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  2. Saravanaa Bhavan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saravanaa_Bhavan

    Saravanaa Bhavan, previously Hotel Saravana Bhavan, is an Indian restaurant chain based in Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India. [1] The chain serves South Indian cuisine and operates 33 locations in India (24 in Chennai ) and 92+ across 28 countries in North America , Southeast Asia , the Middle East , Europe , and Oceania .

  3. Jalabhisheka - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jalabhisheka

    A popular practice of worship to Lord Shiva Jalabhisheka ( Sanskrit : जलाभिषेक) also known as Jalabhishekam is a popular practice of worship to Lord Shiva in Hinduism . [ 1 ] The Hindu adherents pour a stream of holy water on a Shivlinga during the Jalabhisheka worship of the deity Lord Shiva.

  4. Kannappa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kannappa

    In South Indian traditions, Kannappa is a devotee of the Hindu god Shiva. [1] His story is closely connected with the Srikalahasteeswara Temple in Andhra Pradesh. He is a saint in the Tamil Shaiva tradition. Originally a hunter, Kannappa began offering devotion to a Shiva Lingam, to which he offered his own eyes. Before he could sacrifice both ...

  5. Old Madiwala Someshwara Temple, Bengaluru - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Madiwala_Someshwara...

    Old Madiwala Sri Someshwara Temple located in Bangalore city (also Bengaluru), Karnataka, India is dedicated to the deity Someshwara (the Hindu god Shiva). It is one among the oldest temples in the city and dates back to the Chola Empire period. [1] The temple belongs to the early 12th century.(1247 AD).

  6. Uma–Maheshvara - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uma–Maheshvara

    Uma–Maheshvara, central India, probably late 1000s to 1100s AD, buff sandstone, Dallas Museum of Art. Uma–Maheshvara (Sanskrit: उमामहेश्वर, romanized: Umāmaheśvara) is a form of the divine couple, Shiva (Maheshvara) and Parvati (Uma), in Hindu iconography.

  7. List of Shiva temples in India - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Shiva_temples_in_India

    In Hinduism, Shiva is the supreme being regarded to perform the functions of creation, preservation, as well as the destruction of the universe. [1] Hindu texts describe the worship of Shiva and the establishment of temples and shrines throughout the Indian subcontinent, commonly in the aniconic form of a lingam .

  8. Kalyanasundara - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kalyanasundara

    In South Indian Shiva temples like those in Tiruvenkadu and Chidambaram, the bronze Kalyanasundara images of Shiva and Parvati are used in annual temple festivals to commemorate the divine union. Special halls are reserved for the annual ceremonial wedding of the deities.

  9. Lingodbhava - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lingodbhava

    Furthermore, in punishment, Shiva ordained that Brahma would never have temples on earth for his worship. As Shiva cut off Brahma's fifth head, he had committed the sin of brahmahatyāpāpa (murder of a Brahmin or an equivalent crime) and had to roam the three worlds as Bhikshatana, a naked beggar, to get