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The Temple Town of Madurai Surprised Me in Ways I Didn’t Expect

Hotels in Madurai

I went to Madurai thinking I already knew what to expect. Ancient temples, busy streets, jasmine garlands, strong filter coffee. I had it mapped out in my head before I even boarded the train.

Madurai had other plans.

This city in Tamil Nadu is one of the oldest continuously inhabited cities in the world, and it carries that age with quiet confidence. It does not perform for you. It simply gets on with being itself, and that, more than anything, is what caught me off guard.

The Meenakshi Amman Temple Is Bigger Than You Think

Everyone knows about the Meenakshi Amman Temple. It is the reason most people come here. But knowing about it and standing inside it are two entirely different experiences.

The temple complex covers roughly 14 acres in the heart of the city. There are 14 gopurams, the towering gateway structures covered in thousands of sculpted figures painted in vivid colours. The tallest stands at about 52 metres. I had seen photographs. The photographs do not prepare you for the scale.

What surprised me most was the interior. It is not a monument. It is a working, living temple. Priests move through the corridors with purpose, rituals happen throughout the day, and the air carries camphor and flowers in equal measure. I spent nearly three hours inside without planning to. The Hall of a Thousand Pillars alone held me far longer than expected, each pillar carved differently, some producing musical notes when tapped.

Go in the early morning. The crowds are thinner, and you can actually take in the surroundings’ true essence without being rushed.

The Streets Around the Temple Are the Real Education

As soon as you leave your house, you’re instantly enveloped by the old city of Madurai. The neighbourhoods around the Meenakshi Temple are filled with floral stalls, silk garment stores, brassware vendors and tea shops.

As with many other aspects of life in Madurai, there is a large volume of commerce in the sale of jasmine flowers. The locals refer to the flower as “Madurai malli”. Each day at the Temple, Madurai Malli is sold to buyers who purchase the product directly from the sellers. At 6 a.m., the sellers participated in selecting flowers based on their sizes and fragrance. The flowers are further bundled into bunches or containers, ready for sale.

Exploring the streets of Madurai without an end goal is a wonderful way to start your mornings. This is true because of the number and variety of people and local activities that exist on the streets. One can observe processions, vendors setting up their stalls or school groups travelling past or on the same side of an old building.

The Food Deserves a Separate Conversation

Food in Madurai is generous and satisfying, with spices used liberally.

Jigarthanda is a local drink made with milk, almond gum, nannari syrup, and ice cream that might seem strange, but works really well on a hot afternoon near the Periyarchai bus station.

Kari dosai from one of the roadside stalls close to the temple is a must-try. It is a thick, crispy dosa filled with spiced meats, served with a good coconut chutney that has a flavour much deeper than expected from a roadside stall. I had this dish twice over two mornings.

If you are in Madurai for more than one day, you cannot leave without ordering mutton curry with parotta at one of the established restaurants along Netaji Road.

The Thirumalai Nayakkar Palace Is Worth the Detour

Most visitors stop at the temple and move on. The Thirumalai Nayakkar Palace, about a kilometre away, is a 17th-century structure with a courtyard the size of a small football ground. It is much quieter than the temple, and the Indo-Saracenic arches and the main hall’s ceiling height make it worth every minute.

A Word on Where to Base Yourself

Madurai is compact enough that where you stay shapes the trip. The right hotels in Madurai will put the temple, the flower market, and Netaji Road within easy walking distance, which matters when you are moving between meals, markets, and monuments throughout the day.

I came to Madurai with a checklist. I left with the distinct feeling that the city had simply let me observe a small part of something much larger and much older than any checklist could hold.

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