Sacred to Shiva

Mallikarjuna

श्री शैलम देवस्थानम

also known as Mallikarjuna Jyotirlinga, Mallikarjuna Swamy Temple, Srisailam Temple, Sri Bhramaramba Mallikarjuna Swamy Devasthanam

Located on Shri Shaila mountain in the Nallamala hills.

ColophonGet Darshan Info

Notice

valid until 31 Aug 2026

Tiger movement near Sakshi Ganapati / forest approach

Forest officials reported a tiger sighting near Sakshi Ganapati Temple, the main approach point to Srisailam shrine, in April 2026, with pugmarks found in the surrounding Nallamala Forest. They advised devotees to avoid venturing out at night and to refrain from entering forest areas even during the daytime until the situation is cleared.

Read the official notice

Introduction

allikarjuna Swamy Temple or Srisailam Temple is a Hindu temple dedicated to the deities Shiva and Parvati, located at Srisailam, Nandyal district in the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh. It is significant to the Hindu sects of both Shaivism and Shaktism as this temple is referred to as one of the twelve Jyotirlingas of Shiva and as one of the fifty two Shakta pithas, centres of the Hindu goddess. Shiva is worshiped as Mallikarjuna and is represented by the lingam. His consort Parvati is depicted as Bhramaramba.

History

There are inscriptional evidence from the Satavahana dynasty which place the temple to be existent from the 2nd century. Most modern additions were done during the time of king Harihara I of Vijayanagara Empire (14th and 15th centuries). The veerasheromandapam and paathalaganga steps was constructed during the time of Vhanni Reddi Kingdom (12th and 13th centuries). The reddi dynasty were committed devotees of Sri Bhramarambha Mallikarjuna Swamy.

Legends & lore

When Shiva and Parvati decided to find suitable brides for their sons. Shiva got Riddhi (intellect) and Siddhi (spiritual power) married to Ganesha. Kartikeya on his return was enraged and went away to stay alone on Mount Krauncha in Palani in the name of Kumara brahmachari. On seeing his father coming over to pacify him, he tried to move to another place, but on the request of the Devas, stayed close by. The place where Shiva and Parvati stayed came to be known as Srisailam. According to Hindu legend, the presiding deity in the form of Linga (an iconic form of Shiva) was worshipped with jasmine (locally called in Telugu as Mallika), leading to the name Mallikarjuna.

About the deity — Shiva

Shiva, also known as Mahadeva and Hara, is one of the principal deities of Hinduism. He is the Supreme Being in Shaivism, one of the major traditions within Hinduism.

Read more about [Shiva](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shiva).

Architecture

The temple complex covers two hectares and houses four gateway towers known as gopurams. The temple has numerous shrines, with those of Mallikarjuna and Bhramaramba being the most prominent. The temple complex houses many halls; the most notable is the Mukha Mandapa built during the Vijayanagar period. The temple is situated facing east. The center mandapam has several pillars, with a huge idol of Nadikeshwara. The temple is enclosed by tall walls measuring 183 m (600 ft) by 152 m (499 ft) and 8.5 m (28 ft) tall. There are a number of sculptures in the precinct each rising above another. The Mukamandapa, the hall leading to the sanctum, has intricately sculpted pillars. The shrine where Mallikarjuna is housed is considered the oldest in the temple, dating back to the 7th century. There is a Sahasra linga (1000 linga), believed to have been commissioned by Rama and five other lingams believed to have been commissioned by Pandavas. A mirror hall in the first precinct has images of Nataraja.

Religious significance

Shiva in this temple is referred to as one of the twelve Jyotirlingas. Goddess Bramarambha's shrine is referred to as one of the fifty-two Shakta pithas. This temple is classified as one of the Paadal Petra Sthalam. On the way to the main temple is located Shikhareshwaram temple. It is said that by having darshan in the temple one does not get rebirth. Krishna River here is called Patal Ganga. One has to go down 852 stairs to reach the river. The Shiva Linga is bathed with the water of this river.

As per Siva Mahapuranam, once Brahma (the Hindu God of creation) and Vishnu (the Hindu God of preservation) had an argument in terms of supremacy of creation. To test them, Shiva pierced the three worlds as a huge endless pillar of light, the jyotirlinga. Vishnu and Brahma split their ways to downwards and upwards respectively to find the end of the light in either directions. Brahma lied that he found out the end, while Vishnu conceded his defeat. Shiva appeared as a second pillar of light and cursed Brahma that he would have no place in ceremonies while Vishnu would be worshipped till the end of eternity. The jyotirlinga is the supreme partless reality, out of which Shiva partly appears. The jyotirlinga shrines, thus are places where Shiva appeared as a fiery column of light. Originally there were believed to be 64 jyotirlingas while 12 of them are considered to be very auspicious and holy.

How to reach

Located in: Srisailam, Andhra Pradesh.

Tags

jyotirlingashiva12-jyotirlingashakta-pithashaktismshaivismnallamalaandhra-pradeshvijayanagarasrisailam

Festivals celebrated here

त्योहार

No festivals linked here yet.

When our editors confirm the festivals that gather pilgrims at this shrine, they will appear in this folio with their next dates.

News & updates

समाचार

We are watching for news about this shrine.

As soon as our editors find a piece worth reading — a renovation, a festival report, a court ruling, a historic recovery — it lands here, with full attribution.

Plan your visit

यात्रा योजना

Before you go

  • Approach by deep-forest road from Hyderabad

    The approach to Srisailam from Hyderabad (around 232–245 km) passes through dense Nallamala forest sections. Night driving is generally discouraged due to wildlife crossings and limited services en route. Plan travel for daylight hours where possible.

  • Vegetarian-only food in the temple town

    Srisailam is a temple town where only vegetarian food is served at hotels, lodges and roadside eateries. Plan meals accordingly.

Sources & attribution

This article's initial draft was assembled from the open-source data above. Reviewed editorially before publication.

Services & Support · सेवा

Soon, you can do more than read about Mallikarjuna.

We’re building the infrastructure for verified pujas, transparent donations, and trust-rated local help around every shrine. Tell us where you want us first.

पूजा बुकिंग

Book a Puja

Connect with verified pujaris at Mallikarjuna. Choose a puja, a date, and the offering — we handle the rest. Each pujari is KYC-checked and rated by the temple committee.

No spam. Notifications only when bookings open.

दान

Donate

Support Mallikarjuna’s maintenance, annadana programs, and community work. Every paisa receipted, every disbursement public.

Direct to the trust. No intermediaries.

स्थानीय सेवा

Hire Local

Trust-verified local services around Mallikarjuna — pujaris, drivers, cooks, tutors, plumbers — recommended by the temple’s community.

Recommendations only from verified residents.