Hinduism - Where Is Tiruchendur In India?


On the Bay of Bengal in Tamil Nadu, sixty miles up the coast from Kanyakumari, there is a temple and holy spot (tirtha).

Tiruchendur is one of six temples in Tamil Nadu dedicated to the hill deity Murugan, who has been absorbed into the greater pantheon as a version of the god Skanda, Shiva's son.

Five of these temples have been firmly discovered, each of which is associated with a certain place, ecology, and episode in Murugan's mythological career.

In Tiruchendur's instance, it is claimed to be the location where he slew a demon foe, presenting him in his warrior form.

Every other Murugan shrine in Tamil Nadu is claimed to be the sixth of these temples.

Murugan's worship is therefore a symbol of Tamil pride and identity, and since the number six connotes completeness—as in the six directions or the six chakras in the subtle body—it also implies that nothing outside is required.

See Fred Clothey, "Pilgrimage Centers in the Tamil Cultus of Murukan," Journal of the American Academy of Religion, Vol. 40, No. 1, 1972, for further information.

~Kiran Atma


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