Thursday, May 5, 2011




TOURIST CENTRES
Salem has several competing meaning and Origins.  The chief among them are the following five terms:  Cheram, Sailam, Salya, Seylai and Seelam.  The word cheram (or keralam or seram) indicates that this was the land of the cherams.. Salem is a weaving centre.  Most of the weaving in Salem is still concentrated in producing Saeylai (the Tamil word for sari) the one/piece garment worn by women therefore, Salem is supposed to mean the place where Saeylais are produced.
The city contains two major temples dedicated to Sukavana Isvarar and Soundhararaja Perumal, both on the right bank of the river.  A number of Mari Amman and Kali Amman temples are found in  almost all parts of the city.
Arts and literature flourished and patronized by the rulers of the hills and plains. Avvaiyar and other Sangam poets of Salem were renowned and well respected.    
                                 
MARIAMMAN
A mother goddess.  The Tamil word mari means death but when the letter a in it is accented, the word changes to mean rain. She is the most ancient and popular deity among the village deities of Salem and is worshipped under several other names  such as Amman, Atthu, Ayam Ayee (Mother) Dharmapuri  (Mari with army) Magamayee ( Great Mother) and Vadivattha ( Beautiful Mother)    all    indicating    an    ancient  form  of   ancestral   mother   worship Iconographically,  Mari represented in a sitting posture with four bands. They hold a drum, a trident a bundle if ropes and a skull.
Mari Amman  rules over discuses that bring death, especially small pox.  At  times of small-pox incidence, the  leaves of the neem tree (netta azadirachia) sacred to the goddess, are spread on the bed of the afflicted person and a bunch of them tied in the entrance of   the  patients house indicating the presence of the goddess.  In the benevolent aspect, the goddess brings rainy to put an end to the diseases which result from the heat.
She is believed to cure a variety of illness of those who offer silver sheet metal models of their affected organs.  This type of prayer is commonly found in almost all Mari Amman temples in Salem.
Almost  every village has a temple or shrine dedicated to her which is the focus of village festivals.  Major temples are relatively large and may or may not be surrounded  by compound walls.  Annual festivals in early or late summer usually last for several days.  The festival begins with the planting of a stump of a neem tree, 6  tall and with three prongs at the top;  A new mud pot containing           sanctified water is placed among the prongs, Devotees offer her pongal ( ritual cooking)  sacrificed goats and roosters in the temple yard.
Some devotees walk bare feet on burning coals and pierce their bodies with pins and knives.  Walking on burning coals is an ancient custom practiced in honour of mother goddess.  These self-inflicted in honor of mother goddess. These self-inflicted painful fistulas were prohibited during the British rule as they  were  thought  to  be  injurious  to  health of   the  devotees.   On  the  last  day of the festival, a procession of floats is held, each float depicting a legendary scene.  Fireworks conclude the festivities.         
This Dravidian goddess is one of the widely revered goddess of the ancient world.  Under many variants of her name, She was Marrattu ( Mari Attha)  to  the  Chaldeans,  March to  the  Jews, Mary to the Christians.  She was also the goddess of the eye of truth and judgment.  Compare "ayin" which was the "eye" in the Hebrew sacred alphabet.  Possibly derived from aya.  The babylonian creatress.  Aya in tamil means mother and Mari Amman is popularly known as Mari Aya.  In Syria she was known as the goddess Mari whose huge eyes searched men"s souls.  As death giver she was Mariamman, Miriam, and Mara an exceedingly ancient name of the goddess as death-bringer.  The name and its variants are found from India to Northern Europe.
   
MURUGAN
A Dravidian god of youth and beauty.  The Dravidian cult of the young is as old as the cult of mother and ancestors.  It was absorbed into the brahminical Hinduism and Murugan was sanckritized as Skandha, which name was again Tamilized into Kandha. These names are alternatives for the brachminical Karthikeya the Hindu god of war.  In the Tamil tradition, Murugan is adored as a Tamil and Vedhic scholar.  The  name Skandha may preserve the memory of Alexander the Great, the Macedonian youth and world conqueror, who blazed like a flash of lightning on the Indian horizon and left lasting impression on the Indian mind.
Murugan is known by several descriptive names: Balamurugan, Kumaran, Mayil veganan, Subramanian, Velan, and Velumurgan Iconographically, he holds a lance or spear (vel) and rides a peacock; his flag, a living malai, Thiruchengode and Vaiyappa Malai, are Murugan's favourite aunts. The most famous Murugan temple of Tmil Nadu is in Pazhani. Dinduval District.  According to the Salem legends, a new image of Murugan in Pazhani was installed by a siddhar when Murugan came to and remained in Vaiyappa Malai accepting the gift of gold   created by the Alavoy malai siddhars. The  notable Murugan temples in Salem  are at Ammapettai, Belukurichi, Kanakagiri, Kapilamalai, Thiruchengodu, Kandhasramam, Kanjamalai, Kalipatti and Vaiyappa Malai.   Most of the Siva temples contain Murugan shrines.                                             
MUNIAPPAN
Muniappan ( Forefather) .  It is an ancient and very popular village deity of Salem.  He is also known as "Aiyanar" ( Revered Father).  The word Muni is generally taken to mean an anchorite, or one who has taken a vow of mauna. (silence)   It is frequently used for a sage who has supernatural powers which he displays in his blessings and curses.  This interpretation is inappropriate when the phrase is seen in the combination of muniappan. The word muni stands for munnai ( fore ) and appan ( father ) Therefore it is believed the words muniappan and aiyanar refer to an ancient dravidian cult of ancestor worship.
Blood sacrifices at these shrines are very common.  The huge and terrifying images are accompanied by larger than life figures of attendants and animals.  Smaller terra cotta horses and iron spears, offered by devotees in fulfillment of their vows, usually crowd the front yard of these shrines.  In the centre of the shrine, there is usually a grouping of triangular shaped an iconic stones or Neolithic stone implements, or some other form of a pandukal monument such as a dolmen. The new cult of Aiyappan is the Sanskritized braminical Hindu version of the Aiyanar cult. Because of the dominant presence of Muniappan shrines everywhere, the Salem district is known as the Land of Muniappan.
Though Salem is the origin for worshiping various gods and godess, a great  movement which disapprove  gods was started  by E.V.R.Ramaswamy Nayakar who belongs to Salem Region. This movement was made great changes in the minds of the people who believed superstition since ancient times.
 
IRON AND STEEL
Iron ore is abundant in Salem.  Salem has been the chief centre of supply of the finest steel throughout historical times and iron was a historical mark of Salem's contact with the western world in ancient times.  J.M.Health the prized that the tools used by the Egyptian sculptors may have been made of Salem Steel.

IRON ORE
Magnetic oxide of iron deposits occur in the mountains of Godumalai, Kalrayan, Kanjamalai, Kolli Malai, and Thalaimalai.  The total reserves of Kanjamalai and Kolli Malai are estimated at between 235 and 245 million tons. Salem is the promotion centre of mangoes.Silver ornamental jewllery are the famous business in this region. Wood carving and designing windows and doors are the attractive business in this region.
JAMA  MASJID
The oldest mosque in Salem, situated on the southern bank of the Thirumanimuthu Aru in the heart of the city. It was reportedly built by the Mysore ruler, Thippu Sulthan, who is said to have offered prayers here. The Masjid Inam granted to this  mosque was confirmed by the British in 1862. By a special resolution in 1880.
YERCAUD - JEWEL OF THE SOUTH
GENERAL INFORMATION:
Area383 sq.km
Altitude1515 metres
Population40546 (approximately)
MaxMin
Winter25 C13 C
Summer30 C16 C
Average13 C30 C
Rainfall2000 mm1500 mm
SeasonThroughout the year
ClothingWinter:  Ordinary cotton with light woolen pull-over is enough Summer: Ordinary cotton
Language spokenTamil, English
STD Code04281
   
Yercaud in the Servarayan Hills   (Shevaroy Range) of Salem District. It is a quite pleasant hill resort in Tamil Nadu. The name is derived from the Picturesque Yeri (Lake) once surrounded by Kadu (forest).  Yercaud  is a Beautiful hill station with a pleasant cool climate.  Yercaud's temperature never rises above 30 C or falls below 13 C . This  is one hill station where one does not feel the biting cold of winter. With such a salubrious climate, Yercaud can be visited round the year.  It is 30 Km from Salem and is the least expensive hill station in India.
   
PLACES OF INTEREST:
YERCAUD LAKE:

No comments:

Post a Comment