Thursday, July 15, 2021

C. V. Raman(physics)Nobel Prize Award Ceremony with other winners

 

C. V. Raman

 

 

 

 Raman at the 1930 Nobel Prize Award Ceremony with other winners, from left C. V. Raman (physics),

Sir Chandrasekhara Venkata Raman FRS (/rmn/; 7 November 1888 – 21 November 1970) was an Indian physicist who was most recognised for his work in the field of light scattering. S. Krishnan noticed that some of the deflected light changes wavelength and amplitude when it passes through a transparent material. The Raman effect (Raman scattering) was named after this phenomena, which was a new sort of light scattering. Raman won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1930, and was the first Asian person to win a Nobel Prize in any discipline of science.

Raman, a precocious youngster born to Tamil Brahmin[6] parents, finished his secondary and higher secondary schooling at St Aloysius' Anglo-Indian High School at the ages of 11 and 13, respectively. At the age of 16, he topped the University of Madras bachelor's degree exams with honours in physics from Presidency College. While still a graduate student, he published his first research work on light diffraction in 1906. He earned his M.A. the following year. He joined the Indian Finance Service in Calcutta as an Assistant Accountant General when he was 19 years old. He met the Indian Association for the Cultivation of Science while he was there (IACS), the first research institute in India, where he was able to conduct autonomous study and make significant discoveries in the fields of acoustics and optics.

Ashutosh Mukherjee appointed him as the first Palit Professor of Physics at the Rajabazar Science College of the University of Calcutta in 1917. On his first trip to Europe, viewing the Mediterranean Sea encouraged him to identify the dominant explanation for the blue colour of the sea at the time, namely the reflected Rayleigh-scattered light from the sky, as being wrong. In 1926, he started the Indian Journal of Physics. On February 28, 1928, he and Krishnan discovered a novel light scattering phenomena named "modified scattering," but better known as the Raman effect. Every year, the Indian government commemorates the day as National Science Day. In 1933, Raman became the first Indian Director of the Indian Institute of Science in Bangalore. In the same year, he established the Indian Academy of Sciences. In 1948, he founded the Raman Research Institute, where he worked until his death.

 

In 1954, India's government bestowed the first Bharat Ratna, the country's highest civilian honour.

 

Later, in protest of Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru's stance on scientific research, he destroyed the medallion.

Early childhood development and education

C. V. Raman was born in Tiruchirapalli, Madras Presidency (now Trichy, Tamil Nadu), to Hindu Tamil Brahmin parents Chandrasekhara Ramanathan Iyer and Parvathi Ammal. He was the second of eight siblings. His family relocated to Visakhapatnam (formerly Vishakapatnam or Vizagapatam or Vizag) in Andhra Pradesh in 1892 when his father was recruited to the faculty of physics at Mrs A.V. Narasimha Rao College.

Raman attended St Aloysius' Anglo-Indian High School there. He passed matriculation at age 11 and the FA examination (similar to today's Intermediate exam, PUCPDC and +2) with a scholarship at age 13,securing first rank in both under the Andhra Pradesh school board examination.

 

Raman enrolled at Presidency College in Madras (now Chennai) in 1902, where his father had been moved to teach mathematics and physics.19 At the age of 18, he received a bachelor's degree from the University of Madras, where he placed first and won the gold medal in physics and English. In 1906, while still a graduate student, he published his first scientific publication in the British magazine Philosophical Magazine, titled "Unsymmetrical diffraction bands due to a rectangular aperture." [20] In 1907, he earned a master's degree with honours from the same university. Surface tension of liquids was the subject of his second work published in the same journal that year.  It was alongside Lord Rayleigh's study on the sensitivity of the ear to sound,that Lord Rayleigh began to communicate with Raman, calling him courteously as "Professor." Richard Llewellyn Jones, Raman's physics teacher, was well aware of his abilities and insisted that he continue his research in England. Jones arranged for Raman's physical inspection with Colonel (Sir Gerald) Giffard. The inspection revealed that Raman would not withstand the harsh weathers of England,he incident of which he later recalled, and said, "[Giffard] examined me and certified that I was going to die of tuberculosis… if I were to go to England."

Career

Chandrasekhara Subrahmanya Ayyar, Raman's older brother, had entered the Indian Finance Service (now Indian Audit and Accounts Service), India's most prominent government service. [The most sought service, the Indian Civil Service (ICS), was recruited in England at the time. Raman, unable to study overseas, followed suit and qualified for the Indian Finance Service in February 1907, taking first place in the entrance examination. " In June 1907, he was assigned to the Indian Association for the Cultivation of Science in Calcutta (now Kolkata) as Assistant Accountant General (IACS), He quickly contacted Asutosh Dey, who would later become his lifelong partners, Amrita Lal Sircar, the institute's founder and secretary, and Ashutosh Mukherjee, the institute's executive member and Vice Chancellor of the University of Calcutta. With such a connection, he was able to conduct research on his own time, even "at very unusual hours," as Raman later reminisced. The institute had not yet recruited regular researchers or published any research papers.Raman's article "Newton's rings in polarised light" was published in Nature in 1907. .

In 1909, the Indian Association for the Cultivation of Science (IACS) published a publication called Bulletin of Indian Association for the Cultivation of Science, in which Raman was a key contributor

 

In 1909, Raman was transferred to Rangoon, British Burma (now Myanmar), to take up the position of currency officer. He had to return to Madras after only a few months since his father died of a terrible disease. He stayed in Rangoon for the rest of the year due to his father's death and burial rituals. In 1910, he was relocated to Nagpur, Maharashtra.[31] Even before he had served for a year in Nagpur, he was elevated to Accountant General in 1911 and sent back to Calcutta.

 

 

The University of Calcutta began assigning research scholars to Raman at IACS in 1915. Sudhangsu Kumar Banerji, a PhD student under Ganesh Prasad (who later became Director General of Observatories of India Meteorological Department), was his first student. University of Allahabad, Rangoon University, Queen's College Indore, Institute of Science, Nagpur, Krisnath College, and University of Madras all followed suit the next year. Raman had mentored almost a dozen students by 1919. Raman obtained two honorary appointments at IACS after Sircar's death in 1919: Honorary Professor and Honorary Secretary. He referred to this time in his life as his "golden era."

 

Raman was appointed Palit Professor of Physics at the University of Calcutta in 1913, a position named after the donor Sir Taraknath Palit. The appointment was made by the university senate on January 30, 1914, as reported in the meeting minutes:

 

 

 

At the Senate meeting on January 30, 1914, the following appointments to the Palit Professorships were made: Dr P C Ray and Mr C.V. Raman, MA... Each Professor's position will be indefinite. When a professor reaches the age of sixty, he must resign from his position. Ashutosh Mukherjee had invited Jagadish Chandra Bose to take over the role prior to 1914, but Bose had declined. When a second choice, Raman became the first Palit Professor of Physics but was delayed for taking up the position as World War I broke out. He did not become a full-fledged professor until 1917, when he joined Rajabazar Science College, a campus established by the University of Calcutta in 1914.  After a decade of service, he unwillingly left as a civil servant, which he regarded as "supreme sacrifice. since his salary as a professor would be roughly half of his salary at the time. But the advantage was the terms and conditions were congenial to him, as plainly expressed in the report of his joining the university, which stated:

 

Acceptance of the Sir T N Palit Professorship by Mr C.V. Raman on the proviso that he not be obliged to go outside of India... Mr. C. V. Raman began his employment as Palit Professor of Physics on 2.7.17, according to reports... Mr Raman has been advised that he will not be obliged to teach MA and MSc sessions, which will allow him to focus on his own research or aid advanced students with their studies.

Some members of the University of Calcutta Senate, particularly foreign members, were outraged by Raman's nomination as the Palit Professor because he lacked a PhD and had never studied abroad. As a sort of response, Mukherjee arranged for Raman to get an honorary DSc from the University of Calcutta in 1921. In the same year, he went to Oxford to give a talk at the British Empire's Congress of Universities.  His hosts were J. J. Thomson and Lord Rutherford, and he was well-known at the time. When Mukherjee asked him about his future goals after he was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1924, he said, "Of course, the Nobel Prize." As the first editor of the Indian Journal of Physics, he founded the journal in 1926. In the second volume, he published his renowned essay "A new radiation," which reported the discovery of the Raman effect.

In 1932, Raman was succeeded as Palit Professor by Debendra Mohan Bose. In 1933, he left Kolkata to become the first Indian director of the Indian Institute of Science in Bangalore. The lands and funds for the Indian Institute of Science in Bangalore were donated by Maharaja Krishnaraja Wadiyar IV, the King of Mysore, Jamsetji Tata, and Nawab Sir Mir Osman Ali Khan, the Nizam of Hyderabad. In 1909, the Viceroy of India, Lord Minto, approved the formation, and Morris Travers was nominated as the first Director by the British government. The fourth Director was Raman. He recruited G. during his time at IISc. N. Ramachandran, who eventually rose to prominence as an X-ray crystallographer. He formed the Indian Academy of Sciences in 1934 and started publishing the proceedings of the academy.  Around that time, the Calcutta Physical Society was founded, with Raman spearheading the idea in early 1917. In 1943, Raman founded Travancore Chemical and Manufacturing Co. Ltd. with his old student Panchapakesa Krishnamurti.  The company was one of the first organic and inorganic chemical manufacturers, and was renamed TCM Limited in 1996.  Raman was named the first National Professor of Independent India by the new government in 1947.

 

In 1948, Raman left the Indian Institute of Science and founded the Raman Research Institute in Bangalore the next year. He was the organization's director, and he stayed involved until his death in 1970.

 

Contributions to science

The states involved in the Raman signal are depicted in an energy level diagram.

From left, C. Raman, Raman, Raman, Raman, Raman, Raman, Raman, Raman, Raman, Raman, Raman, Raman, Sinclair Lewis (physics), V. Raman (chemistry), Hans Fischer (chemistry), Karl Landsteiner (medical), and V. Raman (literature)

The sound of music

Understanding the physics of musical sounds was one of Raman's passions. Between 1916 and 1921, he was motivated by Hermann von Helmholtz's The Sensations of Tone, a book he came across when he joined IACS.He explored and published his discoveries in a prolific manner. On the basis of superposition of velocities, he developed the theory of transverse vibration of bowed string instruments. He researched the acoustics of many violin and related instruments, including Indian stringed instruments, and water splashes, and even performed "Experiments with mechanically-played violins."

 

Raman also researched the distinctiveness of Indian drums. His analysis of the harmonic nature of the sound of the tabla and mridangam were the first scientific studies on Indian percussion. He produced a critical inquiry on Kaufmann's hypothesis on pianoforte string vibrations. He was able to investigate how sound travels through the Whispering Gallery of St Paul's Cathedral's dome, which produces strange sound effects.  His work on acoustics was a crucial forerunner, both empirically and philosophically, to his subsequent works on optics and quantum physics.

 

The sea's colour is blue.

Raman began investigating light scattering in 1919, as part of his wider excursion into optics. His first astonishing physics finding was the blue colour of seawater. During a trip back to the United States on the S.S. In September 1921, Narkunda reflected on the Mediterranean Sea's blue hue. He researched seawater using rudimentary optical equipment, a pocket-sized spectroscope, and a Nicol prism in hand.Of various speculations on the colour of the sea,Lord Rayleigh's in 1910 was the best. "The much-admired dark blue of the deep sea has nothing to do with the colour of water, but is merely the blue of the sky viewed through reflection," according to the author. Rayleigh had correctly explained the nature of the blue sky using a process known as Rayleigh scattering, which is the scattering and refraction of light by particles in the atmosphere.  Raman could see the water via the Nicol prism without being affected by sunlight reflected off the surface. In contrast to Rayleigh, he noted how the sea appeared even bluer than usual. As soon as the S.S. arrives, While the Narkunda was parked in Bombay Harbour, Raman completed an article titled "The Color of the Sea," which was published in Nature in November 1921. Rayleigh's answer, he thought, is "questionable by a simple mode of observation" (using the Nicol prism).

 

Looking down into the water with a Nicol in front of the eye to eliminate off surface reflections, the sun's rays might be seen entering the water and appearing to converge to a point at a significant depth inside it due to perspective. What is it, exactly, that diffracts light and makes its passage visible? The diffracting particles could, at least in part, be the water molecules themselves, which is an intriguing notion to examine in this context .

When he reached Calcutta, he asked his student K.R. Ramanathan, a researcher from the University of Rangoon, came to the following conclusion in early 1922, as recorded in the Proceedings of the Royal Society of London:

In this study, it is recommended to advocate for a completely different viewpoint, namely that molecular diffraction controls the apparent luminosity and, to a large extent, its colour in this occurrence, just as it does in the case of sky colour. A theoretical calculation and experimental observations of the intensity of molecule scattering in water will be provided as a required prelude to the discussion .

 

Ramanathan followed up with an elaborate experimental finding in 1923.A subsequent study in the Bay of Bengal in 1924 provided the conclusive evidence.Water's intrinsic colour is now primarily attributed to the selective absorption of longer wavelengths of light. Due to harmonics of the infrared absorption O-H stretching modes of water molecules, in the red and orange portions of the spectrum.

Wednesday, July 14, 2021

Thoothukudi macaroons

 

Thoothukudi macaroons











Thoothukudi macaroons are a unique sort of macaron that originated in the port town of Thoothukudi in the Indian state of Tamil Nadu. While typical macaroons are prepared with pulverised almonds, Thoothukudi macaroons are produced with cashew nuts as the main ingredient.

History

Thoothukudi macaroons are essentially European macaroons that have been indianized. Mr. Arunachalam Pillai was the first to introduce macaroons to the District. According to local mythology, Portuguese sailors who arrived in Thoothukudi recruited native labour to bake macaroons, which they adapted into their current form. [2] In Mangaluru's bakeries, a similar product is also very popular. The Portuguese colonisation of Goa and the subsequent migration of Goan Catholics to South Canara are also responsible for the creation of these macarons.

Ingredients

The following are the ingredients:

Whites of eggs

Sugar

Cashews[2] are a type of nut.

Saturday, July 10, 2021

Pearl hunting

 

Pearl hunting






The action of recovering pearls from wild mollusks, mainly oysters or mussels, in the sea or freshwater is known as pearl hunting. Pearl hunting was once quite popular in the Arabian Gulf and Japan. Pearl diving began in the 1850s on Australia's northern and western coasts, and in the 1870s in the Torres Strait, off the coast of Far North Queensland.

In most cases, pearl-bearing mollusks reside at depths that are inaccessible by hand from the surface, necessitating diving or the employment of a tool to reach them. The mollusks were traditionally gathered by freediving, a technique in which a diver lowers to the ocean's depths, collects what they can, and then resurface on a single breath. The diver's ability to see while underwater was enhanced by the diving mask. When the surface-supplied diving helmet became accessible for underwater operations, it was also used for pearl hunting and gathering pearl shell as a raw material for the creation of buttons, inlays, and other decorative work.

The diver's ability to stay at depth was substantially increased by the surface-supplied diving helmet, which also presented the previously unknown risks of barotrauma during ascent and decompression sickness.

History

The only way to get pearls before the turn of the century was to hand pick vast numbers of pearl oysters or mussels from the ocean floor, lake, or river bottom. Following that, the bivalves were taken to the surface, opened, and the tissues were examined. It took more than a tonne of searching to find at least 3-4 good beds.

Free-divers were frequently compelled to descend to depths of over 100 feet on a single breath in order to collect enough pearl oysters, exposing them to the perils of hostile organisms, waves, eye damage, and drowning, often as a result of shallow water blackout on resurfacing. [2] Pearls were highly uncommon and of diverse quality at the time due to the difficulty of diving and the unpredictable nature of natural pearl formation in pearl oysters.

Asia

In Asia, some pearl oysters might be discovered on shoals at a depth of 5–7 feet (1.325–2 metres), but most divers had to travel 40 feet (12 metres) or even 125 feet (40 metres) deep to obtain enough pearl oysters, and these deep dives were highly dangerous. Divers in Asia in the nineteenth century had only the most basic sorts of technology to help them survive at such depths. They oiled their bodies to conserve heat in some regions, put greased cotton in their ears, and so on.

For thousands of years, most seawater pearls were retrieved by divers working in the Indian Ocean, in places like the Persian Gulf, the Red Sea, and the Gulf of Mannar (between Sri Lanka and India).[4] Athenaeus' 3rd-century Sophists at Dinner preserved a fragment of Isidore of Charax's Parthian itinerary, recording freediving for pearls around an island in the Persian Gulf .[5]

 

Divers in the Philippines, particularly in the Sulu Archipelago, have also been successful in obtaining huge pearls. In fact, pearls found in "high bred" shells of deep, clean, and swift tidal waters in the Sulu Archipelago were regarded the "finest of the world." Occasionally, By law, the greatest pearls belonged to the Sultan, and selling them may result in the seller's death. Despite this, numerous pearls were smuggled out of the archipelago and ended up in the hands of Europe's wealthiest families. [6] Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait, Japan, India, and certain Persian Gulf countries were known for pearling. The Gulf of Mexico was famed for pearling, which was first discovered by Spanish explorers.

Wednesday, July 7, 2021

Ramanathaswamy Temple

 



Ramanathaswamy Temple



 

 

 

The Ramanathaswamy Temple (Rmantasvmi Kyil) is a Hindu temple dedicated to the god Shiva on the island of Rameswaram in Tamil Nadu, India. It is also a Jyotirlinga temple, one of the twelve Jyotirlinga temples. It is one of the 275 Paadal Petra Sthalams, where Appar, Sundarar, and Tirugnana Sambandar, three of the most respected Nayanars (Saivite saints), have glorified the temple with their songs. The temple was expanded by the Pandya Dynasty in the 12th century, and its main shrines sanctuary was rebuilt by the Jaffna kingdom's Jeyaveera Cinkaiariyan and his successor Gunaveera Cinkaiariyan. Among all Hindu temples in India, this one has the longest corridor. Rameswaram, where the temple is located, is an important pilgrimage place for Shaivites, Vaishnavites, and Smarthas. Before crossing the bridge to Lanka, Rama built and worshipped the presiding god, the Lingam of Ramanathaswamy (Shiva).

Legend

Rama, the seventh avatar of the god Vishnu, pleaded to the god Shiva to forgive him for killing a Brahmin during the war against the Rakshasa king Ravana (who was a brahmin, son of a vedic rishi) in Sri Lanka, according to the Ramayana.

 Rama desired a huge lingam in which to worship Shiva. He told Hanuman, his army's lieutenant, to bring a lingam from the Himalayas. When Hanuman took too long to bring the lingam, Rama made a miniature lingam out of sand from the seashore, which is thought to be the lingam in the sanctuary.

Architecture 

The east and west temple towers are depicted in this image.Ramanathaswamy (Shiva) in the shape of a lingam is the temple's main deity.[1] Inside the sanctum, there are two lingams: one built by Rama from sand and serving as the principal deity, Ramalingam, and another carried by Hanuman from Kailash, Vishwalingam.

 Because the Vishwalingam was carried by Hanuman, Rama directed that it be worshipped first; this tradition is still followed today.There is a high compound wall (madil) on all four sides of the temple premises, measuring around 865 feet furlong from east to west and one furlong of 657 feet from north to south, same like all ancient temples in South India.

The outer set of corridors is said to be the world's longest, measuring around 6.9 m in height, 400 feet in each direction east and west, and 640 feet in each direction north and south. The east and west inner corridors are about 224 feet long, and the north and south inner corridors are around 352 feet long. [7] Their width varies from 15.5 to 17 feet in the east and west, 172 feet in the north and south, and 14.5 to 17 feet in the middle. [5] [7] These corridors have a total length of 3850 feet. In the outside corridor, there are approximately 1212 pillars. [7] From the ground to the centre of the roof, they are around 30 feet tall. The main tower, known as the rajagopuram, stands 53 metres tall.

Individual compositions are carved into the majority of pillars. [7] Ramanathaswamy Temple was originally a thatched shelter. The current structure is the result of the efforts of countless people over many generations. The Setupatis of Ramanathapuram take pleasure in their role in the Temple's construction. Dalavai Setupati constructed a part of the main eastern Gopuram in the seventeenth century. Muthuramalinga Setupati, who ruled for forty-nine years between 1763 and 1795, built the world-famous third corridor in the late eighteenth century. "Chokkatan Mandapam" was the name of the passageway. Muthuirullappa Pillai was the Mukhya Pradhani (Chief Minister) and the Chinna Pradhani (Deputy Minister).


Tuesday, July 6, 2021

Peruvadiyar Temple in Tanjore

Tanjore Peruvadiyar Temple 




peruvutaiyar Temple ( Big temple ) or tancaip largest temple ( Peruvudayar Temple ) ( Sanskrit: Brihadeshwara Temple, Birahadeeswarar Temple ), also known as destination Thanjavur, where the Chola Nadu Cauvery river is located on the southern bank tiruvicaippa song, the Shiva temple. The temple is also designated as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. It is one of India's largest temples [1] and is devoted to the Tamil gods.

The temple is one of Tamil Nadu's most popular tourist destinations. In 1987, the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) designated it as a World Heritage Site. Three of the UNESCO by the General Age ulakapparampariyak domain list are shown: Great Living Chola perunkoyilkal name of the temple, Gangaikonda colicuvarar Temple, Darasuram airavatecuvarar temple.

History

King Chola I, who erected the Tanjore Peruvadiyar Temple, is commemorated by a statue.Rajaraja Chola I, the Chola ruler, created the Tanjore Peruvadiyar Temple, which is a sign of Chola distinction. [12] Rajaraja Chola I (1003-1004 AD) began construction on the temple in his 19th reign and finished it in his 25th reign (1009-1010 AD). [6] [13] varaitittat temple, coordinate system, It was decided to use symmetrical geometry rules. The temples built following this for the next two centuries are a testament to the wealth and art of the Chola period. Pillars are found, and they are versatile with square pedestals as a new style of Chola architecture.

The temple is a testament to the unique Dravidian architecture, the rule of the Cholas and the civilization of the Tamil people, and is an excellent example of the Chola skill in architecture, sculpture, painting and bronze sculpture.

Cholas from the Middle Ages

Between 985 and 1070 AD, Chola art was at its pinnacle. During the mediaeval Chola period, numerous temples were constructed. Temple construction proceeded throughout the Chola Empire's vast territory. During this time, many tiny temples were constructed.

The context in which the notion of constructing a huge temple aroseThe Kayilayanathar Temple in Kanchi, erected by Rajasimhan, impressed Rajaraja greatly. Similarly, Rajaraja, who desired to construct a temple, did so in Tanjore. Before the news of the model was formed, Periyakovil the system, Thiruvarur Thyagaraja temple, and the acalesvarar were formed. The model is a small brick temple in Thanjavur, Thirukattupalli, Ilangad, built by Rajaraja Chola.

Mahalingam is the name of the source at the Thiruvidaimarudur temple. The notion that the idol did not appear to have Rajaraja Chola's name. According to legend, the idea of erecting a lingam and a temple in Peruvadiyar's honour spurred the construction of this temple.



Structure



Karuvur Thevar with Rajaraja Chola [ A citation is required ]

Kunjara Mallan Rajarajaperundachan is the temple's primary sculptor, according to the temple's inscriptions. The temple's base is 5 metres (16 feet) tall. [17] The Nandi is the second largest Nandi in India after the Lapakshi Temple Nandi, weighing 20 tonnes and measuring two metres high, six metres long, and two and a half metres wide. [19] Ilingam, the principal deity, stands 3.7 metres tall. External scale is 240 m x 125 m. [18] On the top of the exterior wall are carved dance statues displaying 108 Bharata Natya symbols. [18] Later Pandyas, the goddess vicayanakara kings' altar from the 13th centuryThe altar was built with ramps, and the shrine of Ganesha was upgraded by the Maratha emperors. [18] The Tanjore Nayaks also made improvements to the temple. [20]



System of temples

Image of the temple's interior,The main structure measures 150 feet in length. The Kournunik Tower is formed by a massive plane that rises to a height of 190 feet above the womb, similar to Egyptian pyramids. The 160-foot-high Lingaraj Temple in Bhubaneswar was built at the time. It's worth noting that Rajarajeswaram outperformed it. The front porch, Nandi Mandapam, Karuvur Thevar Temple, Amman Temple, and Subramanian Temple were all added later.

Apart from these, every other aspect of this magnificent temple dates from the same era. One can't help but love their proud demeanour and the integrated plan's simplicity. A circular wall of appropriate dimensions surrounds axial halls, aeroplanes, artha halls, mahamandapams, and big nandis. A tower stands to the east of this wall. A lengthy hall adjacent to the wall has many pillars on the inside. It unites 35 different temples. Between many gaps in the four diktats, these temples are built in central locations. At the front, where the entrance to the second external stood, there is a second tower.

Tuesday, September 25, 2018

Iynthuveetuswamy Temple,Chettiyapathu, Udangudi.

          Iynthuveetuswamy Temple

           -Chettiyapathu, Udangudi


                     ஐந்து வீட்டு சுவாமி கோவில்                                                           திருத்தெய்வங்கள்  

           தீராத நோய் தீர்க்கும் ஐந்துவீட்டு சுவாமி திருக்கோவில்







ஸ்ரீ பெரியசுவாமி,






ஸ்ரீ வயணபெருமாள்,




ஸ்ரீ திருப்புளி ஆழ்வார், 






 ஸ்ரீ அனந்தம்மாள்,





ஸ்ரீ ஆத்திசுவாமி,


                         ஸ்ரீ பெரியபிராட்டி,

பூஜை காலம்


பூஜை காலம்


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