruvananthapuram reflects society opinion on this matter. Temples
in ancient India had a clear role in distribution of wealth. There is no
harm in having rich temples if the community around is also rich. But
to have a rich temple amidst poverty and misery? What can be more
shameful if the idol in a temple is covered in gold when there are
houses around with children dying of poverty and ill health?
A temple has got relevance only if there are people associated with it.
The prosperity or decline of any temple should reflect the conditions of
society around it. In this respect it is inevitable that a part of its income
4 Ajithkumar,J (2004), Modern temples of India, bloghttp://www.boloji.com/index.cfm?
md=Content&sd=Articles&ArticleID=7673
5http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/jul/04/kerala-temple-vault-treasure
Hindu religion
"Hinduism. There is one root word in the term Hindu. It is called hidi. Hidi means a
man who moves on the path of spirituality, and who neglects all the worldly
pleasures and other passions for that spiritual upliftment. He is a Hindu. Now, when
people ask me, What do you mean by Hindu?, I say there are five letters in the
word Hindu. H stands for honesty, I stands for integrity, N stands for nobility, D
stands for devotion, and U stands for unity. And, I say any person who strives for
these ideals is called patasheela, which means five good things. You may believe
in any cult you want, any path you want, but do you believe in honesty, do you
believe in integrity, and nobility, devotion, and unity? If you do, you are a Hindu. So
this is why we say to people of other religions, Go and convert others, as you like.
Christians, go and convert. Islamic people, go and convert others. But Hindus never
convert anyone because anyone who holds to these five values is a Hindu by birth.
Why should I try to convert you?6
Concepts
The term Hindu is related to the word Sindhu the name of a river, which is known
in English as the river Indus. Because of the difficulty in pronunciation by the
Persians the river Sindhu became the river Hindu. And the inhabitants living
across the river Hindu became Hindus and the land became to be known as
Hindustan. Hence, the major religion of India (Latin derivative of Hindu), became to
be known as Hinduism.
The proliferation of Hindu denominations fall within three main groups:
Vaishnavaism, worship of Krishna and His incarnations; Shaivism, worship of Shiva;
and the Shaktas who worship Kali. The all-embracing nature of Hinduism often
appears confusing for the Western mind, but despite external variety, much
philosophy is common for all Hindus.
A notable feature of Hinduism, referred to as Sanatana Dharma (the eternal religion)
or Vedic Dharma (pertaining to the Vedas), is that it does not originate from one
prophet or teacher. The earliest record of Hindu teaching is found in the Vedas (c.
3000 B.C.), but many authorities claim that Hinduism is as old as the universe,
being based upon eternal truths, which have no mortal source.
Hinduism has its origins in such remote past that it cannot be traced to any one
individual. Some scholars believe that Hinduism must have existed even in circa
6 Professor Satya Pal Sharma, http://www.spiritualworld.org/hinduism/print.htm
10000 B.C. and that the earliest of the Hindu scriptures The Rig Veda was
composed well before 6500 B.C. The word "Hinduism" is not to be found anywhere
in the scriptures, and the term "Hindu" was introduced by foreigners who referred to
people living across the River Indus or Sindhu, in the north of India, around which
the Vedic religion is believed to have originated.
There is no one Hinduism, and so it lacks any unified system of beliefs and ideas.
Hinduism is a conglomerate of diverse beliefs and traditions, in which the prominent
themes include:
Philosophy
A Hindu is an individual who accepts and lives by the religious guidance of the Vedic
scriptures. While the teachings of the Hindu tradition do not require that you have a
religious affiliation to Hinduism in order to receive its inner teachings, it can be very
helpful to formally become a Hindu because it provides one a formal connection to
the world's oldest continually existing enlightenment tradition."
Hinduism is not just a religion with a long history. Nor is it just the religion that
gave birth to Jainism and Buddhism. It is more than a set of dates and related ideas.
Hinduism is also a different way of sensing and seeing reality. It is a different
mindset, illustrated by evocative stories.7
There is a symbolic story from the religious book known as the Upanishads, the
most philosophical of the Hindu texts. In the following passage, a boy, Shvetaketu,
is asking his father Uddalaka about the true nature of reality.
My teachers must not have known this wisdom, the boy says, for if they had
known, how could they have failed to teach it to me? Please instruct me in this
wisdom, father.
Yes, dear one, I will replied the father.
In the beginning was only Being,
One without a second
Out of himself he brought forth the cosmos
And entered into everything in it.
There is nothing that does not come from him.
Of everything he is the inmost Self.
He is the truth; he is the Self supreme.
You are that, Shvetaketu, you are that.
Upanishads, 1.72.3
7 Kenneth Shouler, Ph.D. and Susai Anthony, A Philosophy and Feel for Hinduism,
http://www.netplaces.com/hinduism/hinduism-history-and-central-ideas/aphilosophy-and-feel-for-hinduism.htm
The boy desires to learn more, so the father instructs him in a more concrete way.
Please, Father, tell me more about this Self.
Yes, dear one, I will, Uddalaka said.
Place this salt in water and bring it here Tomorrow morning.
The boy did.
Where is that salt? his father asked.
I do not see it.
Sip here. How does it taste?
Salty, Father.
And here? And there?
I taste salt everywhere.
It is everywhere, though we see him not.
There is nothing that does not come from him
Of everything he is the inmost Self.
He is the truth; he is the Self supreme.
You are that, Shvetaketu; you are that.
Upanishads, 12.313.3
This salt-in-the-water analogy shows that Brahman is everywhere, in all things.
Despite all of the variety in the world, one reality pervades all of it, just as salt is
everywhere in the water. The exchange between father and son instructs us about
the spirituality through which Hindus perceive reality. To Hindu eyes, the most
ordinary occurrences possess spiritual significance. The salt is there in the water,
though we cannot see it. Reality, too, is all spiritual, alive with Brahman, this
Immense Being (as he is called in some translations) part of each thing, without
limit or boundaries. All of reality is one.
Mythology
Hinduism is generally associated with a multiplicity of Gods, and does not advocate
the worship of one particular deity. The gods and goddesses of Hinduism amount to
thousands or even millions, all representing the many aspects of only one supreme
Absolute called Brahman.
Therefore ,,to believe that the multiplicity of deities in Hinduism makes it
polytheistic is erroneous. The Rig Veda says: "Ekam sath, Vipraah bahudhaa
vadanti" (The Truth is one). However, to equate Brahman with God is imprecise.
It is neither the old man in the sky concept, nor the idea of something capable of
being vengeful or fearful.8
The doctrine of Spiritual Competence (Adhikaara) and that of the Chosen Deity
(Ishhta Devata) in Hinduism recommend that the spiritual practices prescribed to a
person should correspond to his or her spiritual competence and that a person
should have the freedom to choose (or invent) a form of Brahman that satisfies his
spiritual cravings and to make it the object of his worship. Thus, Hindus have a
multitude of gods and goddesses. Deities are represented by a complexity of
images and idols symbolizing divine powers. Many of these idols are housed within
ornate temples of unparalleled beauty and grandeur. Hindus also worship spirits,
trees, animals and even planets.
Hierarchical structure of gods (dynamic) linked together through sequential
emanation is embodied in rituals and meditation practices as well as in temple
architecture. There are two ways in which deities are explicitly placed in temples:
ritual invocation and trough arrangements of iconography. Themes of cosmic
creation and destruction, male and female deities, semi divine beings and quasi
mythical heroes and saints unfold in the popular epics and legends of Hinduism.
The Hindu view of the universe is cyclical the complex theme of Hindu mythology
is dominated by the conflict between good and evil. Nature is imbued with potential
sanctity. Deities are identified with their geographical settings as Mountain Gods,
River Goddesses or tree spirits chief among these are Yakshas and their king
Kubera, associated with prosperity, they protect the household in the form of
Dvarpalas provided with clubs and weapons. Related to the Yakshas are Ganas
whose master is Ganesha, son of Parvati and remover of all obstacles. Yakshas
female counterpart, the Yakshis are usually associated with fertility she appears in
temple frescoes as a beautiful maiden embracing a tree. Yakshas and Yakshis are
depicted embracing or lovemaking. Similar to Yakshis are Apsaras, he courtesan of
the gods and the heavenly dancers. Other popular deities are Ganga and Yamuna,
river goddesses who embody the purifying powers of rivers. The serpent deities
called Nagas are important among Nature divinities. Dwelling underground, Nagas
are the keepers of life energy stored in springs/pools and bestow prosperity. 9
8
Subhamoy
Das,
Gods
&
Goddesses
http://hinduism.about.com/od/hinduism101/a/gods.htm
in
Hinduism,
9 Sunil Vaidyanathan, Temples of South India, English edition Publishers and Distributers Pvt.
Ltd., Mumbai, 2002.
Rituals
More interesting are the consecration rites which, according to vastu shastra texts
from different regional traditions, call down the cosmos ( the gods ), to inhabit the
body of the temple in its full tree dimensions.
Although every Hindu home contains its own altar, a place for personal worship,
the temple holds a special place in the life of the people. In different religious
traditions, the church, the mosque or the synagogue is considered to be the "house
of God," but in Hinduism the temple is the "home of God."
Hindus believe that God is omniscient and all pervading, yet He is personally
present in the temple in His Deity manifestation to provide His devotee the
opportunity of rendering direct service to Him. The Lord is our father and it is our
duty to go before Him and submit our account to Him, to request forgiveness for our
wrongdoings and beg strength to live in constant remembrance of His will.Worship
in the temple is considered more beneficial than worship at home, because the
association of so many other devotees and the spiritual atmosphere free from
domestic distractions nourishes faith and devotion.
The rituals while visiting the temple evoke the appreciation of the Lord's personal
presence. At the entrance to the temple building, everyone removes their shoes out
of respect for the sacred area. The worshipper then rings a bell as he enters the hall
where the Deity is resident. Going before the Deity to take darshan or audience of
the Lord, he offers respect or pranaams, either by folding his hands or perhaps by
bowing down and laying prostrate. In this simple act of devotion one can feel close
communion with God.
It is customary for every visitor to the temple to bring an offering of some kind foodstuffs, gifts for the Deity or donations of money. No offering is too great or too
small.
As Lord Krishna says: "If one offers Me with love and devotion a leaf, a
flower, fruit or water, I will accept it."
Bhagavad-Gita Ch. 9 Text
26
At the end of the hall is the main altar where the predominant Deities of the temple
stand. There may be other side altars as well. Only the priest enters the Deities'
room, while everyone observes from outside. The Deities should be gorgeously
dressed in the finest fabrics and decorated with ornaments, jewellery and garlands
of flowers. The Vedic tradition teaches that when much time, effort and opulence is
afforded in decorating the Deity, then everyone can come and enjoy the
extraordinary beauty of the temple and be inspired with a mood of sacrifice and
selflessness. Without centring their service on the Deity, the tendency of the people
will be to expend their efforts on individual improvement of material standards, by
which they develop an attitude of selfishness, greed and separatism.
Most Hindu temples are open every day of the year from morning to night, except
for a short period in the afternoon, but visitors like to come at the times of the arati
ceremonies which are performed several times daily. During arati the priest offers
different articles of worship to the Deity. These include: incense, ghee lamps, water
for bathing, a small napkin for drying, flowers and peacock and yak-tail fans. A
conch is blown at the beginning and end of the arati, and throughout the ceremony
the priest rings a small bell to attract the attention of the Deity and the audience to
the worship. During arati the devotees sing special hymns, and then kirtan. Kirtan is
sung in a responsive manner using mantras (short verses composed of the names
of God) such as the maha-mantra:
Hare Krishna, Hare Krishna, Krishna Krishna,
Hare Rama, Hare Rama, Rama Rama, Hare Hare
Hare
Hare
One may also see in the main hall one or more decorated thrones. These are called
vyasasanas, the seat for those teachers who are presenting the Vedic
philosophy.Satsanga, or association with a spiritually advanced soul, and
attendance at his lectures are important practices in the development of God
consciousness.
It is customary that before a visitor leaves the temple, he should receive prashad,
foodstuffs, which have been offered to the Deity, even if only in token amount.
Prashad is highly honoured as the mercy of the Lord. In India the distribution of
prashad is a serious welfare activity, the principle being that no one should go
hungry within 10 miles of the temple.
Aside from the daily ceremonies, there are many particular rituals, which a priest
may perform in the temple for the benefit of the devotees; for instance, marriage
ceremonies, the giving of first solid foods to a baby, the first hair cutting of a young
child, etc.
In many places in India devotees will attend the temple functions once or even
twice a day, but in Britain long distances and busy work schedules make it difficult
for many to visit the temple more than once a week. However, on special holy days,
everyone congregates in the temple for a festival programme of kirtan, lectures,
arati and religious dramas, and prashad is distributed to all.
temple, nor necessarily the plan of the site, it regulates them. It is drown on the
ground prior to the building of the temple and on it the temple stands either in fact
or symbolically. In principle it is always square and it is record of an architectural
rite. Purusa is the universal Essence, the Principle of all things, the prime Person
whence all originates. Vastu is the site. In bodily existence, Purusa, the Essence,
becomes the Form. Te temple building is the substantial, and the plan (mandala) is
the ritual, diagrammatic form of the Purusa. Purusa himself has no substance. The
substance is wood, brick or stone in the temple.
The notion that there is nothing static, nothing abiding, but only the flow of a
relentless process, with everything originating, growing, decaying, vanishing this
wholly dynamic view of life, of the individual and of the universe, is one of the
fundamental conceptions of later Hinduism.
Nature is also present in form of rituals. In temple ritual, the Garbhagraham is seen
as the " seed " of the temple. In the rite of gharbadhana, a pot containing precious
stones and other ritual items is buried below the Garbhagraham. The seed
symbolically germinates, growing directly upward through the center of the sikhara,
the spire positioned directly over the sanctum and reaching towards the heavens.
The sikharam, also referred to as the Vimanam, is highly symbolic as well and
deserves its own treatment.On the vimanam rests the kalasam. The kalasam can be
thought of as the roots of an inverted tree, whose trunk runs along the cosmic axis
of the temple and whose branches reach down toward Earth.The representation of
the Hindu temple as an upside-down tree encourages devotees to invert themselves
and find their true roots, thus becoming a temple themselves. By transforming
himself or herself into a temple, the devotee invites God to take up residence
within.
In a way, humans are born upside down-they are rooted in the material aspect of
the world. Just as devotees find their true centers by making their way toward the
Garbhagraham, devotees also find their true origin by gazing up toward the
kalasam. The unity of the Garbhagraham and kalasam is reflected in the anatomy of
the kalasam itself, which on many modern temples contains two structural motifs
recognized as lotus flowers.Through its rich symbolism, the Hindu temple facilitates
the ascent of man toward heaven and vice versa-matter flows up while spirit flows
down.
position where the main deity is installed is compared to the forehead of human,
where Lord Sivas third eye is situated. Thats why kumkum and vibhoodhi (the holy
ash) are put on the forehead.
The Vimanamm over the Garbhagrahamm attracts holy powers from the cosmos,
like our nose attracts pranavayu (oxygen) from air. In all Siva temples the
Garbhagrahamm of the Goddess is found in the place where heart has its abode in
the human body. The big finger of the leg is an important part of the body where in
all the nerve systems of the body end there. It is a custom in Hindu way of life that
one should salute a saint by laying down his body on the earth and by touching the
tip of the big fingers of the legs of the saint. This is the reason why Raja Gopuram is
considered as the gross body of the Deity installed in the Temple and devotees
unable to visit the Temple simply consider the Raja Gopuram itself as the Deity and
offer their obeisance from wherever they are.
Generally, Raja Gopuram consists of an odd number of stories - 3, 5, 7, 9 etc. Three
represents the three states - waking, dream and deep sleep - in which we gain all
our experiences. Five indicates the five senses through which we experience the
outer world; seven signifies, the mind and intellect in addition to the five senses;
and nine represents the above seven to addition to ego and heart (not the
mechanical organ `heart' in our gross body).
Significance of entering through the Raja Gopuram is that when one visits a Temple,
one should turn his antakarana or inner equipment (consisting of the five senses,
mind, intellect, ego and heart. through which he experiences the outer world),
toward the Deity installed in the Temple and attempt to merge with the Deity.
The Garbhagraham is dark, and its walls are largely undecorated. This starkly
contrasts the exterior of the temple, which is often highly ornate and replete with
thousands
of
sculpted
images.
The simple darkness of the sanctum reflects its function as a " womb house, " one
of the meanings of Garbhagraham. A second possible interpretation of
Garbhagraham symbolism is that God resides in each individual. The mandalam is a
pattern of powers in the likeness of the human body, and the deity dwells in the
Garbhagraham at the center of the mandalam. The logical extension of this
symbolism is that God exists in each person in a very real sense, ideally. As
devotees work their way from the exterior of the temple to the sanctum, they shed
the influences of the material world and find their center of being. They become one
with God.
Padmanabhaswamy temple
Padmanabhaswami Temple at Trivandrum is rectangular in plan as it houses
Anantasayi fom of Vishnu. The main temple is completely hidden behind the vast
quadranqular enclosures, the nuclei, the establishments dating back to the IX and X
centur.18
Definig feature of Dravida order or style are aedicules small shrines. 19
This Vishnu temple is the largest temple complex in Kerala. The temple is believed
to have been consecrated during the reign of Raja Marthandavarma circa A.D. 1050,
but it is believed that the smaller temple preceded this by at least five hundred
years. In A.D. 1686, the temple was almost destroyed in a major fire and was
restored and partially rebuilt in the year 1729. under the patronage of Raja
Marthandavarma s descendents. In fact, Rajas munificence almost drained the
state exchequer in one year. His zeal for construction and renovation started even
before he formally ascended the throne. The construction of the sanctum sanctorum
was given highest priority and the huge gilded idol of the recumbent Vishnu was
consecrated during his reign. The magnificent seven storeyed eastern gopuram on
which work was started as early as 1566 and was completed up to the fifth storey
under his patronage. Another colossal feat was construction of the Sribalipura
(circumambulatory passage encircling the sanctum), the awe inspiring rectangular
corridor encircling the central shrine. I was completed in a mere seven months
employing the service of 1000 masons, 7000 laborers and 100 elephants.
The temple like other Kerala temples was built in a mixture of Dravida and kerala
Dravida styles. The temple can be entered trough a broad oblong corridor supported
by 324 pillars adorned with reliefs of Yalis playing tug of war with elephants. The
kulashekara mandapa contains pillars with twenty four exquisitely sculptured
pieces and four groups of musical pillars.
A dip in the tank fronting the temple is part of the everyday ritual. Male devotees
have to wear the dhoti and remove their shirts and vests before entering the
temple. In the earlier days, during the tumultuous rule of the various feudatories,
this was probably to ensure that weapons could not be carried into the temple, to
prevent a sacrilege from being committed within the temple premises. In fact, the
dhoti had to be dipped in water before donning it so that translucence would than
18 H. Sarkar (1992), Monuments of Kerala, General Archeological Survey of India,
New Delhi, pg.43.
19Adam Hardy, The temple architecture of India, John Wiley & Sons Ltd., Great Britain,
2007.pg 14.
reveal any hidden weapon. This tradition still continues to the utter chagrin of many
un uninitiated.
Culture of Kerala
Popular legends says that the sage parasurama threw his parasu(axe) from
Gokarnam top Kanyakumari. The water in the whole area receded and land was
formed.That was how Kerala came into being.
The culture of Kerala is a synthesis of Aryan and Dravidian cultures, developed and
mixed for centuries, under influences from other parts of India and abroad. It is
defined by its antiquity and the organic continuity sustained by the Malayali
people. Modern Kerala society took shape owing to migrations from different parts
of India throughout Classical Antiquity. Kerala trace its non-prehistoric cultural
genesis to its membership (around the 3rd century CE) in a vaguely defined
historical region known as Thamizhagom a land defined by a common Tamil
culture and encompassing the Chera, Chola, and Pandya kingdoms.
At that time, the music, dance, language (first Dravida Bhasha "Dravidian
language" then Tamil), and Sangam (a vast corpus of Tamil literature composed
between 1,5002,000 years ago) found in Kerala were all similar to that found in the
rest of Thamizhagom (today's Tamil Nadu). The culture of Kerala evolved through
the Sanskritization of Dravidian ethos, revivalism of religious movements and reform
movements against caste discrimination. Kerala showcases a culture unique to itself
developed through accommodation, acculturation and assimilation of various
faculties of civilized lifestyle.
It is very clear that Kerala had been a very important place of attraction for the
tourists from time immemorial. Literacy works of those times extoll the beauty of
the land. Kerala had trade relations with Egypt, Babylon, Phoenicia, Greece and
Rome even before the Aryan incursion, which was between 2000 and 1600 B. C.
However, popular legend says that the land stretching from Goa to Gokarnam was
reclaimed by the mythical hero, Sage Parasurama and that was how Kerala came
into being. But references from Hebrew texts give the evidence that Kerala had
trade contacts with Phoenicia and Egypt, long before the Aryan incursion.
Martial Arts - The oldest form of martial art is believed to have originated from the
state of Kerala only. Kalarippayattu, the most popular art of combat is said to be
around 3000 years old. The Chinese fighting style is also believed to be influence
by
this
art. Parisa
Kali,Valeru, Njaninmel
Kali, Velakanni, Onathallu, Parichamuttakali, Adithada and Kunderu are the
other forms of ancient martial arts, which are still practiced in the state. The martial
art forms have undergone many changes with the flow of time. Kalarippayattu was
once a forbidden art during the British regime. Later, after many years it got
reinstated and at present it is one of the popular styles of combat.
Sports - Moving out of the martial arts, Kerala also participates in a number of
sports. Football is one of the major games that are played here and because of this
there are many football clubs in and around Kerala. Boat race also forms an
important activity for the people of the state. Many boat races are organized on the
backwaters of Kerala every year which includes Nehru Trophy Boat Race. Few
other sports played in the state are badminton, cricket and tennis.
References
-Adam Hardy (2007), The temple architecture of India, John Wiley & Sons Ltd., Great
Britain
- Balagopal T.S. Prabhu, A. Achyuthan
Kozhikode, New Edition
eReferences
- Ajithkumar,J (2004), Modern temples of India, blog
http://www.boloji.com/index.cfm?md=Content&sd=Articles&ArticleID=7673
-Kenneth Shouler, Ph.D. and Susai Anthony, A Philosophy and Feel for Hinduism,
http://www.netplaces.com/hinduism/hinduism-history-and-central-ideas/aphilosophy-and-feel-for-hinduism.htm
- Subhamoy Das, Gods & Goddesses in Hinduism,
http://hinduism.about.com/od/hinduism101/a/gods.htm
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Padmanabhaswamy_Temple
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guruvayur_Temple
-http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/jul/04/kerala-temple-vault-treasure
-Professor Satya Pal Sharma, http://www.spiritualworld.org/hinduism/print.htm