Thursday, March 31, 2016

Negalur Patti - Adukkankal which contains a cave with 10000 B.C. prehistoric paintings

Neganur Patti is a village in Gingee taluk in Villuppuram district in the Indian state of Tamil Nadu
Neganur Patti consists of small hillock called Adukkankal which contains a cave with prehistoric paintings, Tamili stone inscription and traces of the presence of Jain beds.
Adukkankal

Wednesday, March 30, 2016

Udumalpet- 2nd Century BC SAngam era Archaeological Materials Discovered

A team of archaeologists and historians from here has discovered a large collection of archaeological materials belonging to the Sangam period, particularly from 2 BC, from three hamlets in Udumalpet taluk.

The materials unearthed by the team headed by S. Ravikumar, an archaeologist-cum-engineer from Virarajendran Archaeological and Historical Research Centre, included a terracotta seal carrying an emblem of bow and arrow used by Chera kings, terracotta lamps, terracotta stands, bobbins, 30 precious stones, cowries and a few other valuables.

Tuesday, March 29, 2016

Azhagankulam - Ramnad - Renewed exavation of sangam pandiyas and the Romansfrom circa 50 BEC to 500 circa CE

Azhagankulam (Marungurpattinam)
Renewed excavation in the T.N. village provides fresh evidence.
Renewed excavation from May at Azhagankulam village in Ramanathapuram district, Tamil Nadu, has thrown up fresh evidence that it was an important trading post between the Sangam Pandyas and the Romans from circa 50 BCE to circa 500 CE.

Monday, March 28, 2016

Karur-Vanji-2000 Year Old Ancient Roman Connections with Tamil Nadu

Karur is one of the oldest towns in Tamil Nadu and has played a very significant role in the history and culture of the Tamils. Its history dates back over 2000 years, and has been a flourishing trading center in the early Sangam days. It was ruled by the Cheras, Gangas, Cholas, the Vijayanagara Nayaks, Mysore and the British successively.
Karur was built on the banks of river Amaravathi which was called Aanporunai during the Sangam days. According to the Hindu mythology, Brahma began the work of creation here, which is referred to as the "place of the sacred cow." The names of the early Chera kings who ruled from Karur, have been found in the rock inscriptions in Aaru Nattar Malai close to Karur. The Tamil epic Silapathikaram mentions that the famous Chera King Senguttuvan ruled from Karur.

Sunday, March 27, 2016

Stone Labyrinth at Baire Gauni near ChinnaKottur (Kundani)-Tamil Nadu




A surviving example beside the Baire Gauni resevoir, near the ruined town of Kundani in Tamil Nadu, is of the Chakra-vyuha design, 8.5 metres in diameter and formed with lines of stones embedded in the ground (Kürvers, 2006)

From the World-wide Labyrinth Locator: "The stone labyrinth at Baire Gauni, near Chinnakottur in Tamil Nadu, India, is laid out in the Chakra-vyuha style commonly encountered throughout India."

Classical - Chakra-vyuha type (also known as Hecate)
An unusual development of the classical labyrinth, found primarily in India, is based on a three-fold, rather than four-fold seed pattern and is often drawn with a spiral at the centre. It is referred to in Indian tradition as Chakra-vyuha, a name derived from a magical troop formation employed by the magician Drona at the battle of Kurukshetra, as recounted in the Mahabharata epic.

Friday, March 25, 2016

Kambam Choru- Tamil Traditional Healthy Food

(Kambam Choru, Bajra Baath, Kambu Sadam, Boiled Pearl Millet)

Bajra also known as 'Pearl Millet' used to be one of the widely available grains half a century before. Last few decades it lost its popularity and people opted for more easily available grains like rice and wheat. Nowadays millets are coming back into the markets due to its health benefits. People with diabetes, high cholesterol etc are trying to include more and more millets into their diet.

Today I want to share a very old Pearl millet recipe called "Kambu Sadam" or "Kambu Choru".

Thursday, March 24, 2016

Good Friday is spent in mourning Christ's death.


Good Friday is a religious holiday observed by Christians across the world in memory of the crucifixion of Jesus Christ. This year it falls on March 25. The day is part of the Holy Week for Christians and is spent mourning Christ's death. The day comes two days before Easter Sunday when the resurrection of Jesus Christ is celebrated.
The two days, Friday and Saturday, are considered part of the mourning period before Easter celebration. While Mass is not celebrated on this days, the 'Way of the Cross' prayers and Bible passage readings are held at churches.

1117-1135 AD Vikrama Chozha Temple - Kumabakonam- Tamil Nadu

சோழர்களின் காலத்தில் கட்டப்பட்ட இப்பழம் பெரும் கோவில்கள் ஏன் கேட்பார் அற்று கிடக்கின்றது.
இதை பாரமரிக்காத காரணம் என்ன? தமிழ்நாட்டில் தமிழன் ஆட்சி செய்யவில்லை என்பதுதாலா அல்லது தமிழனின் வரலாறு அழிக்கப்படவேண்டும் என்ற நினைப்பா?


Wednesday, March 23, 2016

Ancient Scientific Wonder by Tamilan

Wisdom of Siddhas (Siththars)
These 5 temples represent the five elements of nature. The physical body of the throbbing life is also composed of these five elements.

All these temples are located in South India with four of these temples in Tamil Nadu and one in Andra Pradesh. Shiva in these temples have five different names based on the elements they represent

Tuesday, March 22, 2016

2000 years old Tamil Traditional Stilt Walking & Dance

2000 year old Ancient Stilt Dance in TamilNadu
Marakkal (Stilt) Dance

When demons sent poisonous creatures like snakes and scorpions against Goddess Kottravai (Durga) she danced with stints (Stick dance). This is known as Marakkal literally “wooden legs”. - Silappadhikaram (Ancient Tamil Literature)
.....

Monday, March 21, 2016

A 13th Century Tamil inscription found in Myanmar

A 13th century Tamil inscription in Myanmar records that a Perumaa’l temple patronized by Tamils existed at the earlier capital at Pagan.
Seven Paddaachchaariyaars, who came from Tamil Nadu performed the ceremonies, according to Solai Thiyagarajan, who sent news and images of the consecration to media.

Paddaachchaariyaars are authorities in performing consecration of Vaishnava temples of the Dravidian style in the Agamic way of South India (it is Sivaachchaariyaars in the case of Saiva temples).

Sunday, March 20, 2016

5000 years old pre-historic paintings - Porivarai-Nilgiris-Tamil Nadu


Porivarai [Karikkaiyur]
ART ATTACK: Drawings as old as 5000 years face threat from vandals,who have defaced most of the works by adding their element of creativity
Until a year ago,the rocks of Porivarai boasted of prehistoric paintings.Drawings of deer,bull,mongoose,elephant and figures of human beings,dating back to 5,000 years,decorated the hill,situated near Karikkiyoor,34km from Kotagiri in the Nilgiris.Today,the paintings face threat from vandals,who have defaced most of the works by adding their own bit of creativity.The graffiti by the vandals,using ordinary paints over the prehistoric works,indicates scant regard for heritage.

Saturday, March 19, 2016

Mangulam-Scholars claim Tamili Script 500 BC centuries before Asokan Brahmi


Mangulam Inscription
The six Tamil inscriptions of the 2nd century B.C. on the brow of five caverns on the Kazhugumalai hill near Mankulam, 38 km from Madurai, are the most ancient ones in Tamil Nadu and establish the historical facts that the Pandyan king Nedunchezhiyan ruled in the 2nd century B.C. and that Sangam literature dates back to the same period. The inscriptions also have mention about the trade guilds of the period and about a group of Jaina monks headed by Kani Nandan who stayed in the five caverns.

Friday, March 18, 2016

Tamil Culture and Tradition

Tamilnadu Culture


Tamilnadu CultureA distinct ethnic group with a history dating back to Sangam era (from 400-300 B.C.E to 300 CE), Tamils are either Saivites or Vaishnavites segment of Hindu pantheism. Their literature can be traced to the grammatical treatise 'Tolkaapiyam' written around 500 B.C.
While majority of Tamils are Hindus (88%), Christians forming 6% of the population and Muslims (5.57%) do live in harmony and have their own places of worship and festivals to celebrate. Lord Muruga is the chief deity of Tamils and its six abodes are pilgrims centres located in different parts of the state.

Thursday, March 17, 2016

Traditional Popular Folk Dances of Tamil Nadu which you might not have heard about

Here is a list of them
• Kaliyattam
• Karagattam
• Kavadiyattam
• Oylattam
• Devarattam
• Kollattam
• Kai Silambattam
• Dummy Horse
• Peacock Dance
Kaliyattam :
Kaliattam is a dance related to goddess KALI. Artist do the make-up like kali and kill the devil(Mahesh or Satan). There are 2 types of performance in the Kaliyattam. one is Pacha Kali(Kali with Green color) and Pavala Kali(Kali with pavalam(red) color) another one is Siva Kaliyattam(Sivan and Kali competition dance).

Wednesday, March 16, 2016

Mamallapuram-Last of a series of Seven Temples, Six of which had Submerged-TamilNadu

Mamallapuram Submerged
Expedition to Poompuhar - Remains of Kumari Kandam - Graham Hancock Underworld E02 (2002)
According to the indications of archaeological excavation, it appears to be the northern most sea-port of Tamilnadu with a brick structure on the North Western direction of the shore temples.
This structure, datable to Sangam age, is built in north-south orientation having two parallel walls side by side, the gap of which was filled with thick clay.
The underwater city of Mahabalipuram off the coast of India as explored by Graham Hancock in his book Underworld. The Indian government refuses all diving requests now...

40000 years old Narasimha Idol found in Hohlenstein-Stadel, Germany

Oldest ever Idol discovered so far is the Lion-Man ivory scultpure, which is estimated to be 40000 years old.
It was discovered in the Hohlenstein-Stadel, a German cave in 1939.
This 29.6 cm (11.7 inches) in height, 5.6 cm wide, and 5.9 cm thick sculpture was carved out of woolly mammoth ivory using a flint stone knife.

Tuesday, March 15, 2016

Pallanguzhi (பல்லாங்குழி)- Traditional Tamil Game

Pallanguzhi (பல்லாங்குழி)

Pallanguzhi is an urban board game, once patronised by women in Tamil Nadu, Pallankuzhi is played by dropping seeds into pits on a board, It has been a women's pastime, also an entertaining way to improve math and motor skills or a marathon affair during festivals like Sivarathri and Vaikunda Ekadasi and is also played during the break at workplace

The game has fascinated researchers keen on unraveling its many anthropological and social aspects. Scholars have conducted researches on the game to find out the various skills of students at various levels.
Pallanguzhi is mostly played by Tamil women, both in Southern India and SriLanka. Men also play it sometimes for gambling.

Monday, March 14, 2016

Porivarai -Karikkiyur - 5000 years old pre-historic paintings


Porivarai [Karikkaiyur]
ART ATTACK: Drawings as old as 5000 years face threat from vandals,who have defaced most of the works by adding their element of creativity
Until a year ago,the rocks of Porivarai boasted of prehistoric paintings.Drawings of deer,bull,mongoose,elephant and figures of human beings,dating back to 5,000 years,decorated the hill,situated near Karikkiyoor,34km from Kotagiri in the Nilgiris.Today,the paintings face threat from vandals,who have defaced most of the works by adding their own bit of creativity.The graffiti by the vandals,using ordinary paints over the prehistoric works,indicates scant regard for heritage.
K T Gandhirajan,a member of the team that excavated the rock art of Porivarai in 2004,said he visited the spot every year and agonised over the vandalism.The original drawings were clearly visible when we excavated the place with the help of a local person.The graffiti you see today is the handwork of a mentally disturbed person from the nearby village.He goes to the site often and draws religious symbols on the prehistoric works, said Gandhirajan.The Porivarai rock art panel,according to him,is the largest in south India.
Even though the team that excavated the site immediately reported its findings to the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) as well as the state archaeology department in 2004,neither took charge of it.If either of them had taken over the site,it would have helped us to protect it, said Gandhirajan.There are seven rock art sites in and around Kotagiri.Porivarai is the largest among them.It has more than 450 paintings,drawn in ochre and lime and made of natural pigments during different periods.There are plants,animals,human figures,including group scenes from battlefields and also of men riding on horses with weapons (bow and arrow,sword and shield) chasing the bulls.
Dakshina Murthy,a heritage art expert based in Delhi who happened to visit the place recently,said the rock panel in Porivarai was priceless.The drawings have a solid form,created from using white kaolin and red ochre.Some of the figures have three layers of depictions,indicating different periods or visits of artists to convey their visual expressions.The entire panel would have been filled with images over a long period showcasing the rich tradition of visual thinking, said Dakshina Murthy.
Although awareness drives,initiated by heritagelovers in and around Kotagiri,helped the locals understand the importance of the prehistoric rock art sites around them,many feel it is not enough.What you see in Porivarai is an insult to our civilization.Its high time the government stepped in to protect the site, said Dakshina Murthy.The original depictions can be restored.But,for this the government should first take over the site and provide it protection,said Gandhiraja


4500 ஆண்டுகளுக்கு முன்பே வீரத் தமிழன் விளையாட்டு!
அழிவின் பிடியில் கற்கால பாறை ஓவியங்கள்: 'கண் விழிக்குமா' தொல்லியல் துறை?

நீலகிரி கரிக்கையூர் பாறை ஓவியங்களின் சிறப்பு: கீழ் கோத்தகிரி அருகே கரிக்கையூர் பொறிவரை வனத்தில் உள்ள பாறை ஓவியங்கள், 300 அடி உயரமும், 500 அடி அகலமும் கொண்ட ஒரே பாறையில் வரையப்பட்டுள்ளன. இதில், 500க்கும் மேற்பட்ட பல்வேறு ஓவியங்கள் உள்ளன. இந்த பாறைக்கு அடியில் ஒரே நேரத்தில் 100 பேர் எளிதாக தங்கும் அளவுக்கு இட வசதி உள்ளது. இதனால், இப்பகுதியில் பழங்கால மனிதர்கள் அதிகளவில் தங்கியிருக்க வாய்ப் புள்ளதாக கருதப்படுகிறது. இதிலுள்ள மனித உருவங் கள் நடனமாடும் வகையிலும், போர்க் கருவிகளுடன் சண்டையிடும் காட்சிகளும், யானை மீது போர் கருவிகளுடன் அமர்ந்திருக்கும் காட்சிகளும், குதிரை, குரங்கு, காட்டு பன்றி, மாடு,எருது, ராட்சத பல்லி, மான், மீன் போன்ற உருவங்களும் காணப்படுகின்றன.
-Proud to be an Tamilan

Sunday, March 13, 2016

Tolkapiyar’s Literary Theory-Tamil

"Tolkappiyam at least in parts is the earliest work in Tamil. It is a book on phonology, grammar and poetics. Therefore it implies the prior existence of Tamil litrature..The most important aspect of this literature is the distinction between what is called akam and puram the exterier or the outer and the interior or the inner . I prefer to call them the poetry of the phenomenon and the poetry of the noumenon. The inner core of truth of human life is akam or Love. There is a rule that in akam poetry no names are to be mentioned... As against this, puram or the poetry of the phenomenon shows the experience of the varying individuals in this world, an experience which can be often dated as belonging to the historical persons...   Ultimately akam  and puram are as the inner palm of the hand and its back..."


 A. General Theory
Tolkappiyam at least in parts is the earlest work in Tamil. It is a book on phonology, grammar and poetics. Therefore it implies the prior existence of Tamil literature. There is a distinction made therein between literary language and colloquial or non-literary language - ceyyul and valakkul thus implying certain literary conventions not only in grammatical forms but also in literary form and subject matter. However, from the point of view of vocabulary, ordinary words, literary words, dialect words and foreign words may all come into the literary composition.Though Tolkappiyam, as stated may be earlier than the Cankam works, it seems to contemplate the same kind of literature.
Akam and Puram
The most important aspect of this literature is the distinction between what is called akam and puram the exterior or the outer and the interior or the inner. I prefer to call them the poetry of the phenomenon and the poetry of the noumenon. The inner core of truth of human life is akam or Love. There is a rule that in akam poetry no names are to be mentioned. Akam is therefore describing an ideal or perfect human being whether man of women but here the poetry is not describing any type. It represents the autobiography of the individual from the fundamental universal point of view.
But this gives its core of love which may be equated with a soul which is revealed through the varying personalities within the background necessarily of the multifarious aspects of Nature and History which after all form the various points of view or perspectives revealing the inner core. Each poem, as I have stated elsewhere, is "a chink in the wall of its individuality giving the glimpse of the whole universe. It is a beautiful dew drop reflecting the whole of  the heavens and the earth from the individual point of view, its coign of vantage. "
There are various implications of this ideal love tried to be explained in Nakkirar's commentary on Iraiyanar Akapporul. There were controversies on this as time went on, especially between the vedic scholars and the later day moralists on the one hand and the Tamil poets believing in the old theory of Love. The idealized love, it has to be said, made it easier for Tirumular to identify Love with God; "anpe sivam."  This led to the mystic poetry of the Nayanmars and Alvars singing in the old Akapporul style.
The phenomenon is there only as an exposition of the noumenon. It is only when love attains this ideal level that it becomes akam; for, other love stories remain only puram. As against this, puram or the poetry of the phenomenon shows the experience of the varying individuals in this world, an experience which can be often dated as belonging to the historical persons. This however is not to mean that this poetry is not universal; only it raises itself to that universal level by emphasizing the phenomenon.
Ultimately akam and puram are as the inner palm of the hand and its back. Akam poetry deals with this love from the point of view of pre-marital love or post-marital love kalavu and karpu. Puram deals with not only the various aspects of war then practised but also with the phenomenal victory of human life, with the greatness of men who come to be sung by poets and also with the evanescence of life inspiring man to do great acts and make himself eternal in the memory of men during the short span of his life.
Anthology
There is one thing peculiar about this poetry; the poems consist of dramatic monologues. Tolkappiyar enumerates certain illustrative con­texts in the various aspects of akam and puram poetry where the charac ter could speak and reveal a dramatic moment. Therefore there is in that age no narrative poetry or epic but only a series of dramatic mon­ologues. This is one of the important aspects of the literary theory of Tolkappiyam.
Dandin who came to live in Tamil Nad at the end of the seventh Century realized the importance of this literary theory about poetic anthologies and therefore spoke only of two kinds of poetry, the poetry of anthologies and the poetry of continuous narration or epic. As I have stated elsewhere,
"Many a gem of purest ray serene may be hidden in the sea of experience, and many are the hidden ways of the subtle artists, working on these valuable gems. Many like the epic poets are great in weaving beautiful patterns, immortalized in the pearl necklace of a queen or in the diamond diadem of a king - the varying disposi­tions of the many faceted gems satisfying the varying tastes and vanities of the rich. Some like the Cankam poets are great in carving out glis­tening and living forms of the Divine Dance [Ratna Sabhapati] or the Female Beauty, in each individual gem, infusing and vivifying the dead stone, with their life breath and mystical vision, making it, in short, the Absolute. How can this Absolute be reduced to the relative in a pattern? "
Anthological literature suggests in a unique way the group poetry as I have suggested elsewhere -
"Cankam poetry is unique as group poetry par excellence. It has a personality of its own representing the group mind and the group personality of the Cankam age. Taken as a whole, it satisfies all the requirements of great poetry, enumerated above. The folk songs and proverbs of an age, with their authors unknown, form a unity, as the very expression of the national personality and the language.
Cankam poetry, though too cultured to be called folk song, consciously creates this universal personality and that is why it has been classified as a separate group in Tamil literature - the really great national poetry, not in the sense of national popularity but in the sense of being the voice of the nation in its origin.    These remind us of the towering gopuram of Tanjore expressing the aspiring spiritual height of the Cola age, though it is not the handiwork of any one sculptor but the work of a group of artists, each giving expression in rock to a vision of his own. It is therefore necessary to realize the importance of this conception of Cankam literature as a Tokai or anthology or group poetry which lies at the very root of the theory of Cankam poetry."
Poetic Quintessence
What is called vanappu mentioned as the last of the organs of a literary composition in the list given by Tolkappiyar contemplates some narrative poetry or literature. But they are not as elaborately discussed as the contexts or dramatic moments of anthologies. There, amongst these vanappus, is tol which describes an old story. As contrasted with it is viruntu which describes a new story.
There is also the literature composed in the ordinary dialect of the common man. There is again the literature consisting of a commingling of verse and prose. The other kinds do not contemplate any continuous narrative. Vanappu comes at the end of the list almost either as a concession to a latter age where narrative poetry has developed or as a vague remembrance of a forgotten tradition of an earlier age. In any case the cryptic explanation given for these vanappus, vaguely suggesting narrative poetry against the elaboration of the dramatic moments of the anthologies, seems to suggest the prevailing poetic theory of the age related mainly to the anthologies rather than to narrative poems.
Another aspect of this literature is the attempt by the poet to capture the poetic quintessence of the dramatic moment in the form of living phrases and poetic metaphors and similes which become the life of the verse. These phrases are, as it were, the keys with which the inner treasure of poetry has to be locked. These therefore have become the names of such verses and often the immortal names of the poets themselves. Even when this idea is elaborated as a Netuntokai and Pattuppattu, the dramatic and poetic compression is not forgotten.
This necessitates a great and important place being given to sugges­tion. Apart from ordinary figures of speech mainly consisting of various kinds of metaphors and similes there is ullurai uvamam which is an implied metaphor. Here nature is described; and from that, one has to understand the implications: for instance, the buffalo treading on lotus and feeding on tiny flowers implies the extra marital relationship of the hero who leaves the heroine to suffer thereby. That age thought it was against the culture of the heroine and others to state this charge openly. There may be further implications within implications, thus giving rise to various strata of meaning, naturally to be understood only by the real critics or sahradayas.      Apart from the figures of speech, there were also other kinds of suggestions not only of the meaning but also of emotions and ideals. iraicci is a general name given to this suggestion. The whole theory of suggestion as conceived and developed by the Cankam poets, require a detailed research.
The emphasis Tolkappiyar lays on poetic sentiments or Rasa or what is called meyppatu should also be understood. He speaks of eight rasas, nakai or hasya, uvakai or hanpiness which is something more extensive than sringara; suffering or soka; vira or heroism physical. moral, intellectual and spiritual, ilivaral or jugupsa or a kind of shudder­ing at meanness; knodha or anger (bhaya or fear) and adbhuta or won­der.Tolkappiyar further elaborates the various emotions which play an important part in the various dramatic moments of Akam poetry. 
There is a separate chapter on this rasa or meyppatu in Tolkappiyar thus showing the importance of these poetic sentiments intended to be sug­gested by a description of the appropriate time and place of the story, which are in turn made alive by a graphic description of Nature includ­ing the plants and the animals on the one hand, and the human society on the other and finally by that story made clear through the behaviour and speeches of the hero and the heroine amidst their followers and relatives. The implications of this theory of meyppatu has also to be worked out in detail by further research.
Conventions
Naturally, for understanding such dramatic monologues, it is necessary to be familiar with the conventions of such poetry. For inter­preting such a verse, it is necessary, as emphasized by Tolkappiyar to know who the speaker is, to whom it is spoken, its dramatic context in akam or puram ; the time implied therein as a looking back or as a looking forward and the various strata of meaning and rich suggestion because such poetry believing as it does in compression should have recourse to an elaborate theory of suggestion and meyppatu or rasa or poetic sentiment.There is also the poetic convention about interpret­ing long drawn sentences, its peculiar linkages and ellipses.

B. Theory Implied in Versification
Enumeration of Organs
I may pass on to quote from my essay on the theory of poetry in Tolkappiyam, an organic theory of poetry where the sounds and the meanings together form one united whole. The ceyyul iyal or the chapter on literary composition in Tolkappiyam starts by enumerating the various constituents of a verse as its organs where we find enumerated both the aspects of form and matter, not only the poetic form but also the phonological and morphological form.
(1) The alphabetical sounds or phonemes (Eluttu);
(2) their duration (Mattirai);
(3) their knitting together into syllables (Acai) ;
(4) the various permutations and com­binations of these syllables as feet (cir) ;
(5) the varied integrations of these feet into lines (ati);
(6) the caesura - the coincidence with the metrical and grammatical pause (yappu) ; (7) the lexical tradition (ma­rapu);
(8) the basic poetic intonations or fundamental poetic tunes so to say (tnkku) ;
(9) the innumerable garland-like patterns of the metrical weldings such as assonance and rhyme (totai) ;
(10) the import or the purport of the verse, controlling and vivifying all these parts, so as to make them expressive of the self same purport (Nokku);
(11) the basic verse patterns as so many permanent and natural sound configurations of the idiom of the language (pa);
(12) the length or dimensions of the verses (alavu);
(13) [here comes subject matter] the harking back to the ideal behaviour patterns of an ennobling humanity (tinai);
(14) their varying main currents of activity (kaikol);
(15) the speaker (kurrul); whose expression is the poem;
(16) the person to whom the poem is spoken (ketpor);
(17) the place (kalam) and
(18) the time of the poem (kalam);
(l9) the resulting effect of purpose of the verse (payan);
(20) the sentiment or emotion bubbling forth therein;
(21) [here comes to poetic syntax] the elliptical construction or the yearning after completion of the sense, at every stage of its progress (eccam) ;
(22) the context mak­ing the meaning (munnam) ;
(23) the underlying universality (porul) ;
(24) the ford in the poetic current where the particularity enters into the flow of poetry or the particularity of the poetic aspect of the verse (turai);
(25) the great linkings or the retrospective and prospective constructions (mat­tu);
(26) the colour of the rhythm of the verse (vannam); and
(27) the eight-fold poetical facades (vanappu) or kinds of poetry of poetic com­position.
Their Significance
At first this may sound a confused conglomeration but a careful analysis and understanding will reveal the great organic theory of poetry as conceived by Tolkappiyar.
Some of the constituents of the verse, like the letters or phonemes, their duration, the syllables, the feet, the garland ­like weldings, the lines and intonations are elaborations of our phonetic experiences, whilst the resulting sound configurations, the rhythms, the dimensions, and the poetic tunes are prosodic elaborations of such an experience. All these hypnotize the reader, by their basic poetic music, and make him move and heave with the poem.
He stands enchanted and hypnotized believing in the subject matter and becoming one with it, carried away by the multitudinous concatenation of canorous sounds of varying durations, modified by breaths; frictions, trills, liquids, hard and soft explosions, enriched by oral and nasal resonances, and divided into happy collections of significant and natural syllabic pulsations, which by their flow, by their permutations and combinations form into various waves of feet, which in their turn move with the poetic mood, by their very force of movement fastening themselves into varying patterns of wreaths or eddies of differing directions and angles of assonance and rhyme; the multifarious dispositions of these lines, giving rise, on this poetic march to varied and variegated poetic tunes, resulting in basic configurations of different rhythms of many a hue and many a facade.
Here arises what Eliot has called the auditory imagination. The other organs of the verse like the meaning made clear by the context, the elaborate ramifications by allusions and suggestions glowing into life, by sweet remembrances as described at length by Prof. Richards, the lexical traditions of words and their significance, the elliptical construc­tion or the yearning for the predicate after every pause in the continuous flow of the sense making the whole a continuity, and the retrospective and prospective constructions as looking backward and forward to bring about a well known organized unity, are but ordinary grammatical themes. There are the various ways in which the reader's understanding of a poem and his usual grasp of the meaning are utilized for swaying his mind hither and thither, his mind, thereby heaving up with the crest of the poetic wave and ebbing away with its trough, and his hypnotized intellect, reasoning with the music and meaning of the poem, and there­by, becoming one with the theme.
The remaining constituents of the verse are its speaker, the persons addressed, the time and place, the effect, the sentiment, the generality, the particularity and the universality of the poem, the last head reminding us of Jung's "archetypes and the unconscious racial and individual mem­ories". These are all that one is accustomed to to consider under the head of meaning and subject matter. These form the poetic theme in its concrete and specific reality, vivified by its glowing emotion, appealing to every heart by its universality or archetype, becoming of momentous value, as the expression of a fundamental mode of intrinsically ennobling human behaviour; its value carrying with itself the imprimatur of per­sonal experience.         
The value of a work of art, as Read suggests, consists not merely in the progressive organization of impulses for freedom and fullness of life according to Richards, but also of the open recognition of amoral sanction which is, in the old phraseology, revealed to the artist. The eight-fold facades and the import of the parts are attempts at telescoping these various strata of poetry, viz. the sound, the music, the significance, its sweep and development, the emotion and the final experience. Everything, thus, appears to be of great importance in the final make up of the poetic personality of the verse, reflecting the personality of the poet.

-Proud to be an Tamilan 

Saturday, March 12, 2016

Silambam – 5000-years-old- Martial Art Form from Tamil Nadu-India


Silambam is s traditional martial art form from Tamil Nadu.Silambam is s traditional martial art form from Tamil Nadu.
Silambam or silambattam is a weapon-based Indian martial art from Tamil Nadu, but also traditionally practised by the Tamil community of Sri Lanka and Malaysia. The word silambam refers to the staff which is the main weapon used in this system. Masters are called asaan while grandmasters are addressed as periyasaan or iyan.
Legend:
Oral folklore traces silambam back several thousand years to the siddha (enlightened sage) Agastya. While on his way to Vellimalai, Agastya discussed Hindu philosophy with an old man he met, said to be the god Murugan in disguise. The old man taught him of kundalini yoga and how to focus prana through the body’s nadi (channels). Agastya practiced this method of meditation and eventually compiled three texts on palm leaves based on the god’s teachings. One of these texts was the Kampu Sutra (Staff Classic) which was said to record advanced fighting theories in verse. These poems and the art they described were allegedly passed on to other siddha and eventually formed the basis of both silambam and the southern style of kalaripayat.
History:
References to silambam in Silappadikkaram and other works of Sangam literature show that the art has been practiced as far back as the 2nd century BC. The bamboo staff – along with swords, pearls and armor – was in great demand with foreign traders, particularly those from Southeast Asia where silambam greatly influenced many fighting systems. The Indian community of the Malay Peninsula is known to have practiced silambam during the period of Melaka’s founding in the 14th century.
The soldiers of Kings Puli Thevar, Veerapandiya Kattabomman and Maruthu Pandiyar (1760–1799) relied mainly on their silambam prowess in their warfare against the British Army. Indian martial arts suffered a decline after the British colonists banned silambam along with various other systems. They also introduced modern western military training which favoured fire-arms over traditional weaponry. During this time, silambam became more common in Southeast Asia than its native India where it was banned by the British rulers. The ban was lifted after India achieved independence. Today, silambam is the most well-known and widely practiced Indian martial art in Malaysia where demonstrations are held for cultural shows.
Weapons:
Silambam's traditional weapon of choice is a bamboo staff.
Silambam’s traditional weapon of choice is a bamboo staff.
Silambam’s main focus is on the bamboo staff. The length of the staff depends on the height of the practitioner. Ideally it should just touch the forehead about three fingers from the head, typically measuring around 1.68 metres (five and a half feet). Different lengths may be used depending on the situation. For instance, the sedikuchi or 3-foot stick can be easily concealed. Separate practice is needed for staffs of different lengths. Listed below are some of the weapons used in silambam.
Silambam: staff, preferably made from bamboo, but sometimes also from teak or Indian rose chestnut wood. The staff is immersed in water and strengthened by beating it on the surface of still or running water. It is often tipped with metal rings to prevent the ends from being damaged.
Maru: a thrusting weapon made from deer horns
Aruval: sickle, often paired
Panthukol: staff with balls of fire or weighted chains on each end
Savuku: whip
Vaal: sword, generally curved
Kuttu katai: spiked knuckleduster
Katti: knife
Kuttuval: dagger
Kattari: native push-dagger with a H-shaped handle. Some are capable of piercing armor. The blade may be straight or wavy.
Surul pattai: flexible sword
Muchan / Sedikuchi: cudgel or short stick, often wielded as a pair.
Popularity:
Silambattam has become increasingly popular with tourists as they take up the art form, learning and mastering its intricate movements and techniques. Jyothis Senthil Kannan, a master of Silambattam, who has been teaching the art for over 10-years and also runs a martial arts school in the scenic town of Puducherry, says that Silambattam is attracting more and more students over the years as people come to know about it.
-Proud to be an Tamilan