Mangalasasanam

'auspicious felicitations') refers to a Vaishnava concept in Hinduism, where a devotee offers their salutations and felicitations upon God due to a profound sense of concern for the latter, and also as an exercise of forgetting their sense of self.

[1] The concept of mangalasasanam is often associated with the pasurams (verses) of the Alvars, who during the early medieval period of Tamil history (between the 7th and 10th centuries CE), worshipped Vishnu and his avatars through their hymns.

The Sri Vaishnava shrines that were extolled by the Alvars are called the Divya Desams, where a number of these poet-saints offered their mangalasasanam.

[2] The below table provides a classification for the mangalasananams offered by the Alvars:[3]

Some of the famous Divya Desams the mangalasanams were uttered include the following temples:

Mangalasasanam delivered at the Thiruindalur temple