Kolaramma Temple, Kolar – The Temple
Kolaramma Temple was built in the Southern Style of
architecture by Cholas. The temple has a Dravida Vimana Style of architecture
and it has inscriptions from the period of 1012 A.D. There are intricate carvings
and designs inside the granite stones of the temple. The temple is in L-shape housing
two shrines; one for Kolaramma and the other for Sapthamadhas. A common
vestibule is shared by both the shrines, although the main temple faces east
and the other shrine faces north.
The treatment of walls with slender pilasters of the
main shrine and a large image of Chamunda flanked by Virabhadra and Ganapati
are noteworthy. The garbhagriha, adhisthana mouldings and the pilastered wall
are covered with numerous inscriptions in Tamil characters. Facing east, the
temple has an austere Mahadwara ornamented with Gajalakshmi in green stone on
the lintel while its pillars inside have sculptured figures on all sides.
The inner Mahadwara is connected to a prakara. In the
prakara, are several shrines in addition to a large pillared mandapa. The
garbhagriha has stone images of Saptamatrikas with Dhakshinamoorthi to the
right and Vinayaka to the left. The main image of Chamunda / Mahishasuramardhini
faces south and is worshipped as the chief deity Kolaramma.
Kolaramma is the presiding deity of the
town of Kolar in Karnataka.
She is an eight-armed Goddess Durga. The devotees worship her by looking at the
mirror which is placed opposite the idol. There is a special pooja conducted on
Tuesdays and Fridays, which is when devotees visit the temple. In the southern
cell are the stucco colossi of the Saptamatrikas and the utsavamurti of
Kolaramma.
Another popular deity of this temple is Chelamma or
the scorpion goddess. People
believe that by praying at the Chelamma shrine, a person will be guarded
from scorpion bites
by the deity. There is a small pit near the shrine which is said to contain
scorpions. During April and May at certain days a scorpion is said to come from
this pit and sit near the deity.
Another interesting thing about the temple is the hundi or the well
which is used to collect money offerings from the people, and it is a tradition
to at least put one coin into the small opening on the floor of the temple,
which apparently is a large hole dug into the earth, one can still hear the
clicking sounds of coins accumulated over hundreds of years.
The temple was a prominent Shakti worship site and a
tantric temple. The proof for this lies in the stone slabs inside the temple.
These stone slabs are memorial stones with pictures depicting sacrifices taking
place in the temple. You can also view the depiction of tantric goddess with a
bow on the temple walls.
There is a slab which depicts a battle scene is now
found on the front platform of the entrance to the temple. The heroic stone
‘Viragal’ which is around four and a half feet tall belonging to the Ganga
period is covered with relief work of horses, soldiers, elephants, celestial
cars and celestial nymphs. It has been noticed that there are more than 30
inscriptions found inside the temple, in Kannada and Tamil.
No comments:
Post a Comment