| PLACES
OF WORSHIP Adoor
temple
Forty
five kms. east of Kasaragod town, Adoor is noted
for its ancient Siva Temple, believed to have been
founded by Arjuna. The temple, which is known as Sri
Mahalingeshwara temple, is situated in picturesque
surroundings on the southern bank of the river Payaswini.
The
Makara Samkramam is a very important festival day
in the temple when a Sahasra Kumbha Abhishekam with
feeding of a large number of people takes place.
According to tradition, the day coincides with the
anniversary of the day on which a harijan spotted
the Sivalingam. The annual Jatra or
festival of the temple starts with Dhwaja Arohanam
(hoisting of the temple flag) on the 27th of Kumbham
(February, March) and concludes with the Avabhritha
Snanam (holy dip) in the water of the Payaswini
on the fourth of Meenam (April) every year.
Ajanur
Madiyan Kulom temple
In
Ajanur village is situated the famous Madiyan Kulom
temple. It is about five kms. from Kanhangad.
The main deity of the temple is Bhadrakali; but there
are also other deities like Kshetrapalan, Bhagavathi
and Bhairavan. A peculiarity of this temple is that
a Brahmin priest performs pooja only in the noon,
while the morning and evening poojas are performed
by a sect called Maniyanis.The festivals in the temple
fall during the months of Edavam (May, June) and Dhanu
(December, January).
Ananthapuram
At
a distance of about five kms. from Kumbla is the Ananthapuram Temple which is said to be the ‘Moolasthanam’ of the Ananthapadmanabha
Swami (Sri PadmanabhaSwami Temple) of Thiruvananthapuram.
Local tradition has it that Ananthapadmanabha of Thiruvananthapuram
had settled down here originally.
Anantheswara
temple
The
fame of Manjeshwaram lies in the famous Srimad Anantheswara
Temple owned by the Gowda Saraswath community. Itttracts
pilgrims from all over India, particularly from the
region lying between Kanyakumari and Goa. The annual
car Festival of the temple is on the sixth Lunar Day
of the bright half of the Margashira month,
usually between the third week of November and the
third week of December. It is also called the Shashti
Festival as the final day celebration takes place
on the Skanda Shashti day , a day sacred to
Subrahmanya. In the outer round of the temple, there
is a flower garden named Anantha Nandana Vana.
Bela
church
About
11 kms. from Kumbla on the Kumbla-Badiadka road, is
the Mother Dolorus Church of Bela. This Gothic style
Roman Catholic church which is under the Mangalapuram
Diocese, has celebrated its centenary recently.The
Christian church at Kasaragod has also celebrated
its centenary recently. The St. Thomas Church at
Chittarikal is another famous one. The eastern parts
of the district about in a number of small and big
churches.
Kizhur
Sasta temple
There
is an ancient Sastha temple at Chandragiri which
is known as Kizhur Sastha Temple. This is the headquarters
of the Anjooru Nayanmar (five hundred Nairs). The
festival which is peculiar to this temple is Pattu
Utsavam. Troups of professional singers sing
jointly in praise of the greatness of the deity.
The dignitaries of all the Kazhakams of Saliyas from
Pattuvam to Panamboor (present new Mangalapuram) known
as Pathinalu Nagaram assemble here annually
on the second Saturday of Vrischikam (November).
Kumbla
Sri Gopala Krishna temple
Two
of the four sacred temples of Kumbla Seema are located
in Kumbla and its suburbs. They are the Mujankavu
Sri Parthasaradhi Temple and Kanipura (Kaniyara) Sri
Gopalakrishna Temple. Kumbla is also called Kanipura
(Kaniyara) after the latter temple.
The
temple of Sri Parthasarathi of Mujankavu is situated
in Ednad village, about four kms. east of Kumbla and
about eight kms. north west of Madhur.
The
Sri Gopalakrishna Temple, is situated in the heart
of the town of Kumbla at the foot of an elevated
hill which rises majestically in front of it, with
the Kumbla river flanking it on the left (north).
The colourful festival at Kumbla temple which lasts
for five days every year, commences with the Dhwajaarohanam
on the Makara Sankramana day. People in thousands
from all over the region attend these festivities.
Madhur
temple
At
Madhur, eight kms. north east of Kasaragod, is the
famous Madhur Srimad Anantheswara Vinayaka temple.
The imposing structure of the temple, with its turrets
and gables and the copper plate roofing, rises majestically
against the beautiful landscape of hills, paddy fields
and gardens with the river Madhuvahini flowing
leisurely in front of it.
The
Madhur temple is a Siva temple with Srimad Anantheswara
as its presiding deity. The Sivalingam of the
temple is said to have been found by a harijan woman,
Madharu.
A
special festival associated with the Madhur temple
is the Moodappa seva.The large figure of Maha
Ganapathi is covered with appam. It requires enormous
quantities of rice and lakhs of rupees for its conduct.
The festival is conducted only periodically in view
of the huge expenditure involved.It was celebrated
in April 1962 after a lapse of about 160 years, and
very recently in April 1992. The ceiling of the Namaskara
Mantapam of the Madhur Temple has been decorated
with beautiful figures of puranic heroes in wood
carving. A closer examination of the wood carvings
would disclose the various episodes of the Ramayana,
beginning with the Putrakame-shtiyagam and
ending with Seetha Swayamvaram.
The
Mantapam in the interior of the temple building
as well as the outside façade of the second and
third storeys of the main building are also profuse
with attractive and exquisite wood carvings.
Malik
Dinar mosque
Kasaragod
acquired over the years, considerable importance as
a centre of Islam on the west coast. It is the site
of one of the mosques believed to have been founded
by Malik Ibn Dinar. The mosque, Juma Masjid, which
is one of the best kept and most attractive in the
district, is located at Thalangara.It contains the
grave of Malik Ibn Mohammed, one of the descendants
of Malik Ibn Dinar and the place is sacred to Muslims. Another
notable mosque, in Kasaragod is the Theruvath Mosque
which is in the centre of the town. An important
local celebration takes place every year in commemoration
of the arrival of Malik Ibn Dinar. The Uroos attract
pilgrims from all over India.
Narampady
church
This
is a Roman Catholic church on the Badiadka-Mulleria
route, about 10 kms. from Badiadka. This is known
as St. John Britto Church and this was established
in 1939.
Nellikkunnu
mosque
Uroos,
celebrated in Nellikkunnu mosque, attracts people
in thousands. The Nercha celebration, during
the second half of November, lasts for one week.
Perne
Of
the 18 temples of Muchilottu Bhagavathi, Perne is
the northern most and the only one north of Payaswini
Seema. It is five kms. east of Kumbla and near Ananthapuram
Lake Temple, on the Kumbla-Badiadka route . The mass
marriage at the time of Pooram festival in the month
of Meenam, is a unique feature of this temple.
Temples
of Kasaragod town
Kasaragod
has a few important temples. Of these, the Mallikarjuna
temple, situated near the taluk office, is the most
important. The annual festival have falls in the
month of March and it attracts huge crowds.
One
of the most important temples of the Gowda Saraswathas
in Kerala is the Venkatramana temple.The Sri Arya
Karthyayani temple and the Sri Panduranga temple are
also famous temples of the place.
Just
on the eastern side of Pulikunnu by the Payaswini
river, there is a temple belonging to the Thiyya community
where thirty nine deities are worshipped. The main
festival here, called Kaliyattam, falls in
February/March. There is also the Palakunnu temple
(near Malik Ibn Dinar mosque) akin to the Palakunnu
Devasthanam of Udma. Bhagavathi temples, such as
Theruvath Bhagawathi and Kadappuram Sri Kurumba temples,
are spread all over the municipal area, worshipped
by particular communities.
Thrikkaripur
Sri Chakrapani temple
Sri
Chakrapani temple has a hoary past with a legend about
its origin in the ancient Brahmandapurana. The great
sage Garga, according to the legend describer many
a holy place in Bharath Varsha including Sri Chakrapani
Temple to Yudhishtira, when the Pandava were dwelling
in the Gandhamadana Sailya Forest during their twelve
year exile. Thrikkaripur where the temple is situated,
is about 40 kms. north of Kannur town. The temple
has been bestowing spiritual solace and prosperity
for generations.
Trikkannad
This
is a Siva temple on the sea shore, within one km.
of the Bekal bridge. The place arround Pandyan
Kallu, a rock rising above the sea near the temple,
is an ideal spot for adventurous swimmers. Swimming
in the sea is a popular sport here.
Palakunnu
Bhagavathi Kshetram is one km. north of Trikkannad
on the Kasaragod-Kanhangad road. The annual Bharani
festival attracts thousands.
PLACES
OF TOUrIST INTEREST
Bekal
Bekal,
situated on the seashore of Pallikkara village, is
an important place of tourist interest in the district.
It lies 12 kms. south of Kasaragod town. According
to Bekal Rama Nayak, a local Kannada writer, the word,
Bekal is derived from the word Baliakulam,
meaning Big Palace. The place is said to have
been the seat of a big palace in the past. The term
Baliakulam got corrupted as Bekulam
and later as Bekal.
It
was usual in older days for every royal palace to
be protected by a fort. The Bekal fort might have,
therefore, existed even from early days of the Chirakkal
Rajas. While giving a description of the Kolathiri
Kingdom in his Kerala History, K.P. Padmanabha Menon
writes; "The eldest of the male members reigned
as soveriegn Kolathiri. The next in succession, the
heir apparent, was the Thekkelamkur. The residence
assigned to him was the Vadakara fort. The
third in succession was the Vadakkelamkur in
charge of Vekkolath fort. This V(B)ekkolath
fort is identified by some scholars as the present
Bekal".
H.A.
Stuart, in his Handbook of South Canara (1985), makes
this observation: "….. Several forts were built
by the Shivappa Nayaks of Badnore between 1650 and
1670 A.D. The two forts of Bekal and Chandragiri
were originally under the Kolathiri or Chirakkal Rajas
until the time of Shivappa Nayaka's invasion. Perhaps,
the Bednore rulers might have rebuilt and improved
it".
The
Bekal fort, which is of great historical and archaeological
interest, is the largest and best preserved of its
kind in the district and the land on which it is situated,
runs into the sea with fine bay towards the south.
According to the South Canara Mannual, Bekal
fort fell into the hands of Haider Ali in 1763. It
housed the Huzur of Canara during Tippu's time and
the remains of a gallow reminiscent of the days of
Mysorean occupation were seen here till a few years
back. After the overthrow of Tippu Sultan in 1799,
Bekal was incorporated into the dominions of the English
East India Company. The erstwhile Kasaragod taluk
of South Canara district was known as Bekal for more
than half a century.
The
Bekal fort is now under the Archeological Department
of the Government of India.
There
is a Travellers' Bungalow, maintained by the Public
Works Department of the State Government within the
Bekal fort. The natural scenery at Bekal is alluring
and makes a visit to the place an exhilerating experience.
There is a recently renovated temple dedicated to
Hanuman, at the entrance to Bekal. An old mosque
is also situated very near the fort and this is believed
to have been founded by Tippu Sultan.
It
was in the year 1992 the central government declared
Bekal Fort as a special tourism area. It was with
the intention of transforming BekalFort into international
tourism centre that in the year 1995 the government
formed Bekal Tourism Development Corporation.
It
is in Chemmanad, Udma, Pallikkara and Ajanur Panchayats
that of the Bekal tourism project is implemented.
At present the corporation is engaged in arranging
basic facilities for the project. Corporation has
decided to acquire 278 hectares of land for Bekal
development.
Plans
for bettering and increasing basic facilities will
be implemented in the four panchayats where Bekal
tourism project is implemented. Water supply scheme
for the entire people of Pallikkara, Udma, Ajanur
and Chemmanad will be implemented. In the first phase,
programmes like waste incineration, road construction
and installation of street lights will also be carried
out.
B.R.D.C.
has programme to develop other tourist centres of
the district as part of Bekal project. Two House
boats have already started functioning at Valiyaparambu
this year itself. Boats clubs will be established
at Bekal and Chandragiri soon. A Bekal facility centre
was established in 1998 near Bekal Fort. In the facility
centre there is an information centre.
Chandragiri
Chandragiri
lies three kms. south of Kasaragod town. It has a
large square situated high above the Chandragiri river
on its southern bank. The fort it said to have been
built in the 17th century by Sivappa Nayak of Bednore,
who established his authority over the area and built
a chain of forts. The Chandragiri river, on the bank
of which it rises, marked the traditional boundary
between Kerala and the Tuluva Kingdom. There is a
beautiful bridge over the Chandragiri river at Tekkil,
five miles from Chandragiri. A mosque is situated
nearby and the view of the bridge with the mosque
in the background is one of the most attractive sights
on a drive along the NH 17 from Kannur to Kasaragod.
A long railway tunnel passes through Chandragiri.
A boat club has been recently started here.
Cheruvathur
Cheruvathur
is an important place on the NH 17. The former Mangalore-Cheruvathur
coast road starts from Mangalapuram, the headquarters
of the South Canara district and runs through the
coast line, till it reaches Cheruvathur.
The
Kunniyur family in Kuttamath Amsom near Cheruvathur
has produced a number of illustrious scholars who
have contributed greatly to Malayalam literature.
Edneer
mutt
Situated
on the Kasaragod-Puthur road, about eight kms. north
east of Kasaragod town, this ancient mutt is a reputed
seat of learning. It attracts devotees from all over
Kerala, Karnataka and other states.
This
belongs to the Thotakacharya (one of the four disciples
of Sankaracharya) tradition. Vadakke mutt in Trissur
was established by a disciple of Thotakacharya. The
Swamiji of this mutt was the founder of Padinjare
mutt in Trichambaram and Edneer mutt was established
by the swamiji of Trichambaram. At present the mutt
is renowned for the encouragement it gives to art
and culture.
Govinda
Pai memorial
Manjeshwaram
is renowned as the native place of M. Govinda Pai
(1883-1963), one of the greatest Kannada poets of
modern times. He has enriched Kannada literature
and poetry. He was conferred the title of "poet
laureate" by the erstwhile Government of Madras.
He was also a nationalist, historian, dramatist and
linguistic.His residence in Manjeshwaram is maintained
as a memorial and the Government of Kerala has established
a first grade college dedicated to his memory.
Hosdurg fort
The
Hosdurg fort with its round bastions, looks imposing
from a distance. Several public offices are located
within its premises. There is a famous temple attached
to the fort which is known as Karpooreshwara temple.
The fort is a major attraction for tourists. In Kanhangad,
there are two churches; one Catholic and the other
a Protestant. There are also a number of mosques
here.
Kammatamkavu
An
evergreen forest of about 50-60 acres, with a perennial
stream, is a centre of worship connected with the
Kammatam Bhagavathi Temple.
Kanhangad
Kanhangad,
the headquarters of the Hosdurg taluk, is 33 kms.
south of Kasaragod. It has an area of 32 sq. kms.
and a population of 23,621. Kanhangad has the reminents
of a large fort built by Somasekhara Nayak of Ikkeri
(1714-39). It is locally called Hosdurg (hosa, new
and durg, fort) and it is after this fort that the
Hosdurg taluk derives its name.
Kanwatirtha
Beach resort
The
clean and neat 3-4 kms. long beach and the swimming
pool like lake, half a km. long and proportionately
broad, formed by sea water, are gift of nature.
Kasaragod
town
Kasaragod
municipal town is situated on the banks of the Chandragiri
river and is 31 m. above sea level. Kasaragod
is an important business centre. Arecanuts and copra are the main trade.Pepper, copra and cashew-
nuts are the important commodities transported from
here. One of the important local industries is cloth
cap making, which is the main means of livelihood
of a large number of Muslim women. The caps manufactured
at Kasaragod are exported to Zanzibar and other African
countries.
Kasaragod
is one of the minor ports of the district. The port
is located on the eastern bank of the backwaters formed
by the Chandragiri river, which is separated from
the sea by a sand spit of about one kilometer length.
Schooners do not call at this port but anchor outside
the bar. Being the district headquarters, Kasaragod
is a fairly developed urban centre. There are a number
of educational institutions in the town. The Government
College, Kasaragod, established in 1957, is the premier
educational institution of the place.
Kottancheri
hills
This
rain forest near Panathur, is a beautiful picnic centre
which is also ideal for trekking. 'Talakkaveri',
in the Brahmagiri mountains of Coorg, is quite near
Kottancheri Hills.
Kottappuram
The
place derived its name from the mud fort built by
the Nileswar Rajas and later annexed by the Bednore
Nayakas in the 18th century. A Juma Masjid and a
Hindu shrine stand close by.
Kudlu
It
was at Kudlu in the suburbs of Kasaragod, where the
famous eight day discourse between Madhavacharya,
the great Dwaita philosopher and Trivikrama Pandit,
the famous Adwaita scholar, took place. The discourse
held in the presence of king Jayasimba of Kumbla,
ended in the victory of Madhavacharya and the acceptance
of the Dwaita philosophy by Trivikrama Pandit.
Kumbla
Kumbla,
which is situated 13 kms. north of Kasaragod town,
was the seat of the Rajas of Kumbla who once held
sway over the southern part of the Tuluva country
which included the present Kasaragod taluk. The town
stands on a bold peninsula in a lagoon seperated from
the sea by a sand spit and connected to it by a narrow
channel. In 1514, Duarte Borbosa, the Portuguese
traveller, visited Kumbla and he had recorded that
he had found the people exporting a very bad quality
brown rice to Maldives in exchange for coir, from
the small port here. Early in the 16th century, the
port paid a tribute of 800 loads of rice to the Portuguese.
When
Tippu captured Mangalapuram, the Kumbla Raja fled
to Thalassery; but he returned in 1799 and after an
unsuccessful bid for independence, submitted to the
English and accepted a small pension of Rs. 11,788
per annum in 1804.
It
was in Kumbla that Parthishubha was born in the 18th
century and composed all his Yakshagana Prasangas
which earned for him the title, 'Father of Yakshagana'.
Maipady
palace
Once,
the present Maipady was the seat of the Kumbla Rajas.
The palace is about eight kms. from Kasaragod on
the Kasaragod-Perla road and within three kms. from
Madhur.
Manjeshwaram
Manjeshwaram
lies in the northern most extremity of Kerala and
is a place of historical and religious importance.
According to Manjula Kshetra Mahatmya,
a legend which deals with the history of the place
and describes the pilgrimage undertaken by Virupaksha,
a Gowda Saraswatha Brahmin saint, this village was
known as Manjula Khetra, Manjukhetra or Manjarisha.
The southern portion of the town stands on a plain
and the northern portion, on a steep bank which overhangs
the river. These two portions were held by the Jain
Bangara Raja and the Vittal Raja respectively, until
Tippu Sultan hanged the former and forced the latter
to take refuge with the English at Thalassery. Manjeshwaram
has been for long, the seat of a flourishing community
of a Gowda Saraswatha or Konkini Brahmins. There
are two old Jaina Bastis at Bangra Manjeshwaram on
the southern bank of the Manjeshwaram river.
Nileswaram
Nileswaram,
which is the abbreviated form of Nilakanta Iswar,
was formerly the seat of the Nileswaram Rajas who
belonged to the family of Kolathiris. It was annexed
by Somasekhara Nayaka of Bednore in 1737 after a struggle
of twelve years in which the French and the English
took part. When the Bednore Nayaka invaded the territory,
the Nileswar Raja obtained the aid of the English
who had their factory at Thalassery. In 1737, a treaty
was signed by which the Bednorians agreed not to advance
south of the Valapattanam river and the English obtained
commercial concessions including the monopoly of pepper
and cardamom in those portions of the Kolathiri dominion,
which were occupied by the Bednore people.
The
fort at Nileswaram, however, remained in the hands
of the Raja and he allied himself with the French
who held the fort on his behalf till 1761. In the
meantime, Bednore was captured by Haider Ali and the
Raja remained in power at Nileswaram till the territory
was annexed by the English in 1799 and the Raja was
forced to submit and accept a pension. Among the
temples of the place, mention may be made of the Sri
Kottappuram Vettakorumakan temple, Mannampurathu kavu,
Pallikkara Bhagavathi temple and the Thaliyil Neelakanta
temple.
Nityananda
Asramam
There
are two notable ashramams in Kanhangad,viz.,the Nityanandasramam
and the Anandasramam. The former, which is situated
on the hillock about half a km. south of the Hosdurg
taluk office, was founded by Swami Nityananda.The
spot was at first part of a forest area. Here Swami
Nityananda constructed 45 guhas (caves) in a mountain
slope. There is a temple built in 1963, after the
style and design of the famous Somanatha temple in
Gujarat. A full size statue of Swami Nityananda in
sitting posture made of panchaloha is one of the attractions
of the ashramam.
Anandashramam,
situated about five kms. east of the Kanhangad Railway
Station, was founded in 1939 by Swami Ramadas, a great
Vaishnava saint of modern times. The main ashramam
and other buildings have a beautiful setting in the
midst of shady mango, coconut and other groves. There
is a hill to the east of the ashramam, to which the
devotees retire for quiet meditation and from its
west, the surrounding extensive landscape can be seen
in its natural grandeur. The spot at the highest
point of the hill is so fascinating that the devotees,
who go up the hill and sit silently, are blessed with
deep peace and tranquility.
Povval
fort
This
is an old fashioned fort on the Kasaragod-Mulleria
route, about 10 kms. from Kasaragod.
Posadigumpe
Posadigumpe
is an ideal picnic centre, located on a hillock, 487.68
metres above sea level in Dharmathadka, about 18 kms.
east of Mangalpady. On top of it, one can see the
Arabian sea and the vast arecanut gardens of Kasaragod,
extending up to Mangalapuram city and to Kudremukh.
Ranipuram
The
former Madathumala has taken this new name recently.
Lying 780 metres above sea level, it is only 9 kms.from Panathur,
which is 48 kms. east
of Kanhangad .The extensive forest of Madathumala merges with the
forests of Karnataka.The natural
beauty is comparable only to Ooty. This
place is quite ideal for trekking.
Tulur
vanam
Also
known as Kekulom (the eastern place), Tulur
vanam is four kms. east of Panathur. The temple here
is consecrated to Kshetrapalan and Bhagavathi. The
eight day annual festival commencing from Sivarathri,
attracts large crowds from all over the district,
as well as from Coorg.
Valiyaparamba
Separated
from the mainland by backwaters, this fishing village
is an island with the Arabian sea as one of the borders
and is an ideal picnic centre.
Veeramala
hills
This
hill top with ruins of a Dutch fort, built in the
18th century, is a picnic spot from where the natural
beauty of Kariangot river and surroundings can be
enjoyed. The Cheruvathur-Kariangot portion of NH
17 runs paralleled to the hill near Mayica, Cheruvathur
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