Jump to content

Eruvessi

Coordinates: 12°3′0″N 75°33′0″E / 12.05000°N 75.55000°E / 12.05000; 75.55000
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Cerebellum (talk | contribs) at 13:02, 11 July 2021 (mistagged article - it has a source. you can help!). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Eruvessi
village
Eruvessi is located in Kerala
Eruvessi
Eruvessi
Location in Kerala, India
Eruvessi is located in India
Eruvessi
Eruvessi
Eruvessi (India)
Coordinates: 12°3′0″N 75°33′0″E / 12.05000°N 75.55000°E / 12.05000; 75.55000
Country India
StateKerala
DistrictKannur
Languages
 • OfficialMalayalam, English
Time zoneUTC+5:30 (IST)
PIN
670632
ISO 3166 codeIN-KL
Coastline0 kilometres (0 mi)
Nearest cityChemperi. Payyavoor
Lok Sabha constituencyKannur
ClimateTropical monsoon (Köppen)
Avg. summer temperature35 °C (95 °F)
Avg. winter temperature20 °C (68 °F)

Eruvessi is a village in Irikkur Block Panchayat, Taliparamba Taluk, Kannur district, Kerala, India. It is located at a distance of around 50 Kilometers from Kannur. There is a famous temple called Padikkutti Devi temple and the festival or Utsav is well known. Eruvessi Sri Padikutty temple is the birthplace of Sree Muthappan. This place was ruled by Mannanar dynasty of Muthedath Aramana and Elayadath Aramana.[1] The ruins of Aramana of the Mananar are still visible on the banks of Eruvessi River.[clarification needed]

Transportation

The national highway passes through Taliparamba town. Mangalore and Mumbai can be accessed on the northern side and Cochin and Thiruvananthapuram can be accessed on the southern side. The road to the east connects to Mysore and Bangalore. The nearest railway station is Kannur on Mangalore-Palakkad line. There is airport at Kannur.

Geography

Eruvessi is a hilly village on the eastern side of Kannur district. The terrain is undulating in nature and the extreme eastern side has forests bordering Karnataka state.

References

  1. ^ P.J Rajendran (2000). Kshethravinjanakosam. D.C.Books publishing, Google books. p. 103. ISBN 9788126402540.