Before Kammasandra village was known as "Kammasandra" it was known as "Dharmasthali" and was where Manjunathasharma or Bhakta Manjunatha lived. Bhakta Manjunatha was born in Dharmasthali to a family of Shaiva HinduBrahmins and was always a man of good character, but was an atheist who insulted Sri Manjunathaever since he was little. He ran a localwrestling school and participated in vigilantism instead of working in his family's catering business and participating in religious traditions. Later in his life, he realized the divinity of Sri Manjunatha and became an ardent devotee of Sri Rudradeva. Then, one day when Bhakta Manjunatha and his family visited the local Sri Manjunatha temple, a few incidents occurred which were interpreted as bad omens and every single holy deepa on the temple premises became unlit. The other temple-goers then accused Bhakta Manjunatha as the cause. Nevertheless, Maharaja Ambikeshwaravarma, a local viceroy for the ruling Rastrakuta Dynasty and another Shaiva devotee, happened to be in attendance when that happened and quickly quelled the mob. He then approached Manjunatha to prove his innocence by making every deepa glow again. Bhakta Manjunatha sang the devotional songMayakaya Deepam by MaharshiVeda Vyasa and made them glow brighter than ever before. Everyone realized that Manjunatha was a changed man and was the greatest devotee of Sri Maheshwara. He is believed to have insulted Sri Manjunatha ten million times in his lifetime. Therefore, to acquit himself of his past sins, Bhakta Manjunatha, under the patronage of Maharaja Ambikeshwaravarma and the help of his family, created ten million lingas. Hence the name Kotilingeshwara, where Koti means crore and installed them in the area now known as Kotilingeshwara Temple. The temple structures themselves were built by Swamy Sambhashiva Murthy in 1980. The entire story of Bhakta Manjunatha was captured into a critically acclaimed bilingual feature film titled Sri Manjunatha by producer Nara Jayasridevi and director K. Raghavendra Rao. The main attraction of the temple is a huge linga measuring tall and tall Lord Nandi idol, surrounded by lakhs of small lingas spread over an area of. The Lord Nandi idol is installed over a which is in length, in width and in height. There are eleven small temples constructed within the premises for various deities. A water tank is set up close to the Linga, used by the devotees to perform Abhisheka. The idols vary between and in height. There is a rest house, marriage hall, meditation hall and an exhibition center attached to the temple.This place is ideal for one day trip from Bangalore.The temple is extremely famous because of the largest and tallest Shivalinga present in Asia. People believe there are about hundred lakh shivalingas but the numbers are 90 lakhs and not one crore.