Sreevaraham Lakshmi Varaha Temple, Thiruvananthapuram

Sreevaraham Lakshmi Varaha Temple is situated at Sreevaraham of Thiruvananthapuram very near to the well famous Sree Padmanabhaswamy Temple. This is a Hindu temple administered by the Travancore Devaswom Board. The temple is locally known as Sreevaraham Temple.

Importance

The principal deity of this temple is Varahamurthy which is the third incarnation of Lord Vishnu.[1] There are only twenty three temples all over India in this depiction and out of these only in a few are shown his consort Lakshmi Devi along with him. At Lakshmi Varaha Temple, Thiruvananthapuram Lakshmi Devi is shown as sitting on his lap. In Kerala only three temples of Varahamurthy exist this temple at Thiruvananthapuram is believed to be more than 5000 years old.

Architecture

The temple is of typical Kerala style architecture and the sanctum is round in shape and its roof is covered with copper plates.The 'nalambalam' which is the outer structure is square shaped.There is golden flag post in the temple.

Temple Pond

The temple pond needs special mention as it is the largest temple pond in Kerala and has an area of 8 acres. The large number of priests arriving for the Murajapam ritual[2] at Sree Padmanabhaswamy temple takes bath in this pond. During Onam festival, a boat race is conducted in this pond.[3]

Deities and Sub-Deities

The main deity is Lord Vishnu in his incarnation form as Varahamurthy in sitting posture along with Lakshmi Devi. The sub-deities are Ganapathy, Sree Krishna, Nagarajah, Yakshiamma, etc.

Offerings

Offerings that are common in other Vishnu temples are done here also which includes 'Archana, Ganapathy Homam, Ashtothararchana, Thrimadhuram, Paalpayasam, Unniyappam, Thulabaram and so on.

Festivals

The main festival is in the Malayalam month of Meenam (mid March -mid April) and during the same period of 'Painguni Festival' of Sree Padmanabhaswamy temple. Varaha Jayanthi in the Malayalam month of Meenam is also celebrated in a grand manner.

See also

References

[1] [2]

External links

  1. http://wikimapia.org/20120/Sreevaraham-Temple-Pond
  2. http://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/tp-national/tp-kerala/back-to-the-vedas-with-murajapam/article1952689.ece
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