Sacred Madras: Temples, Churches, Mosques and the Cityscape
MTA
Religious architecture and intercommunal life across centuries
2nd Edition
*Sacred Madras* provides a comprehensive historical and architectural analysis of Chennai, arguing that religious institutions—Hindu temples, Islamic mosques and dargahs, and Christian churches—have been the primary architects of the city’s urban form. Moving beyond colonial narratives that view the city through a British administrative grid, the book demonstrates how ancient village shrines, processional "car streets," and sacred water tanks (pushkarinis) established the foundational logic for neighborhood zoning, commerce, and social hierarchy. By examining "processional urbanism," the text illustrates how seasonal festivals and ritual routes temporarily reorder public space, granting visibility to various communities and dictating the physical width and layout of the city's historic arteries.
The book delves into the socio-economic structures that sustain these spaces, highlighting the role of caste-based artisan quarters, the legal complexities of Waqf and temple endowments, and the gendered labor of women in ritual and community care. It traces the evolution of the cityscape from the birth of colonial enclaves like Fort St. George to the modern pressures of "slum clearance" and the emergence of massive IT-corridor mega-campuses. Through these shifts, religious sites have functioned as resilient nodes of urban governance, providing education through madrasas and pathshalas, and serving as essential hubs for collective action during natural disasters like the 2015 floods.
The final chapters address the contemporary challenges of heritage conservation, tourism, and the politics of sound, where the overlapping of bells, azaan, and nadaswaram creates a contested yet vibrant sensory landscape. The author advocates for a "plural cityscape" in urban policy, suggesting that Chennai’s future should be guided by its "urban intelligence"—the informal pacts, shared thresholds, and intercommunal negotiations that have historically allowed diverse faiths to coexist. Ultimately, the book presents the sacred geography of Chennai not as a relic of the past, but as a living toolkit for fostering belonging and social cohesion in a rapidly modernizing metropolis.
This book is ideal for urban planners, historians, anthropologists, and architecture students interested in how religious spaces shape city development. It will particularly benefit those studying South Asian urban history, religious pluralism, and the interplay between faith and urban form in colonial and post-colonial contexts. Researchers examining temple economics, sacred ecology, or intercommunal negotiations will find valuable case studies throughout the text's layered analysis of Chennai's sacred landscape.
March 28, 2026
43,395 words
3 hours 2 minutes
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