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The artwork on gopuram showing Parvati-Shiva Kalyanasundara wedding legend. Near the newly weds are
Saraswati, Lakshmi, Vishnu and others.
The earliest built western gopuram is the only one with inscriptions below each artwork that
identifies what it is. The artwork on it includes Durga fighting the evil, shape shifting buffalo
demon and Skanda sitting on peacock and dressed up for war. Other artwork found on the
eastern gopuram include Surya, Ganapati, Vishnu, Sridevi (Lakshmi), Tripurasundari, Brahma,
Saraswati, Varuna, Durga, Agni, several rishis, Yamuna goddess, Kama and Rati, Budha, the
Vedic sages such as Narada and Agastya, Pantanjali, Somaskanda legend, Ardhanarishvara (half
Shiva, half Parvati), Harihara (half Vishnu, half Shiva), several forms of dancing Shiva and
others.
The surviving south gopuram called the Sokkaseeyan Thirunilai Ezhugopuram was constructed
by a Pandya king identified from the presence of the dynasty's fish emblem sculpted on the
ceiling. The Pandyas sculpted two fishes facing each other when they completed gopurams (and
left it with one fish, in case it was incomplete). Other artwork found on the southern gopuram
include Chandesha, Ganapati, Vishnu, Sridevi (Lakshmi), several Devis, Brahma, Saraswati,
Surya, Chandra, Durga, Indra, Agni, several rishis, Ganga and Yamuna goddesses, Kama and
Rati, Budha, the Vedic sages such as Narada, Pantanjali, Somaskanda legend, Ardhanarishvara
(half Shiva, half Parvati), Harihara (half Vishnu, half Shiva), several forms of dancing and
standing Shiva such as Pashupata, Kiratarjuna and Lingobhava, as well as others.
The eastern gopura wall shows all 108 dance postures from the Natya Shastra. The other gopuras
also have dance images.
The eastern gopuram features the 108 reliefs of Natya Shastra dance postures (22 cm each in a
separate niche) and faces the sanctum. The eastern gopuram is credited to king Koperunsingan II
(1243-1279 A.D.) as per epigraphical recordsand was repaired with support from a woman
named Subbammal in the late 18th century.
The northern gopuram was repaired and finished by
the Vijayanagara king Krishnadevaraya (1509-1530 A.D.) in the 16th century. The eastern and
northern gopura also depicts the wide range of narratives as the southern and western gopuram.
The idols of Pachaiappa Mudaliar and his wife Iyalammal have been sculpted on the
eastern gopuram. The Pachaiappa Trust to date has been responsible for various functions in the
temple and also maintain the temple car. The eastern gopuram is renowned for its complete