The temple
Ekambareswarar Temple at Kanchipuram, Tamil Nadu is the Earth (Prithvi) shrine of the Pancha Bhoota Sthalams — the five elemental Shiva temples of southern India. Prithvi (Earth). The 3,500-year-old mango tree in the temple courtyard bears four flavors of fruit.
Where it stands
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Place | Kanchipuram |
| State / region | Tamil Nadu |
| Country | India |
| Coordinates | 12.8447° N, 79.6991° E |
Tamil Nadu’s Shaiva tradition is among the oldest continuous Shiva-worship traditions in the subcontinent. The state is home to the Pancha Bhoota Sthalams, the Nayanar tradition of devotional poet-saints (whose Tevaram hymns have been recited daily in temples for over a thousand years), and the great Dravidian temple complexes of the Chola, Pandya, and Vijayanagara eras.
Darshan rhythm
| Window | Time |
|---|---|
| Daily darshan | 06:00 – 12:30, 16:00 – 20:30 |
| Pradosham aarti | 18:30 |
| Maha Shivaratri | Panchamurthi procession; night-long abhishekam. |
These windows are sourced from the temple’s published schedule and cross-checked against pilgrimage and devotee accounts. They are subject to change on festival days, on day-of-week observances local to the temple, and during extraordinary events. For any planned visit, confirm at the temple gate or via the temple’s listed contact — the registry is the starting point, not the substitute.
When to visit
- Maha Shivaratri — the temple’s most attended night of the year. Expect long darshan queues, an extended abhishekam schedule, and a vigil through the four prahar.
- Pradosham (thirteenth lunar day) — the twilight aarti at 18:30 is the optimal everyday window for Shiva-darshan when crowds are normal.
In the Pancha Bhoota circuit
Ekambareswarar Temple is the Earth-element shrine of the Pancha Bhoota Sthalams — five temples in southern India where the linga is held to embody one of the five elements directly. The five together constitute a compact Shaiva pilgrimage that can be completed in seven to ten days for a focused circuit, mostly across Tamil Nadu with one shrine in Andhra Pradesh.
The Vedasara Shiva Stotram of Adi Shankara is the canonical hymn whose theological frame underwrites the Pancha Bhoota observance — Shiva as the Lord of all bound beings, manifest equally in earth, water, fire, air, and space.
What we verify, what we don’t
Verified. Coordinates and identity are cross-checked against Google Maps, OpenStreetMap, and (where available) the temple’s official site. Tradition classification (Jyotirlinga, Pancha Bhoota, Panch Kedar) follows the canonical lists preserved in Adi Shankara’s stotras and parallel Puranic sources.
Not verified. Daily timings and festival schedules can shift — temples adjust hours for renovation, security advisories, regional civic holidays, and astronomical recalculation of festival dates. The timings listed here are the most recently sourced; they are starting points, not guarantees. For any planned visit, confirm at the temple gate or via the temple’s published contact channels.
Not promised. Dress codes, photography rules, gender-of-access norms, and Brahmin-priest officiation policies vary by region and by individual temple. The norms of one regional Shaiva tradition do not automatically apply to another. When in doubt, observe the practice of long-standing local devotees on site.