The visit to this temple at Agara was a part of our
Chozha period temples Visit on the ancient trade route from Chamarajanagar to
Kollegal ( Gangapadi ), in Karnataka State. This place was called as Durgaiyur Agara, which is now called as Agara. Agara.-Agara,
a village in the Yelandur taluk in the Mysore District. Population 4,261. It
has four old temples dedicated to Ramesvara, Narasimha, Varadaraja and Durga.
In that except Varadharaja Temple, the other temples were recently renovated.
The Varadharaja temple was encroached by a private person.
In the Tamil inscriptions, the village is named
Durgaiyur- agaram and in the Kannada Durgagrahara, thus showing that it derived
its name from the goddess Durga of the place, though latterly the first portion
was left out and the place came to be known as merely Agara. It will be seen
from the Kannada and Tamil names of the village as given in the inscriptions
that agara is only a Tamil corruption of the Sanskrit agrahara.
Deity :
Sri Durga.
Some of the Salient features of this temple
are.....The temple is facing
west with a balipeedam and Simha ( Looks like Hoysala emblem simha ). Nagars
are under a tree.
The goddess in the Durga Temple is a standing figure, about four feet high, with four hands, the
upper holding a discus and a conch, the right lower in the abhaya hasta and the
left lower banging by the side. Outside, the base is decorated with a frieze of
what look like yazhis.
ARCHITECTUREThe temple consists of
sanctum sanctorum, antarala, artha mandapam and a mukha mandapam. The adhisthana is of pradhibandha adhisthana
with three vrutha kumuda and yazhivari. A Nagara Vimana is over the sanctum
with stucco images of Simha on the four sides on the bhoomi desa level.
All the walls of the Durga Temple are engraved
from the top to the bottom, but many slabs have fallen from the walls and are
now scattered here and there or are buried in the debris. The was renovated now
and the wall are plain with out any pillars or pilasters.
HISTORY AND INSCRIPTIONSThe temple was built
during Chozha period. The earliest record here belongs to
Kulothunga-Chozha-I. Inscriptions
are found on the Kumuda of adhisthana. There
are nearly fifty Tamil inscriptions in the four temples of Agara.
During the restoration of the temple, inscribed
the four temples stones have been broken or chiselled out, several shelled have
been displaced and some more left on the site in an condition, so that there is
scarcely any epigraph at which is complete. One of the fragments temple
mentioning the god, which may on palaeographical grounds be assigned to the
close of the 10th century,
bears testimony to the antiquity of the temple. There are also other fragments
recording grants to the by the Hoysala king temple by Vishnu Vardhana and the
general Vishnu-dandadhipa.
A 11th
Century inscription records the gift of 5 panas for a sandhi lamp to goddess
Durggayar.
Another 11th
to 12th Century inscription records the endowment of a lamp by
Tirunallulan Pichchan-devan.
Another
inscription records the endowment of burning a perpetual lamp for which 3
gadayanas, by Madhusudan.
LEGENDS As per the Sthala purana, a king of the name of
Vishnu Sharma, who, when on a visit to the place, was bitten by a cobra, got
rid of the poison by his prayers to the deities Rameswara and Narasimha, and
that thence forward the village became known as Agara ( free from gara or
poison).
TEMPLE TIMINGSSince oru kala pooja is conducted the closing and
opening times are unpredictable.
HOW TO REACHThis place Agara is
on the bus route Chamarajanagar to Kollegal. 31.2 KM from Chamarajanagar, 7 Km
from Kollegal, 61.8 KM from Mysore and 147 KM from Bangalore.
REFERENCE : Mysore
District Gazetteer
Deity :
Sri Durga.
LEGENDS
REFERENCE : Mysore
District Gazetteer
முகப்புத் தோற்றம் இல்லையா - பூட்டிய கதவுடன் உள்ளதைத் தவிர -
ReplyDeleteகதவு பூட்டப்பட்டு இருந்தது... வீதி குறுகலாக இருந்ததால் முகப்பு தோற்றமும் எடுக்க முடியவில்லை.
Delete