Brihadeshwara means 'the Great Lord' — and the temple built in his honour around 1010 CE by Raja Raja Chola I lives up entirely to that name. In Tamil it is called Periya Kovil: the Big Temple. Standing before the vimana (main tower), which rises about 216 feet in the Dravidian style, gives a clear sense of what the Chola kings understood worship to mean — an act of total dedication.
At the entrance stands a large Nandi, carved from a single stone, one of the largest in India. A local tradition says that the shadow of the main vimana never falls on the ground at noon — a reflection of the precision with which the structure was conceived and built, over a thousand years ago.
The Brihadeshwara vimana rises ~216 feet — its single granite capstone at the top is believed to have been placed using a ramp several kilometres long. No cement was used; only precisely fitted granite.
The Brihadeshwara temple is a UNESCO World Heritage Site and one of the best-preserved examples of Chola architecture in the world. Over a thousand years of continuous worship have happened within these walls. The pradakshina (circumambulation) around the temple, with the enormous vimana rising above you, is one of south India's more powerful temple experiences.
The Kaveri delta surrounds Thanjavur — rice country, green and flat. The temple bells carry far on the still air of the delta, especially in the early morning.
- Open year-round; tradition is Nandi darshan first, then Brihadeshwara.
- Pradakshina (circumambulation) around the temple — with the tall vimana visible throughout.
- Morning and evening special puja with traditional instruments.
- The shadow tradition — vimana's shadow at noon — is part of local lore.