Nainativu Nagapooshani Amman Temple
| Nainativu Nagapooshani Amman Temple | |
|---|---|
நயினாதீவு நாகபூசணி அம்மன் கோயில் | |
| Religion | |
| Affiliation | Hinduism |
| District | Theevakam, Jaffna |
| Province | Northern |
| Deity | Sri Nagapooshani Amman and Sri Nayinaar Swami |
| Festivals | Mahostavam (Thiruvizha), Navaratri, Shivaratri, Aadi Pooram |
| Governing body | Nainai Nagapooshani Amman Devasthaanams |
| Features |
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| Location | |
| Location | Nainativu |
| Country | Sri Lanka |
| Geographic coordinates | 9°37′8.6″N 79°46′27.4″E / 9.619056°N 79.774278°E |
| Architecture | |
| Type | Dravidian architecture |
| Completed | Unknown |
| Inscriptions | Tamil Inscription of Parâkramabâhu I |
| Website | |
| www.nainainagapooshani.com | |
| Part of a series on |
| Sri Lankan Tamils |
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Nainativu Nagapooshani Amman Temple (Tamil: நயினாதீவு நாகபூசணி அம்மன் கோயில், romanized: Nayiṉātīvu Nākapūcaṇi Am'maṉ Kōyil) is a Hindu temple on the Palk Bay, in the island of Nainativu, Sri Lanka. It is dedicated to Parvati who is known as Nagapooshani or Bhuvaneswari and her consort, Shiva who is named here as Nayinaar. The temple complex houses four gopurams (gateway towers) ranging from 20–25 feet in height, to the tallest being the eastern Raja Raja Gopuram soaring at 108 feet high. The temple is a significant symbol for the Sri Lankan Tamil people, especially the Jaffneses, and is said to have been mentioned since antiquity in Tamil literature, such as Manimekalai and Kundalakesi. It was built during 1720 to 1790 after the ancient structure was destroyed by the Portuguese in 1620. The temple attracts around 1000 visitors a day, and approximately 5000 visitors during festivals. The annual 16-day Mahostavam (Thiruvizha) festival celebrated during the Tamil month of Aani (June/July) - attracts over 100,000 pilgrims. There are an estimated 10,000 sculptures in this newly renovated temple.