Thondaimandala Mudaliar

Thondaimandala Mudaliar
Regions with significant populations
Tondai Nadu, Chola Nadu
Languages
Tamil
Religion
Hinduism
Related ethnic groups
Karkathar, Tirunelveli Saiva Pillai, Tamil people

Thondaimandala Mudaliar is a Forward caste vegetarian community in the Indian state of Tamil Nadu. Sekkizhar, the author of the Periyapuranam, was from this community.

History

Sangam and Medieval Tamil literature

According to Sangam literature, the Vēlir migrated from the Gangetic plains of ancient Dvārakā under the guidance of the sage Agastya. This is described by Nacchinarkkiniyar in his commentary on the Tolkāppiyam (Payiram; Porul.34).[1] The sage Agastya took with him 18 families of Vēls or Vēlirs and their kings from Tuvarai (identified with Dvārakā)[2] in the north, and migrated south.[3] Irunkōvēl, a Vēlir King of the Irunkōvēl line and a contemporary of Karikala Chola (circa 270 BCE), mentions his lineage and traces it back 49 generations to one of the kings of their ancestral home in Dvārakā.[4] This is repeated by the poet Kapilar when he sings to Irunkōvēl and asks him to marry the two daughters of his close friend and patron Vēl Pāri, another Vēlir king.[5]

Sekkizhar, one of the most prominent members of this community, is referred to as Ganga-Kula Tilaka, and his lineage is extolled in various pieces of medieval Tamil literature, the most notable among them being his biography by Umapati Sivacharya.[6][7][8] He was born in Kunrattur and would soon rise to become the Chief Minister of Kulothunga Chola II.[9][10][11][12] The word 'Velanmai' which we take to mean as agriculture is in fact means 'Benevolence', helping others. The Manimekhalai states "He is a Vellala who would not take his food, keeping the guest hungry outside".

Migration

48,000 Vellalars migrated north with the Chola King Karikala Chola (ruled around 270 BCE) after he conquered Thondaimandalam from the Kurumbars, a nomadic tribe also known as the Aruvalars. He parcelled out the land to the Vellalar chiefs, now known as the Thondaimandala Mudaliars,[13][14][15] and divided the territory into 24 Kottams or districts:[15] Pulal, Puliyur, Eekadu, Manavur, Chenkkadu, Payur, Eyil, Thamal, Uttukadu, Kalathur, Chembur, Amur, Eethoor, Venkundram, Palkunram, Ilankadu, Kaliyur, Chriukarai, Paduvur, Kadikai, Chenthirukai, Kunrapattiram, and Venkadam Velur.[15]

Ceremonies

The members of this community held the right of handing over the crown at the time of coronation ceremony (mudi-sootu vizha) of kings and religious heads.[16] In the Tamil classical literature, Kamba-ramayana, Kavi-chakravarthy Kambar stated that "the great sage Vashista took the crown from ancestors of Sadayappa Vallal and crowned the King Rama".

Historical personalities

Modern personalities

Sports

Shivani ArunKumar: National Junior Karate and Skating Champion

Literature

Politics

References

Citations

  1. Journal of Tamil studies, Issues 29-30 by International Association of Tamil Research, International Institute of Tamil Studies, p. 28
  2. Ancient India: collected essays on the literary and political history of Southern India, p. 358
  3. Temples of Kr̥ṣṇa in South India: history, art, and traditions in Tamilnāḍu, p. 34
  4. Pivot politics: changing cultural identities in early state formation processes, p. 165
  5. The Four Hundred Songs of War and Wisdom: An Anthology of Poems from Classical Tamil, the Purananuru Translations from the Asian classics, p. 201
  6. The Cōḷas By Kallidaikurichi Aiyah Nilakanta Sastri
  7. Kalhār (white water-lily): studies in art, iconography, architecture, and archaeology of India and Bangladesh, p. 367
  8. 1 2 Kalhār (white water-lily): studies in art, iconography, architecture, and archaeology of India and Bangladesh, p. 366
  9. A Topographical List of Inscriptions in the Tamil Nadu and Kerala States: Tiruchchirappalli District, page 388
  10. Tamil culture, Volume 5, p. 291
  11. Saiva siddhanta, Volume 15, page 26
  12. The grand epic of Saivism
  13. The economic history of India, Volume 1, p. 161: Karikala The Great defeated the Aruvalar and ... distributed the conquered lands to the Vellala chiefs, who were his relatives.
  14. An agrarian history of South Asia, Part 4, Volume 4, p. 100: Vellala gentry on the north Tamil coast trace their origins to a royal Chola ancestor who migrated north with 48,000 Vellala families, conquering Kurumba hunters.
  15. 1 2 3 The Tamils Eighteen Hundred Years Ago by V. Kanakasabhai
  16. This fact can be seen from old Tamil classical literature "Thirukkaivazhakkam" which states "mangaiyoru bhagarkum, madhavarkum, mannavarkum thunga mudiyai sootumkai (the hands that hand over the crown to kings/religious heads at the time of coronation ceremony)".
  17. Criminal Gods and Demon Devotees by Alf Hiltebeitel
  18. Extraordinary Child by Paula Richman
  19. A Sacred Thread by Raymond Brady Williams
  20. The Home of Dancing Śivan̲ by Paul Younger
  21. Ramakrishna Gopal Bhandarkar as an indologist: a symposium:..born into an orthodox saiva vellala family..
  22. Tantric cult of South India
  23. Insights into Hinduism
  24. A history of Indian literature, 500-1399: from courtly to the popular, p. 33
  25. The embodiment of bhakti, p. 49:... The Lord at Pullirukkuvelur has the form of lightning; he is one in the heavens, two in the blustering wind, three in the flames of the red fire, four in the flowing water, five in the earth, a refuge that does not diminish..
  26. Journal of Tamil Studies by International Institute of Tamil Studies, International Institute of Tamil Studies
  27. A primer of Tamil literature By M. S. Purnalingam Pillai
  28. Ancient Jaffna: being a research into the history of Jaffna from very early times to the Portug[u]ese period, C. Rasanayagam
  29. A History of Culture by T. K. Venkataraman, University of Madras

Bibliography

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  • South Indian inscriptions, Volume 13 By Eugen Hultzsch, India. Archaeological Survey, India. Dept. of Archaeology
  • Journal of Tamil studies, Issues 29-30 By International Association of Tamil Research, International Institute of Tamil Studies
  • Enamul Haque, Gouriswar Bhattacharya, Kalhār (white water-lily): studies in art, iconography, architecture, and archaeology of India and Bangladesh
  • Hemakuta: Recent Researches in Archaeology and Museology : Shri C.T.M. Kotraiah Felicitation Volume, A. V. Narasimha Murthy, ISBN 81-86050-66-3, ISBN 978-81-86050-66-8
  • Rājarājeśvaram, the pinnacle of Chola art By Balasubrahmanyam Venkataraman
  • Indian archaeological heritage: Shri K.V. Soundara Rajan festschrift, Volume 1 By K. V. Soundara Rajan, Chedarambattu Margabandhu
  • The economic history of India, Volume 1 By Abdul Qadir Husaini
  • Pivot politics: changing cultural identities in early state formation processes By M. van Bakel, Renée Hagesteijn, Piet van de Velde
  • Ancient India: collected essays on the literary and political history of Southern India By Sakkottai Krishnaswami Aiyangar
  • Temples of Kr̥ṣṇa in South India: history, art, and traditions in Tamilnāḍu By T. Padmaja
  • An agrarian history of South Asia, Part 4, Volume 4 By David E. Ludden
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  • Ancient India: collected essays on the literary and political history of Southern India By Sakkottai Krishnaswami Aiyangar
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Further reading

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