The Colonial Temples of Madras
The Twin Temples of Original Madras
There was a temple for Vishnu called Chenna Keshava Perumal, located at the site of the High Court. This temple was believed to be referred to by Dr. Fryer, who mentioned that he had visited a Pagoda in 1673 CE. In 1710 CE, the Thomas Pitt map also indicates the existence of a great Pagoda in this region. It is beyond the scope of this article to analyze if this temple was built by Beri Thimanna, the Dubhashi of Francis Day, and Andrew Cogan or if it was a much older temple.
Reportedly, there was a public outcry after the temple was demolished. In 1762 CE, the East India Company offered land in Petha Naickenpet. A committee under Manali Muthu Krishna Mudaliar was formed to construct the temple. Mudaliar was a chief merchant of the East India Company.
In Ganga Rama Street in Petha Naickentpet, Mudaliar started constructing the temple. The Company donated 1,173 pagodas. Mudaliar contributed 5,202 pagodas and collected the rest from the public. Totally, around 15,652 pagodas were spent on the construction of the temple.
While constructing the Chenna Keshava temple, Mudaliar built the Chenna Malleeswarar temple nearby. Thus, the twin temples of Shiva and Vishnu were erected, which share the tank and Ratha even today. The twin temples together are referred to as Pattinam Temples. The prominent temples have a simple layout and a limited number of sculptures. Finding such a calm and serene place in today's highly crowded and congested Black Town is tough.
Kanda Kottam
Today, the city has many famous temples for Murugan, fondly called the God of Tamils. However, in the original Madras, which had a shorter boundary around the fort, there was only one famous temple for Murugan. It was Kanda Kottam.
The temple's presiding deity is a small image of Kanda Swami. Although the Murti is small, the Kirti (fame) is significant. Ramalinga Adigal used to visit this temple every day. The famous devotees of Murugan, such as Variyar, playback singers Sirkazhi Govindarajan and T.M.S., were regular visitors of this temple.
Vellore Mari Chettiar served as a merchant under the British East India Company. He was a staunch devotee of Lord Murugan. He and his friend Kandappa Achari used to visit the Murugan temple at Tirupporur on the Kritikai day of every month. One day, when they were resting under a neem tree on their way to that temple, they accidentally discovered an idol of Murugan buried under a snake hole.
Mari Chettiar and Kandappa Achari took that idol along with them. They installed it in a site with a Pillaiyar temple (Rasappa Chetty Street in the Park Town area) in 1673 CE. Chettiar had to pawn the jewels of his wife to extend the temple. Fortunately, he did not have to spend to purchase the land, as Muthiyalu Naicken, the prosperous merchant, gifted it.
The temple got extended and renovated for many years by the Chettiar community.
Alingal’s Pagoda
When a person, Betha Venkatadri, became the Chief Merchant of the East India Company, two people were assigned to serve him. One among them was Alangatha Pillai. He became very popular later, and the British considered him the best Dubhashi they ever had. He also became the Chief Merchant of the East India Company after Betha Venkatadri. He was referred to as Alingal Pillai in British records.
Alangatha Pillai made a lot of money through his service to the British. He was probably too religious. He used his wealth to build a massive temple for Lord Shiva called Ekambareswarar on Mint Street. He became Dubhashi in the 1680s and died probably in 1689 CE. Hence, this temple must have been built sometime in the 1680s CE.
The temple of Ekambareswarar was very popular in Madras in those days. It was referred to as Allingal's Pagoda on a map belonging to the early 1700s.
Chintadaripet Twin Temples
The Pattinam temples were built probably due to public outcry. Kanda Kottam and Ekambareswarar temples were constructed out of devotion. But the twin temples of Chintadaripet were built perhaps due to commercial motives.
Sunku Rama Chetty, a powerful and wealthy Dubhashi, owned the locality called Sunku Ram's Garden. It was developed as Chintadaripet after the weavers settled here in 1734 CE. It seems Audiappa Narayan, who served as a Dubhashi under the British, figured out that the temples would attract the people to settle down in this locality. He was instrumental in constructing the twin temples for Shiva and Vishnu in this area. In the 1780s, the temples were built at the cost of around 18,000 pagodas. Similar to the Pattinam temples, these two temples also share a common tank. Audiappa Narayan also constructed a mosque in this area.
Thus, a Dubhashi built the temples on the land that another Dubhashi owned.
Kaladipet Perumal Temple
Joseph Collet served as the Governor of Madras between 1717 and 1719 CE. Veeraraghava, a Brahmin in a high post in the British Government, became very close to Collet thanks to his sincere work and loyalty.
Veeraraghava was a staunch devotee of Vishnu. He often used to travel to Kanchipuram to visit the famous Varadaraja temple. Due to this, he even used to report late to the office. Collet did not like this, and he wanted to stop this habit of his beloved employee.
Collet gave some money to Veeraraghava and permitted him to collect funds from the public. Thus, Veeraraghava built a temple for Lord Varadaraja in his own locality. The area was also named after the Governor, Colletpet, and the name got transformed into Kaladipet later. It was the first weaver's village outside the Black Town area.
excellent.
ReplyDeleteThank you sir
DeleteThe next time I visit these temples, I am sure I'd be awed not by piety, but by the sense of history these temples have.
ReplyDeleteThe next time I visit these temples, I am sure I'd be awed not by piety, but by the sense of history these temples have.
ReplyDelete