Moolavar
Moolavar or Mulavar is a Sanskrit word referring to the main deity in a Hindu Temple. Moola means "main", which in turn refers to the primary deity in the temple.[1]
Amunthirathu devi moolavar | |
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Name | |
Proper name | Amunthirathu Devi Temple |
Geography | |
Country | India |
State | Kerala |
Location | Mudakkal, Attingal |
Culture | |
Primary deity | Goddess Sree Bhadrakali |
Important festivals | Meena Uthra Maholsavam |
Importance
The sanctuary inside the Hindu temple is called Garba griha (dwelling of the embryo). The sanctum is located at the centre of the temple, and its only opening mostly faces east. The most ancient Hindu sanctuaries are flat stone dolmens, vertical and horizontal slabs forming a square room at the centre of a stone wall boundary. The more important gods, Moolavar, are closed to the center of the temples than the images that surround them and are precisely located at the points corresponding to the energies they represent on the temple plan's magical diagram.[2]
See also
References
- ↑ Baldev Raj, C. Rajagopalan, C. V. Sundaram. Where gods come alive: a monograponze icons of South India.
- ↑ Danielou, Alain (2001). The Hindu Temple Deification of Eroticism. pp. 75.
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