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  2. Temple elephant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Temple_elephant

    To this day (2024), important temples, especially in South India, keep their own temple elephants, which are acquired either by purchase or as gifts. [14] However, it is possible that elephants declared as a ‘gift’ to a temple at the end of the 20th or in the 21st century were actually acquired underhand on the illegal black market, but officially given as a ‘gift’ - this has been a ...

  3. Guruvayur Keshavan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guruvayur_Keshavan

    He fasted for the entire day and dropped down facing the direction of the temple with his trunk raised as a mark of prostration. [5] The anniversary of his death is celebrated on the evening of every year's Ekadasi by the elephants of Guruvayur Devaswom lining up before Keshavan's statue and the chief elephant garlanding it, thus paying tribute ...

  4. Thechikottukavu Ramachandran - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thechikottukavu_Ramachandran

    Thechikkottukavu Ramachandran (born c. 1964) is an Indian elephant owned by Thechikottukavu devasom, a temple in Kerala. [1] Commonly known as simply Raman, he is the tallest living captive elephant in Asia, standing at 314 cm (10 ft 3 + 1 ⁄ 2 in). [2] They gave Ramachandran the title Ekachatradhipathi (transl. The Only Emperor). [3]

  5. Nadungamuwa Raja - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nadungamuwa_Raja

    Nagungamua Raja saying goodbye to his second owner in 1978. Raja was born c. 1953 in Mysore, India. [2] [4] The village of Nadungamuwa has been home to temple elephants since 1917, when Livnis Perera, the grandfather of Raja's final owner, Harsha Dharmavijaya, bought an elephant in order to take his younger brother in a procession to the Balummahara Godagedara Pirivena, Perera.

  6. Elephants in Kerala culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elephants_in_Kerala_culture

    Elephants are a core part of ritual worship in the famous Guruvayur temple which owns more than 60 elephants. The world's only Elephant Palace is constructed in Punnattur Kotta, 3 km from the Guruvayur temple, to house the temple's elephants. A famous elephant, named Guruvayur Kesavan, belonged to this temple.

  7. Chengalloor Ranganathan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chengalloor_Ranganathan

    Ranganathan was originally a temple elephant with the Ranganatha Swamy temple in Tiruchirappalli, Madras Presidency.The temple had acquired him when still a calf and used him for daily chores but as he grew taller, he was unable to enter through the inner gates of the temple.

  8. Punnathurkotta - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Punnathurkotta

    The statue of Guruvayur Keshavan placed at Guruvayur Temple premise. Punnathurkotta was once the palace of a local ruler, now survived by his son R Unnikrishnan, grandsons Madhusudana R Menon & Madhavan R Menon, but the palace grounds are now used to house the elephants belonging to the Guruvayoor temple, and has been renamed Anakkotta (meaning "Elephant Fort").

  9. Guruvayur Padmanabhan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guruvayur_Padmanabhan

    Guruvayur Padmanabhan popularly known as Gajaratnam Padmanabhan was the leader of the elephants of Guruvayur temple in Kerala after the death of the famous temple elephant named Guruvayur Kesavan in 1976. [1] The elephant carried the idol of Lord Vishnu for 66 years. [2]