Kalyani

Other Features

Traditionally, South Indian temples have a kalyani – a stepped tank – to their northeast and indeed the Someshwara Temple follows this configuration The kalyani would have played an important part in temple rituals, particularly during the Teppotsava, a festival in which the idols of the Lord and his consort are taken around on a float in the tank. The temple tank measures approximately 27 by 25 metres, and has a very intriguing past. It was most probably constructed during the 1500s when the temple underwent a spate of renovations. Maps of the 1880s clearly show the tank, but it disappears from maps from the early 1900s. It is likely that the tank was filled up around this time by the British administration, who were wary of unsanitary conditions in the city, especially after cholera and plague epidemics. It was only in 2010 that the Muzrai Department of the State Government excavated the tank, over which stood a shop and a cowshed. The kalyani is still locked up today and inaccessible to the public, but very much visible from neighbouring streets.

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