Warangal was the capital of a
Hindu Shaivaite kingdom ruled by the
Kakatiya dynasty from the 12th to the
14th centuries.The old name of this newly formed city is
Orugallu. ‘Oru’ means one and ‘
Kallu’ means stone. The entire city was carved in a single rock, hence the name Orukallu meaning ‘one rock’. The city was also called Ekasila nagaram.
The Kakatiyas left many monuments, including an impressive fortress, four massive stone gateways, the Swayambhu temple dedicated to
Shiva, and the
Ramappa temple situated near
Ramappa Lake. The cultural and administrative distinction of the
Kakatiyas was mentioned by the famous traveller
Marco Polo.
Famous or well-known rulers included
Ganapathi Deva, Prathapa
Rudra, and
Rani (queen) Rudramma
Devi. After the defeat of PratapaRudra, the
Musunuri Nayaks united seventy two
Nayak chieftains and captured Warangal from
Delhi sultanate and ruled for fifty years.
Jealousy and mutual rivalry between Nayaks ultimately led to the downfall of Hindus in 1370
A.D. and success of Bahmanis.
Bahmani Sultanate later broke up into several smaller sultanates, of which the
Golconda sultanate ruled Warangal. The
Mughal emperor Aurangzeb conquered Golconda in 1687, and it remained part of the
Mughal empire until the southern provinces of the empire split away to become the state of
Hyderabad in 1724 which included the
Telangana region and some parts of
Maharashtra and
Karnataka. Hyderabad was annexed to
India in 1948, and became an
Indian state. In
1956 Hyderabad was partitioned as part of the
States Reorganization Act, and
Telangana, the Telugu-speaking region of
Hyderabad state which includes Warangal, became part of
Andhra Pradesh.The Orugallu
Fort and Veyyi Stambhala Gudi (
Thousand Pillar Temple) have history, architecture and sculpture and are probably among the best of
Indian temples. Kakatiya dynasty, that ruled
Andhra region from 750
AD – 1325 AD – for
575 years, still lives in the ruins of the fort and almost intact temple. You can get a first hand of the dynasty’s taste for sculpture in Veyyi Stambhala Gudi or
1000 Pillar Temple. It has a catchy and apt name. Are there thousand pillars?
Yes there are – of many varieties and sizes; some of them are even part of others! The pillars that support the central ‘
Natya Mandapam’ (dance floor) are large and made of multiple blocks of stone.
The other catch is psychological. When you hear “Veyyi Stambalu” (thousand pillars) you imagine a farm of pillars. For my expectation, the temple was much smaller. More so because a madapam (see left of the picture below), that contributes 400 of
1000 pillars, was dismantled by the archeological survey of india for reconstruction. Unlike pillars in other temples of India, pillars of the main temple, are tightly knit and form its walls and so don’t seem like there are 600 of them.The temple is star shaped with three shrines devoted to Rudradeva (Shiva),
Vishnu, and
Surya (Sun). Interestingly, the third deity is not
Brahma who is part of the
Trinity of God [as in the Trinity (which consists of Brahma, Vishnu, and Shiva) in suchindrum] because the Kakatiyas worshipped
Lord Shiva and
Lord Surya and not so much Brahma. On the fourth side is Shiva’s vehicle, nandi or bull.Unlike most temples in India that face east, 1000 pillar temple faces south. Because, the Kakatiyas, worshipers of Lord Shiva, wanted early morning sun rays to fall directly on
Shiva lingam. So, of the three shrines, Shiva’s shrine faces east and other shrines face south and west. On the fourth side is
Nandi. Adding to the uniqueness, the Nandi in 1000 pillar temple looks east, unlike most Nandis in Indian temples that look west.
- published: 29 Apr 2015
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