Thanjavur Brihadishvara complex west and north colonnade
Historical background
The Brihadishvara temple, built on orders of Rajaraja Chola (r.c. 985 – c. 1014 CE), was consecrated in 1010. After the 11th century, the temple continued to be the focus of devotion and subsidiary shrines dedicated to various deities were erected within its precincts.
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At the close of the 14th century, Thanjavur became part of the Vijayanagara Empire and only after the fall of the capital city in 1565, the Thanjavur Nayakas declared their independence maintaining Thanjavur as their headquarters. They fortified the city and erected a number of shrines within the temple precincts, the most famous being the one dedicated to Subrahmanya (16th cent.).
In 1674, Ekoji Bhonsle, half-brother of the famous Shivaji, conquered Thanjavur, thus establishing the rule of a southern branch of the Marathas. During the following two centuries the Brihadishvara temple was affected by the unsettled political situation in South India and the Thanjavur kingdom. A momentous event was the occupation of the temple by an English garrison from 1771 to 1798. The worship in the temple was discontinued and the walls, paving stones, buildings and sculptures were damaged.
When Serfoji II (r. 1798-1832) ascended the throne, under the supervision of the East India Company, the English left the temple and the king initiated a series of refurbishments and it became again a great religious centre. He built the Ganapati shrine, whose porch walls are embellished with large-scale murals now very faded. Further murals of the Maratha period are to be seen on the ceiling of the mandapa of the Brihannayaki shrine, the consort-goddess of Brihadishvara. The themes illustrated are: the story of Daksha’s sacrifice on the west aisle; the Devimahatmya (Glorification of the Great Goddess) on the central aisle; the story of the sage Markandeya, and possibly another narrative, in the eastern aisle, now used as an office.
Probably executed during the reign of Shivaji II (1832-55) are the sets of paintings on the wall of the west and the north colonnades skirting the spacious prakara. The murals depict deities and the complete Tiruvilayadal Puranam, the ‘The Story of the Sacred Games’ i.e. the 64 ‘sports of Shiva’ at Madurai. The latter are damaged and in a sad state of conservation. The bilingual inscription, in English and in Tamil at the end of the set, probably recording its commission, is now too faded to be read.

Date: First half of the 19th century
Description: Madurai is on the verge of being engulfed by the ocean. Ugra Pandya armed with his javelin, quells the waters. (TP 13)
Location: Tamil Nadu Temple;Brihadishvara Temple complex;Thanjavur
Positioning: Courtyard, north colonnade

Date: First half of the 19th century
Description: Ugra Pandya armed with a disc, vanquishes Indra, thus putting an end to the drought on his land. (TP 14)
Location: Tamil Nadu Temple;Brihadishvara Temple complex;Thanjavur
Positioning: Courtyard, north colonnade

Date: First half of the 19th century
Description: Ugra Pandya throws a bunch of flowers on Mount Meru’s summit. Mount Meru appears in his human form (barely visible) and shows the king where the riches are concealed. (TP 15)
Location: Tamil Nadu Temple;Brihadishvara Temple complex;Thanjavur
Positioning: Courtyard, north colonnade

Date: First half of the 19th century
Description: Shiva as Jnana-Dakshinamurti explains to the rishis the true sense of the Vedas. (TP 16)
Location: Tamil Nadu Temple;Brihideshvara Temple complex;Thanjavur
Positioning: Courtyard, north colonnade

Date: First half of the 19th century
Description: Sundareshvara, in the guise of a merchant sells gems to Abhisheka Pandya. (TP 17)
Location: Tamil Nadu Temple;Brihadishvara Temple complex;Thanjavur
Positioning: Courtyard, north colonnade

Date: First half of the 19th century
Description: Shiva saves Madurai from the floods caused by Varuna’s wrath. (TP 18)
Location: Tamil Nadu Temple;Brihadishvara Temple complex;Thanjavur
Positioning: Courtyard, north colonnade

Date: First half of the 19th century
Description: The citizens of Madurai worship Sundareshvara and Minakshi after he saved the town from the floods caused by Varuna. (TP 19)
Location: Tamil Nadu Temple;Brihadishvara Temple complex;Thanjavur
Positioning: Courtyard, north colonnade

Date: First half of the 19th century
Description: Shiva as an almighty siddha. (TP 20)
Location: Tamil Nadu Temple;Brihadishvara Temple complex;Thanjavur
Positioning: Courtyard, north colonnade

Date: First half of the 19th century
Description: A stone elephant eats a sugar cane given to him by Abhisheka Pandya, at the presence of Shiva in the guise of a siddha (TP 21)
Location: Tamil Nadu Temple;Brihadishvara Temple complex;Thanjavur
Positioning: Courtyard, northern colonnade

Date: First half of the 19th century
Description: Vikrama Pandya kills the magic elephant created by the Jains, seen here armed with clubs, to destroy Madurai. The king’s arrow takes the form of Ugra Narasimha and kills the elephant. (TP 22)
Location: Tamil Nadu Temple;Brihadishvara Temple complex;Thanjavur
Positioning: Courtyard, north colonnade

Date: First half of the 19th century
Description: In which Shiva becomes an old ascetic, a youth, and a baby. (TP 23)
Location: Tamil Nadu Temple;Brihadishvara Temple complex;Thanjavur
Positioning: Courtyard, north colonnade

Date: First half of the 19th century
Description: At the behest of Rajashekhara Pandya, Shiva lifts his right foot. (TP 24)
Location: Tamil Nadu Temple;Brihadishvara Temple complex;Thanjavur
Positioning: Courtyard, north colonnade

Date: First half of the 19th century
Description: The death of the wife of a Brahmin, accidentally killed by an arrow placed on a tree by a hunter, and fallen because of a gust of wind, is explained. (TP 25)
Location: Tamil Nadu Temple;Brihadishvara Temple complex;Thanjavur
Positioning: Courtyard, north colonnade

Date: First half of the 19th century
Description: Devotion to Sundareshvara frees a Brahmin of the sin of brahmahatya (brahminicide), here personified as a large dark creature. (TP 26)
Location: Tamil Nadu Temple;Brihadishvara Temple complex;Thanjavur
Positioning: Courtyard, north colonnade

Date: First half of the 19th century
Description: Shiva, as a fencing master, cuts Siddhan to pieces.(TP 27)
Location: Tamil Nadu Temple;Brihadishvara Temple complex;Thanjavur
Positioning: Courtyard, north colonnade

Description: King Anantaguna Pandya kills the magic snake, created by the Jains. The snake assumes the form of a mountain, Nagamalai, and the poison contaminates Madurai. The town is saved by the King’s devotion to Sundareshvara. (TP 28)
Location: Tamil Nadu Temple;Brihadishvara Temple complex;Thanjavur
Positioning: Courtyard, north colonnade

Date: First half of the 19th century
Description: Nandi fights against a magic cow sent by the Jains to destroy Madurai. (TP 29)
Location: Tamil Nadu Temple;Brihadishvara Temple complex;Thanjavur
Positioning: Courtyard, north colonnade

Date: First half of the 19th century
Description: Shiva, at the head of an army, comes to the help of Kulabhushana Pandya. (TP 30)
Location: Tamil Nadu Temple;Brihadishvara Temple complex;Thanjavur
Positioning: Courtyard, north colonnade

Date: First half of the 19th century
Description: Shiva in the guise of a bracelet merchant, sells bracelets to the wives of the rishis. (TP 32)
Location: Tamil Nadu Temple;Brihadishvara Temple complex;Thanjavur
Positioning: Courtyard, north colonnade

Date: First half of the 19th century
Description: Shiva teaches the eight main yogic powers (Ashtamahasiddhi) to the six Kriittikas (the six Pleiades). (TP 33)
Location: Tamil Nadu Temple;Brihadishvara Temple complex;Thanjavur
Positioning: Courtyard, north colonnade
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