Koneswaram Temple, Trincomalee – Etymology
Thirukonamalai
& Koneswaram:
In Tamil
language, temples are known as Kovils,; thus the temple complex is known locally as Koneswaram
Kovil, the abode of Kona - Eiswara (the Chief Lord or God). The presiding Shiva
deity's names are Konesar, Koneswaran, Kona Natha and the goddess
consort is called Mathumai Amman (another name for Mother
goddess Amman). It later earned the title Thiru Koneswaram
Kovil. The origin of the term Ko or Kone lies in the Old
Tamil word for the terms
"Lord", "King" or "Chief", which allude to the
deity that presides here; this term appears in several Tamil inscriptions of the sixth century B.C. – second
century A.D.
Trincomalee, the coastal peninsula town where Koneswaram
is located is an Anglicized form of the old Tamil word "Thiru-Kona-malai",
meaning "Lord of the Sacred Hill", its earliest reference in this
form found in the Thevaram of the 7th century by Sambandar. Thiru is
a generally used epithet denoting a "sacred" temple site while Malai means
mountain or hill; Middle
Tamil manuscripts and inscriptions
mention the monumental compound shrine as the Thirukonamalai Konesar
Kovil.
Kona has other meanings in Old Tamil such as peak,
while another origin for the term Koneswaram could come from the
Tamil term Kuna (East). Therefore, other translators suggest definitions of
Trincomalee such as "sacred angular/peaked hill", "sacred
eastern hill" or "three peaked hill".
Greek writer Strabo, quoting Eratosthenes and Onesicritus notes the island's proximity to the southernmost
regions of India, next to the country of the "Koniakoi people,"
found south up to a coastal promontory on an eastern limit, and describes the
island as extending towards Ethiopia and being home to
elephants. The temple was constructed atop Swami Rock, also called Swami
Malai or Kona-ma-malai, a cliff on the peninsula that drops 400 feet (120
metres) directly into the sea.
Gokarna:
The Trincomalee Harbour, a circular natural Harbour which the temple crowns
towards the north, is referred to as Ko-Kannam or "Lord's
Cheek", alluding to the cheek shape of Shiva's bull Nandi. The Sanskrit equivalent of the port town's Harbour bay is Go-Karna, meaning "Cow's Ear" or Gokarna
Pattana and the deity's name Gokarneswara or Go – Natha in
Sanskrit. Pathmanathan offers the etymological
link Thiru-Gokarna-Malai or Thiru-Gona-Malai based on this
connection.
The ethnographer Megasthenes writing in his Indica from 350 – 290
B.C., describes the island as being divided by a long river, productive of a
large number of gold and pearls in one half and that the inhabitants of this
country are called Paleogoni, meaning Old Goni in Tamil
and Greek, who Pliny adds worshipped Hercules and Dionysus (Bacchus) like the Pandiyans of Tamilakam.
The Vayu
Purana, written in 300 A.D. specifically
mentions the tallest mountain peak of the great gold and silver rich mountain
range Malaya on the island, and that "to the east of this island
at the shore of the sea lies a great Siva temple in a holy place
called Gokarna." Gokarna is also a place name in Karnataka,
India, Kalinga, Tamil Nadu and Nepal all associated with ancient Shiva temples and some
with Ravana of the Ramayana, the former temple in Karnataka –
the Mahabaleshwar Temple – also earning praise in the Thevaram.
A major shrine to the deity Bhadrakali exists within the
Mahabaleshwar Temple complex, and similarly the Bhadrakali Amman Temple of
Trincomalee, dedicated to the same
deity and significantly expanded by Rajendra
Chola I, stands on Konesar Road before the
entrance to Swami Rock.
Kailash
of the South:
Heralded as "Dakshina Kailasam" / "Then
Kailasam" (Kailash of the South) because it lies on exactly the same
longitude as the Tibetan mountain Mount
Kailash (the primary abode of Shiva),
Koneswaram's early black granite rock-cut architectural style shared
similarities to Kailasanathar Temples of the subcontinent. Its traditional history and
legends were compiled into the Sanskrit treatises Dakshina Kailasa
Puranam – Sthala Puranam of Koneswaram, written in 1380 by Jeyaveera Cinkaiariyan, and the Dakshina Kailasa Manmiam – three
chapters of the Skanda
Puranam of unknown antiquity –
manuscripts of which have been discovered and dated from the 5th – 7th
century.
It was in the Puranas that the shrine first found reference as Koneiswara
Parwata, motivating Kullakottan Chola who learnt of its sanctity to sail to
Trincomalee and develop the temple. The compiler of the Yoga Sutras, Patanjali’s place of birth at the temple corroborates Tirumular's Thirumanthiram, which describes him as hailing from Then
Kailasam and his self-description as a "Gonardiya"
from Gonarda, "a country in the southern and eastern division"
of the Indian continent. Both men were ardent disciples of Nandhi.
Patanjali famously visited the Thillai Nataraja Temple,
Chidambaram, where he wrote
the Charana Shrungarahita Stotram on Nataraja.
Macchakeswaram:
In Kanda Puranam, the epic authored by Kachiyappa
Sivachariyar, Koneswaram is venerated
as one of the three foremost Shiva abodes in the world, alongside Thillai
Chidambaram Temple and Mount Kailash. The Vishnu-Thirumal shrine of the
Koneswaram complex repaired by Kullakottan Chola was referred to as
the Thirukonamalai Macchakeswaram / Macceswaram Kovil in some Middle
Tamil inscriptions such as the Nilaveli inscription of the 10th century,
a Tamil rendering of the Sanskrit Matsyakesvara. In fact, Matsya is the fish
incarnation of Vishnu, and this shrine's significance along with that of the
third pagoda of the promontory to the goddess is expounded further in
the Dakshina Kailasa Puranam and the Thirukonasala Puranam.
Temple
of a Thousand Columns:
The temple's "Aayiram Kaal Mandapam" earned it
the title Pagoda of Trincomalee – Temple of a Thousand
Columns among Europeans. The rocky promontory is dedicated to Siva in his
ancient form of Kona-Eiswara, and is a major centre of pilgrimage today. The
worship of Eiswara is noted to have been the original worship of the island;
Charles Pridham, Jonathan Forbes and George
Turnour state that it is probable
there is no more ancient form of worship existing than that of Eiswara upon his sacred promontory.
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