List of Vellalars
Regions with significant populations | |
---|---|
Tamil Nadu, Sri Lanka, Puducherry, Kerala | |
Languages | |
Tamil (Mother Tongue), Malayalam | |
Religion | |
Hinduism | |
Related ethnic groups | |
Dravidian people, Tamil people |
Vellalars are Tamil people who use titles such as Gounder in Kongu Nadu, Mudaliar in Thondai Nadu and Pillai in Chozha Nadu and Pandya Nadu.
Poets and Ministers
- Sadayappa Vallal, a rich 12th-century Vellala chief who had residences at Puduvai (Puducherry) and Thiruvenainallur.
- Ariyanatha Mudaliar: Vellala Dalavoy of the Vijayanagar viceroy Viswanatha Nayaka.
Freedom fighters and leaders
- Dheeran Chinnamalai -Kongu chieftain and Palayakkarar from Tamil Nadu who rose up in revolt against the British East India Company in the Kongu Nadu, Southern India.[1]
Politics
- M. Bhakthavatsalam, former Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu & Congress Leader[2]
- C. Subramaniam - Father of the Indian Green Revolution, Former Union Minister, Deputy chairperson of the Planning Commission, Governor of Maharashtra. Bharat Ratna (the nation's highest civilian honour) in 1998.[3]
- Kovai Chezhiyan - EX MLA, Kongu Politician and one of the Founder of Kongu Vellala Goundergal Peravai.
Literature
- V. Kalyanasundaram: Famous Writer also known as Thiru.Vi.Ka.
- Pudhumaipithan,[4] revolutionary writer
- Jayakanthan,[5] A Tamil writer
Armed and civil services
- S. Muthiah Mudaliar, Minister in the Composite Madras Government, 1928-1930 as a member of the Indian Justice Party. He was the author of the Communal Government Order in Madras Presidency in 1928.
Spiritual
- Arumuka Navalar, born as Kandar Arumugam Pillai, a Hindu reformer[6]
- Swami Chidbhavananda, established many educational institutions in Tamil Nadu for the upbringing and welfare of the socially deprived.
- Swami Satchidananda, renowned spiritual guru for many Hollywood actors and Rajinikanth and also established Light of Truth Universal Shrine (LOTUS), a spiritual conclave of all religions.
References
- ↑ The memorial was a long pending demand of the dominant Kongu Vellalar community of the region, to which the valiant fighter against colonial oppression belonged. http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2012-04-05/coimbatore/31293607_1_memorial-warfare-cauvery
- ↑ Dictionary of Indian Biography. Indian Bibliographic Centre. 2000. p. 52. ISBN 978-8-18513-115-3.
- ↑ Born on January 30, 1910, in Senguttaipalayam, a hamlet of Varadanur village in Pollachi taluk of Coimbatore district, in an agriculturists family from the dominant Kongu Vellalar community, Mr. Subramaniam, blended the strains of tradition and modernity in his own way, to eventually rise to gubernatorial positions. http://hindu.com/thehindu/2000/11/08/stories/01080009.htm
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑ Jones, Kenneth W.; Hudson, D. Dennis (1992). Religious controversy in British India: dialogues in South Asian languages. SUNY. p. 29. ISBN 0-7914-0828-0.
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