Temple Illustration
Photo gallery coming soon — curated images of Ramanathaswamy Jyotirlinga and its surroundings.
About
Ramanathaswamy Jyotirlinga stands on Pamban Island off the southeastern tip of Tamil Nadu, separated from Sri Lanka by the Palk Strait. This is the southernmost Jyotirlinga, positioned at a geographic and mythological confluence of extraordinary significance — the site where Rama, after defeating Ravana, worshipped Shiva to expiate the sin of killing a Brahmin (Ravana, who was learned in the Vedas). The island itself is the starting point of Rama Setu — the chain of shoals extending toward Sri Lanka that forms the basis of the Ramayana's bridge narrative.
The Ramanathaswamy temple is among the largest temple complexes in India, covering approximately 15 acres, and holds the record for the longest corridor in any Hindu temple — the outer corridor runs 1,212 metres, lined with a thousand intricately carved granite pillars. The gopurams, rebuilt and expanded under the Nayaka and Sethupathi rulers between the 13th and 20th centuries, are among the most ornate in Dravidian architecture. The complex contains 64 sacred wells (theerthams); bathing in all 22 temple theerthams in sequence is the central pilgrimage act, believed to wash away sins before darshan of the Jyotirlinga.
Rameswaram is part of Char Dham — the four sacred sites that Adi Shankaracharya prescribed as a complete pilgrimage circuit covering the four directions of the subcontinent: Badrinath (north), Puri (east), Rameswaram (south), and Dwarka (west). Completing the Char Dham is considered a full account of sacred geography. The ruined town of Dhanushkodi, at the island's tip, where the Bay of Bengal meets the Indian Ocean, is the point from which Rama's bridge is said to have been built and where his army crossed. Devotees may offer Shiva Seva inspired by this sacred kshetra.