Kalpathy
Kalpathy, also spelled Kalpathi, is a historic agraharam village in Palakkad district, Kerala, India, characterized by its linear settlement of traditional Brahmin homes flanking temple-centric streets along the Kalpathy River, a tributary of the Bharathapuzha.[1] Primarily settled by Tamil Iyer Brahmins who migrated from regions like Thanjavur in Tamil Nadu, the village maintains Dravidian architectural styles and orthodox Hindu customs distinct from surrounding Kerala traditions.[2] It serves as a preserved cultural enclave, often likened to a southern Varanasi due to its cluster of ancient Shiva temples and ritual practices.[3] The focal point is the Sree Viswanatha Swamy Temple, a low quadrangular structure dedicated to Lord Shiva and his consort Visalakshi, dating back over seven centuries and situated riverside.[4] Accompanying temples include those for Lakshmi Narayana Perumal, Prasanna Mahaganapathy, and others, forming a temple complex that underscores the village's spiritual heritage.[1] Kalpathy's defining event is the Ratholsavam, an eleven-day chariot festival in November, where massive wooden chariots bearing deities from four principal temples are pulled in procession by devotees, culminating in a convergence that draws regional crowds and exemplifies communal devotion amid preserved Vedic rites.[5][6] This festival, among South India's largest, highlights the village's role in sustaining Tamil Brahmin traditions against modern homogenization, though it has historically intersected with local social tensions over caste orthodoxy.[7]