Tirumala Venkateswara Temple ( Tirupati Temple )
Tirumala
Venkateswara Temple is a Hindu temple in the hill town of Tirumala, near
Tirupati in Chittoor district of Andhra Pradesh. The temple is the richest
pilgrimage centre, after the Sree Padmanabhaswamy Temple in Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala, of any
faith (at more than
50,000 crore ) and the most-visited place of worship in the world.The
temple is visited by about 50,000 to 100,000 pilgrims daily (30 to 40 million
people annually on average), while on special occasions and festivals, like the
annual Brahmotsavam, the number of pilgrims shoots up to 500,000, making it the
most-visited holy place in the world.
Thondaiman, TAMIL RULER
ruler of the ancient Thondaimandalam (present day Kanchipuram) (capital:
Kanchipuram, just south of modern day Chennai),
is believed to have first built the temple after visualizing Lord Vishnu in his
dream. He built the Gopuram and the Prakhara, and arranged for regular prayers
to be conducted in the temple. Later on the Chola dynasty vastly improved the
temple and gave rich endowments. To date,
one can find the various Tamil Grantha script within the Temple prakara
walls. The Sangam literature of Tamil such as that of Silapadikaram and
SatanarManimekalai, dated between 500BC and 300AD, mentions Thiruvengadam (now
named Tirupati) by the appellation "Nediyon Kunram" as the
northernmost frontier of the Tamil kingdoms . In fact, a fairly detailed
description of the deity is given in lines 41 to 51 of book 11 of
theSilapadikaram.
Sri Yaganti Uma Maheswara Temple or Yaganti
The story according to the priests is that when the sage Agastya completed
his uttara desha yatra and started dakshina desha yatra he found the beautiful
and pleasant place called yaganti( Nekanti-i have seen)and thought to build a
temple for Lord Venkateswara on this site . while roaming around caves
one of the caves was found to have a very old statue of Lord Vishnu . After all
the yagna, homa and pooja he found that the statue really contains a small
defect as broken nail on the foot thumb finger. To seek an explanation he
prayed to Shiva and Shiva explained that at this place which contains natural
springs and nature only I can be worshipped. Then the sage Agastya asked a
boon to Shiva to reside in this place for eternity with Mother Parvathi. So
this place is called as Umamahesware (Uma: parvathi, Maheswara: shiva) temple.
The shrine contains the statue of Shiva and Parvathi on a single stone.
The devotees believe that the Nandi idol in front of the temple is continuously increasing its size. The locals say that the idol was initially much smaller than its present size. They say that certain experimentation was carried out on this idol and it was said that the type of rock out of which the idol is carved has a growing or enlarging nature associated with it. As per Archaeological Survey of India the rock grows at the rate of 1 inch per 20 years (10 mm per 8 years).
It is said that people used to do Pradakshinas (rounds) around it in the past. The temple staff has already removed one pillar as the size of the Nandi has increased.
According to Potuluri Veera Brahmendra swamy, the Basavanna (stone nandi) of Yaganti will come alive and shout when Kali Yuga ends.
Golkonda
This is the view as on enters the Palace premises ( Pic from 2011 ) |
View from top of the Palace |
The city and fortress are built on a granite hill that is 120 meters (400 ft) high and is surrounded by massive crenelated ramparts. The beginnings of the fort date to 1143, when the Hindu Kakatiya dynasty ruled the area. The Kakatiya dynasty were followed by the state of Warangal, which was later conquered by the Islamic Bahmani Sultanate. The fort became the capital of a major province in the Sultanate and after its collapse the capital of the Qutb Shahi kings. The fort finally fell into ruins after a siege and its fall to Mughal emperor Aurangazeb.
You know that the Palace was built in a rocky hill |
After the collapse of the Bahmani Sultanat, Golkonda rose to prominence as the seat of the Qutb Shahi dynasty around 1507. Over a period of 62 years the mud fort was expanded by the first three Qutb Shahi kings into a massive fort of granite, extending around 5 km in circumference. It remained the capital of the Qutb Shahi dynasty until 1590 when the capital was shifted to Hyderabad. The Qutb Shahis expanded the fort, whose 7 km outer wall enclosed the city. The state became a focal point for Shia Islam in India, for instance, in the 17th century, Bahraini clerics, Sheikh Ja`far bin Kamal al-Din and Sheikh Salih Al-Karzakani both emigrated to Golkonda.
Steps to the Top |
The Qutb Shahi sultanate lasted until its conquest by Mughal emperor Aurangzeb in 1687. The fortress held out against Aurangzeb for nine months, falling to the Mughals through treachery.
Diamonds
The Golconda fort used to have a vault where once the famous Kohinoor and Hope
diamonds were stored along with other diamonds.Golkonda was once renowned for the diamonds found on the south-east at Kollur Mine near Kollur (modern day Guntur district), Paritala (modern day Krishna district) and cut in the city during the Kakatiya reign. At that time, India had the only known diamond mines in the world.
Golkonda's mines yielded few diamonds. Actually, Golkonda was the market city of the diamond trade, and gems sold there came from a number of mines. The fortress city within the walls was famous for diamond trade. However, Europeans believed that diamonds were found only in the fabled Golconda mines.
Magnificent diamonds were taken from the mines in the region surrounding Golkonda, including Darya-e Nur, meaning sea of light, at 185 carats (37 g), the largest and finest diamond of the crown jewels of Iran.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.