Mylara Lingeshwara Temple at Mylara

Mylara Lingeshwara Temple (ಮೈಲಾರ ಲಿಂಗೇಶ್ವರ ದೇವಸ್ಥಾನ, ಮೈಲಾರ) is a Hindu temple dedicated to the god (Mailari), a form of the god Shiva in Mylara. Mylar was born in " kishnu golla" caste. Located at center of karnataka, It is in the extreme south-western corner of Hoovina Hadagali taluk, Bellary District, Karnataka, India. It is 2 km from Tungabhadra river and 36 km  from Hadagali and 36  from Ranebennur. Mylara Lingeshwara is the Family worshipped by Halumatha Kuruba Gowda community .

Mylara Lingeshwara Temple at Mylara, Bellary District, Karnataka
Mylara Lingeshwara Temple at Mylara, Bellary District, Karnataka

Mylara

ಮೈಲಾರ

Mailara
Village
Mylara
Location in Karnataka, India
Coordinates: 14°48′29″N 75°41′27″E
Country India
StateKarnataka
DistrictBellary
TalukHoovina Hadagali
Lok Sabha ConstituencyBellary
Government
  TypePanchayat raj
  BodyGram panchayat
Languages
  OfficialKannada
Time zoneUTC+5:30 (IST)
ISO 3166 codeIN-KA
Vehicle registrationKA 34
Nearest cityRanebennur , Haveri
Websitekarnataka.gov.in

According to legend

Mallasura[1] (demon) and his brother performed a severe penance extracted from Brahma and, with a promise that they should never be harmed by any human being, began to harass the sages or rishis. The sages appealed Shiva to protect them; Shiva took on a new form[2] and, taking with him his forces of seven crores goravas, warred with Mallasura and his brother Manikasura for 10 days> He then slew them both with his bow. During the battle, Lord Veerabhadra, Shiva's aide, struck the earth with his long hair and Kanchaveeras emerged from the spot. The Kanchaveeras confronted Mallasura and Manikasura and handed them over to Mailara. After killing Mallasura and Manikasura, Mailara (Shiva) wore their intestines as his turban, their teeth as a cowrie necklace, their mouths as a damaruga (hand drum), skulls as a doni (meal bowl) and their skins as a long coat. The fat of the demons was used as oil and their nerves as the lamp wick.

Karnika Utsava (prophecy)

Rituals during the Mylar Jatre (fair) include the Karanika Utsava (bow-climbing and prophecy-uttering ritual) and Pavada (body piercing ritual). Karanika Utsava is performed by the Karanika gorava, who fasts for 12 days, after which he climbs a 12-meter bow and utters a euphoric prophecy regarding regional agriculture, animal husbandry, and politics.

Karnikotsava Gorava's utterance tumbida koda mooru bhaga aadeethale parakh! means "A full pot may get split into three parts". Karnikotsava means the prophecy; it is like a puzzle. Some guess it to be an indication of political situation in the state and some guess about rain and crop that means it is an indication of some threat to the agriculture so, the prophecy warns the farmers to be very careful.[3] It is believed that the saying would indicate the future of the coming year.

Mylara Lingeshwara Temple at Mylara, Bellary District, Karnataka

On Karnikotsava day, the devotees converge to the temple chanting "elukoti elukoti elukotigo... changmalo changmalo". "Elukoti" means seven crores commemorating the seven crore Goravas who accompanied Mailari. By afternoon, a huge wooden bow, symbolic of that with which Shiva slew Mallasura, is brought and placed in the middle of a vast area called Denkana maradi. The gorava carries the bow from his tent and climbs up it, stares from the top in the four directions, and then begins trembling as a sign of divine inspiration, and the pilgrims wait for his prophecy. The gorava gazes skywards, before pronouncing the annual divination. Soon after this he drops down himself from the bow, and the devotees waiting around carefully catch him.

  • 27 February 2013 Karnika(prophecy) -ಮಳೆ ಬೆಳೆ ತಮಪಾದಿತಲೇ ಪರಾಕ್-malebele Sampaaditale paraak.
  • 16 February 2014 Karnika(prophecy) -tumbida koda muru tunda aaditale paraak.
  • 5 February 2015 Karnika(prophecy) -muttina gantu muru bhaga aaditale paraak.
  • 25 February 2016 Karnika(prophecy) -muttina raashi mooru atale paraak (a mound of pearls got divided into three)
  • 13 February 2017 Karnika(prophecy) -Ambali haliseetu kambali beesitale paraak.
  • 9 February 2018 Karnika(prophecy) -Aarane vethana mosa aathale paraak.
  • 22 February 2019 Karnika(prophecy) -Kabbinada sarapali harideetale paraak.
  • 11 February 2020 Karnika(prophecy) - ಸಂಪಾದಿತಲೇ ಪರಾಕ್ - Sampaditale paraak.

Goravara kunita

Gorava, Karnataka

The gorava dance (goravara kunita), a dance of the Shiva cult, is popular in areas of North Karnataka. The goravas[4] worship Mylara linga (Shiva), wear the costume of a black woolen rug, on shoulder hanging bag made out of skin. Some of them wear a black coat and white dhoti. In traditional contexts, the gorava devotees who dance in trance sometimes bark like dogs. It is believed that the totem of the Mylaralinga is a dog. The dancers' feet move in clockwise and zigzag forms. Gorava wears yellow powder on his forehead and gives it to his believed devotees. Artists holds instruments, like damaru (percussion), or sometime holds kolalu (flute), and a few artists wear a small bronze bell on their shoulders. A few followers hold cowbells called paarigante.

gollark: 7 day will do.
gollark: Or hatchlings.
gollark: Does anyone have some X-day 0-hour or X-hour 0-day eggs to test on?
gollark: Wait, not fixed... hmm...
gollark: ```javascriptconst days = parseInt(/.*in: ([0-9]+) days/.exec(text) || 0);const hours = parseInt(/.*and ([0-9]+) hours/.exec(text) || 0);```Fixed!

References

  1. "Epic Narrative as a Blurred Genre". Retrieved 29 October 2008.
  2. "Mailaralinga by M.N. Venkatesha". Archived from By M.N. Venkatesha the original Check |url= value (help) on 26 April 2012. Retrieved 29 October 2008.
  3. "Thus spake Mylara". The Hindu. Chennai, India. 29 February 2008. Retrieved 29 October 2008.
  4. "Professional Religious Singers, Gorava". Retrieved 29 October 2008.
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