The temple and its assets belong to the deity Lord Padmanabhaswamy, and for a long time, have been controlled by a trust headed by the
Travancore royal family.
T P Sundararajan's litigation "changed the way the world looked at the Temple". The temple has six hitherto known vaults (nilavaras), labelled as A to F, for bookkeeping purpose by the Court (Since then, however, an Amicus Curiae Report by
Gopal Subramanium, in April 2014, reportedly found two more subterranean vaults that have been labelled G and H). While Vault B is believed to be unopened since the 1880s, Vault A was possibly opened in recent decades, Vaults C to F have been opened from time to time over recent years.
Vault (Nilavara) B The
Bhagavata Purana says that
Balarama visited Phalgunam (now known as Thiruvananthapuram), took bath in Panchapsaras (Padmateertham), and made a gift of ten thousand cows to sages and other devotees. Though the shrine of Padmanabha was always present in what is the present-day city of Thiruvananthapuram, and it was a very ancient and renowned pilgrim spot even during the time of Balarama, the present-day temple for the deity came up later. The southwest part of the Chuttambalam (the circumambulatory path around the sanctum sanctorum) was constructed at the spot where Balarama is believed to have donated the cows. This portion came to be known as Mahabharatakonam and covered the ground underneath where both Kallara B and Kallara A were situated. As per the legend, many
Devas and sages visited Balarama on the banks of Padmateertham, and requested that they be permitted to reside there and worship Padmanabha. Balarama granted them their wish. It is believed that these Devas and sages reside in Kallara B worshipping the deity.
Naga Devathas devoted to the deity also dwell in this Kallara. One of the oldest existing estimates regarding Vault B, as per the historian Dr TP Sankarankutty Nair and the Temple priests, was by the Travancore Royal Family in the 1880s. Then, the wealth in Vault B, which is by far the largest, and the only vault (of the reported six) that is unopened so far, was worth INR 12,000 Crores (in 1880s' terms). The price of an ounce of gold was 4.26 British Pounds in 1885. The British Pound was around 5.29 to the Indian Rupee in 1885. An article by Emily Gilchriest Hatch, a visiting Englishwoman in 1933, recalls in her book 'Travancore: A Guide Book for the Visitor' (Oxford University Press, 1933) about an unsuccessful attempt to open one Kallara in 1908: "About 25 years ago, when the State needed additional money, it was thought expedient to open these chests and use the wealth they contained." "A group of people" got together and attempted to enter the vaults with torches. When they found the vaults "infested with cobras" they "fled for their lives". The seven-member team were to consult with some more experts on 8 July 2011 and make a final decision on opening the chamber. An Ashtamangala Devaprasnam conducted in the Temple to "discern the will of the deity" 'revealed' that any attempts to open chamber B would 'cause divine displeasure and that the holy articles in the other chambers were defiled' in the inventorying process. But the Observers could not open Kallara B. However,
Gopal Subramanium in his report submitted to the Supreme Court in April 2014, recommended its opening after conducting another Devaprasnam. The two Pushpanjali Swamiyars are the highest spiritual dignitaries of Padmanabhaswamy Temple. The Pushpanjali Swamiyar of Naduvil Madhom sent letters to the Chairperson of the Administrative Committee and the Executive Officer on 8 February 2016 expressing his strong opposition to the opening of Kallara B. The Pushpanjali Swamiyar of Munchira Madhom led a Ratha Yathra from
Kasaragod to Thiruvananthapuram in May 2018, campaigning against opening the sacred Kallara.
Azhvanchery Thamprakkal, the supreme spiritual leader of Kerala Brahmins, while addressing a meeting held in connection with the Ratha Yathra, also demanded that faith should not be trampled upon by opening Kallara B. According to a report by former Comptroller and Auditor General of India
Vinod Rai in August 2014, at least the outermost door (antechamber) to Kallara B has been opened seven times in recent decades - twice in 1991 and five times in 2002. Once Vinod Rai's report was out, Princess
Aswathi Thirunal Gowri Lakshmi Bayi clarified that Mr Rai was referring to the antechamber to Kallara B, and that that antechamber was opened even in 2011 by the Supreme Court-appointed observers. Prior to this, the Supreme-Court-appointed Amicus Curiae Gopal Subramanium had also alleged that Vault B or one of its antechambers was opened, despite a previous ruling of the Supreme court prohibiting the same.
Opening of the five smaller vaults in July 2011 till Supreme Court Final Judgment in July 2020 In June 2011, the
Supreme Court of India directed the authorities from the archaeology department and the fire services to open some of the secret chambers of the temple, and inventory the items kept inside. The two priests of the temple, the 'Periya Nambi' and the 'Thekkedathu Nambi', are the custodians of four vaults, labelled C to F, which are opened periodically. The Supreme Court had directed that "the existing practices, procedures, and rituals" of the temple be followed while opening vaults C to F and using the articles inside, while Vaults A would be opened only for the purpose of making an inventory of the articles and then closed. The review of the temple's underground vaults was undertaken by a seven-member panel appointed by the Supreme Court to generate an inventory, leading to the enumeration of a vast collection of articles, that are traditionally kept under lock and key. As per the directive of the Supreme Court of India, inventorying of the items in vaults C, D, E, and F were completed (in August 2012) and formal inventorying of vault A had commenced by the end of 2012. Vaults A, C, D, E and F were opened, along with their antechambers. Among the reported findings, is a tall solid pure golden idol of
Mahavishnu, studded with hundreds of diamonds and rubies and other precious stones. Also found were an -long pure gold chain, a gold sheaf weighing , a golden veil, 1200 'Sarappalli' gold coin-chains that are encrusted with precious stones, and several sacks filled with golden artefacts, necklaces, diadems, diamonds, rubies, sapphires, emeralds, gemstones, and objects made of gold. Ceremonial attire for adorning the deity in the form of 16-part gold anki weighing almost , gold "coconut shells" studded with rubies and emeralds, and several 18th century
Napoleonic era coins were found amongst many other objects. In early 2012, an expert committee had been appointed to investigate these objects, which include lakhs of golden coins of the
Roman Empire, that were found in Kottayam, in Kannur District. According to
Vinod Rai, the former Comptroller-and-Auditor-General (CAG) of India, who had audited some of the Temple records from 1990, in August 2014, in the already opened vault A, there is an hoard of gold coins dating to around 200 BCE, each coin priced at over . According to varying reports, at least three, if not more, solid gold crowns have been found, studded with diamonds and other precious stones. Some media reports also mention hundreds of pure gold chairs, thousands of gold pots and jars, among the articles recovered from Vault A and its antechambers. Several hundred pots and other items made of gold, that are used for daily rituals or intermittently for ceremonies in the Temple, were not inventoried as the Temple-priests expressed strong objections. The valuables are believed to have been accumulated in the temple over several thousand years, having been donated to the deity (and subsequently stored there), by various dynasties like the
Cheras, the
Pandyas, the
Travancore royal family, the
Kolathiris, the
Pallavas, the
Cholas and many other kings of both South India and beyond, and from the rulers and traders of
Mesopotamia,
Jerusalem,
Greece,
Rome, and later, the various colonial powers from
Europe, and other countries as well. Most scholars however believe that this was accumulated over thousands of years, given the mention of the deity and the Temple in several extant Hindu Texts, the Sangam Tamil literature (500 BC to 300 AD wherein it was referred to as the "Golden Temple" on account of its then extreme wealth), and the treasures consist of countless artefacts dating back to the Chera, Pandya, Greek, and Roman epochs. Also, much of the treasure housed in the much larger and as-yet-unopened vault, as well as in the much smaller cellars that have been opened, date back to long before the institution of the so-called Travancore Kingdom, e.g. the hoard of gold coins from 200 B.C that was mentioned by Vinod Rai. Noted archaeologist and historian
R. Nagaswamy has also stated that several records exist in Kerala, of offerings made to the deity, from several parts of Kerala. Lastly, in the Travancore Kingdom, a distinction was always made between the Government (State) Treasury (Karuvelam), the Royal Family Treasury (Chellam), and the Temple Treasury (Thiruvara Bhandaram or Sri Bhandaram). During the reign of Maharani
Gowri Lakshmi Bayi, hundreds of temples that were mismanaged in the Kerala region, were brought under the Government. The excess ornaments in these temples were also transferred to the Vaults of the Padmanabhaswamy Temple while the funds of the Padmanabhaswamy Temple were utilised for the daily upkeep of these temples. Prior to this now-famous incident in July 2011, one of vaults A, C, D, E, or F, or their antechambers was opened, in 1931. This was necessitated due to the severe economic depression that India was going through then due to which the Palace and State Treasuries had run almost dry. The small group of people, including the king and the priests, found a granary-sized structure almost full with mostly gold and some silver coins and jewels. Surmounted on top of it were hundreds of pure gold pots. There were four coffers filled with gold coins as well. Also found was a larger chest fixed to the ground with six sections in it. They were full of gold jewelry encrusted with diamonds, rubies, sapphires and emeralds. Besides these, there were four more chests of old coins, and they were carried back to the Palace and state treasuries for counting. == Litigations ==