Sirkali Shiva Temple — Vadalur Guide

Sirkali Shiva Temple

Brahmapureeswarar · Thoniappar · Sattanathar · Sirkali, Tamil Nadu

📍 Location
Sirkali
🕐 Timings
6AM–12PM · 4PM–9PM
🎟 Entry Fee
Free
📏 From Vadalur
~35 km
About the Temple

Three Forms of Shiva,
One Sacred Complex

The Sirkali Shiva Temple — known by three names, Sattanathar Temple, Brahmapureeswarar Temple, and Thoniappar Temple — is one of the most celebrated Shaivite temples in Tamil Nadu and holds extraordinary significance as the birthplace of Thirugnana Sambandar, the child saint-poet whose Thevaram hymns form the bedrock of Tamil Shaiva literature.

This is a uniquely structured temple complex spread across three levels, each housing a different and sovereign form of Lord Shiva. The lower level enshrines Brahmapureeswarar (the Shivalingam), accompanied by Goddess Thirunilainayaki. The middle level is home to Thoniappar — Lord Shiva as Uma Maheswarar depicted on a Thoni (boat). The upper level enshrines Sattanathar, Lord Shiva in his Bhairavar form — the Supreme Head of all Laws.

"Thodudaya Seviyan" — the opening words of Sambandar's first hymn, composed at Sirkali, have been chanted without interruption for over 1,300 years. — Thevaram Tradition

The temple is a Paadal Petra Sthalam — one of the 276 Shiva temples glorified in the Thevaram — and is associated with 22 sacred water bodies (theerthams). The complex is enclosed by massive granite walls with two sets of seven-tiered gopurams. The main eastern gopuram stands an imposing 130 feet tall.

Historical Timeline

Key Milestones

7th Century CE
Thirugnana Sambandar born in Sirkali. As an infant, Goddess Parvati herself nurses him. He sings his very first Thevaram hymn at this temple — the famous "Thodudaya Seviyan."
7th–9th Century
Appar and Sundarar also compose Thevaram hymns here. All three Nayanmars glorify this temple, cementing its supreme status among Shaiva Paadal Petra Sthalams.
11th Century CE
Kulottunga Chola I begins major expansion of the temple complex. The three-tiered structure housing Brahmapureeswarar, Thoniappar, and Sattanathar takes its present form.
12th–13th Century
Further construction by Vikrama Chola, Kulottunga II, and Kulottunga III. The seven-tiered gopurams and additional mandapams are completed during this period.
Vijayanagara Period
Nayak rulers add further mandapams and pillared halls to the complex. The sprawling three-courtyard layout is consolidated.
Present Day
A major pilgrimage centre for Thevaram devotees. Devotees visit all three shrines in a single pilgrimage. The 10-day Chithirai festival (April–May) draws thousands annually.
The Three Sacred Levels

Three Forms of Shiva in One Complex

The Sirkali temple complex is built across three ascending levels, each enshrining an independent and distinct form of Lord Shiva with its own sanctum, worship rituals, and divine consort — making this one of the most layered and spiritually profound temple structures in Tamil Nadu.

Ground Level
🪨
பிரம்மபுரீஸ்வரர்
Brahmapureeswarar
Lord Shiva as the Shivalingam — the formless, eternal form. Worshipped at the ground level near the sacred temple tank. Lord Brahma himself is said to have worshipped Shiva here after the great deluge, giving the deity his name.
Consort: Goddess Thirunilainayaki
Middle Level
🚣
தோணியப்பர்
Thoniappar
Lord Shiva as Uma Maheswarar, seated on a Thoni (boat). According to legend, during the great deluge that submerged the earth, Lord Shiva carried the 64 arts on a raft to preserve them — giving rise to the name Thoniappar, Lord of the Boat.
Consort: Goddess Periyanayaki
Upper Level
சட்டநாதர்
Sattanathar
Lord Shiva in his powerful Bhairavar form, enshrined at the uppermost level. Sattanathar means the Supreme Head of all Laws. The shrine is reached by a flight of steps from the southern courtyard of the Thoniappar shrine.
Also known as: Vatukanathar
Temple Highlights

What to See

🏯
Seven-Tiered Gopurams
Two sets of seven-tiered gopurams rise from the outer walls of the enclosure. The main eastern gopuram stands 130 feet tall — a commanding landmark visible from across Sirkali.
🔱
Brahmapureeswarar Sanctum
The ground-level main sanctum housing the ancient Shivalingam. Lord Brahma is said to have worshipped here after the cosmic deluge — the origin of the deity's name. The atmosphere here is one of ancient, quiet reverence.
🚣
Thoniappar Shrine
The middle-level shrine of Lord Shiva as Uma Maheswarar on a boat. The colossal image of Thoniappar is one of the most striking pieces of temple sculpture in the Kaveri delta region.
Sattanathar Shrine
The upper-level Bhairavar shrine of Lord Sattanathar, reached by a flight of steps from the southern courtyard. Ascending to this level rewards devotees with a panoramic view of the entire temple complex below.
👶
Sambandar Sannidhi
A dedicated shrine depicting the miracle of Goddess Parvati nursing the infant Sambandar. This is the very spot where the greatest Thevaram saint received divine grace — considered one of the holiest spots in Tamil Shaivism.
💧
22 Sacred Theerthams
The complex is associated with 22 sacred water bodies — an exceptionally high number even among major Tamil temples. Three vast courtyards with high enclosure walls complete the monumental scale of this ancient complex.
Plan Your Visit

Visitor Information

🕐 Timings & Entry
Morning6:00 AM – 12:00 PM
Evening4:00 PM – 9:00 PM
Entry FeeFree
Main FestivalChithirai — 10 Days (Apr/May)
Sambandar JayanthiAnnual celebration
OpenAll days of the year
ℹ️ Temple Details
Temple NamesSattanathar · Brahmapureeswarar · Thoniappar
ClassificationPaadal Petra Sthalam
Sacred Water Bodies22 Theerthams
Gopuram Height130 feet (Main Eastern)
Dress CodeTraditional attire
Contact+91-4364-270235

How to Reach from Vadalur

🚂
By Train
Sirkali has its own railway station on the Chidambaram–Mayiladuthurai line. ~30 min from Vadalur station.
🚌
By Bus
Direct TNSTC buses from Chidambaram to Sirkali. Frequent services throughout the day.
🚗
By Car
35 km via SH-68 through Chidambaram. ~45 min drive. Parking near the main gopuram entrance.
🛺
By Auto
Auto-rickshaws readily available from Sirkali bus stand and railway station to the temple.
✦ Tips for Visitors
Visit all three levels — Brahmapureeswarar, Thoniappar, and Sattanathar — in a single visit for the complete pilgrimage experience.
Attend the morning pooja (6–8 AM) for the most serene and uncrowded darshan at each of the three shrines.
From the steps leading to the Thoniappar and Sattanathar shrine, you get a panoramic view of the entire temple complex.
Combine with Chidambaram Nataraja Temple (~17 km) for a full day of Tamil Shaiva heritage in the region.
Traditional attire is respected — men are encouraged to wear dhoti for entry into the inner sanctums.
The Chithirai 10-day festival (April–May) is the most vibrant time to visit — plan ahead as the town fills up.

Explore More Near Vadalur

35 km away — three forms of Shiva, one extraordinary pilgrimage.

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