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  2. Kodungallur Bhagavathy Temple - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kodungallur_Bhagavathy_Temple

    Sree Kurumba Bhagavati Temple (alternatively Kodungallur Devi Temple) is a Hindu temple at Kodungallur, Thrissur District, Kerala state, India. It is dedicated to the goddess Bhadrakali, a form of Mahakali or simply Durga or Aadi Parashakthi or Bhuvaneshwari or Kannagi worshipped and significantly revered in Kerala. The goddess is known also by ...

  3. Kodungallur - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kodungallur

    A scene from Kodungallur Bharani festival in Kodungallur Bhagavathy Temple. Origin of the modern name 'Kodungallur' has multiple interpretations: From koṭuṁ-kall-ūr, meaning 'place of the grand stone' in Old Tamil, because of a huge stone that the Chera king Cheran Chenguttuvan brought from the Himalayas to establish a shrine dedicated to the legendary Tamil woman Kannagi.

  4. Nethalloor Devi Temple - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nethalloor_Devi_Temple

    The Nethalloor Sri Bhagavathi temple is located near Karukachal, [1] in the district of Kottayam, Kerala state, India. Changanasserry-vazhoor & Kottayam-Punalur state highways meet in Nethalloor junction; 19 km from Kottayam in Karukachal route and 16 km from Changanasserry in Vazhoor route.

  5. Kodungallur Bharani festival - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kodungallur_Bharani_festival

    The deity at the Kodungallur Bhagavathy temple for whom the bharani festival is offered. Kodungallur Bharani festival is a yearly festival dedicated to the goddess Bhadrakali of Kodungallur Kurumba Bhagavathy temple held between the Bharani days of months Kumbham and Meenam of the Malayalam calendar.

  6. Kodungoor Devi Temple - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kodungoor_Devi_Temple

    Kodungoor Devi Temple [2] is a famous temple located at Kodungoor, Kerala, India. The primary deity of this temple is Kodungooramma. Its antiquity was estimated above 200 years. The temple initially belonged to Madathil family and was later taken up by the Travancore Devaswom Board. [3]

  7. Vaishno Devi Temple - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vaishno_Devi_Temple

    Although the Vaishno Devi temple is now the most popular Devi shrine in the region, its popularity is relatively recent. In 1971, when Inderjit Bhardwaj did a study of Devi shrines in the Siwalik mountains, he did not mention the Vaishno Devi temple as particularly important. Its popularity increased rapidly after an expansion was done in 1976 ...

  8. Kodungallur Kovilakam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kodungallur_Kovilakam

    Kodungallur was a feudal principality subordinate to the rulers of the Kingdom of Cochin from the later half of the eighteenth century until Indian independence. The Kingdom of Kodungallur was under the protection of the Dutch government after 1707 for a few years before returning to its allegiance to the Zamorin .

  9. Ettumanoor Mahadevar Temple - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ettumanoor_Mahadevar_Temple

    Many people come to the temple on the 8th and 10th day of the festival, when seven and a half elephants (in Malayalam: ezharaponnaana) [6] made of gold (nearly 13 Kgms) will be held in public view. This statue was donated to the temple by a travancore maharaja. The temple, one of the wealthiest Devaswoms in Kerala, has many valuable possessions.