karikalan kattivaithan kallanai
  • karikalan kattivaithan kallanai



    Tank irrigation in Tamilnadu


    An irrigation tank

    As per a 1996 – 97 estimate, there are 39,202 tanks in Tamilnadu. In
    the past, Chennai alone had about 150 tanks. In Tamilnadu, tank
    irrigation has not increased much since 1883, when 50 percent of the
    cropped area was under tank irrigation.

    Today, less than 10 percent of the land under crops is irrigated by
    tanks, built mostly by the Chola and Pandya kings.

    Inscriptions in temples tell us of the largesse provided by the kings
    for establishing drinking and irrigation water sources.

    The Grand Anaicut as it stands now

    Anicuts were small or medium dams built across rivers to divert water
    into irrigation channels.

    The Grand Anicut or Kallanai was built in the second century A.D. by
    Karikala Chola. It was made of stone and situated on the river
    Cauvery where the River Kollidam branches off.

    Anicuts have also been built across the Tambaraparani, Chittar and
    many others.

    The anicuts in the Kanyakumari district are said to have been built
    1000 years ago.

    The construction and maintenance was however done entirely by the
    people. The Rajasmighamangalam tank of Ramnad was built more than
    1000 years ago by the Raja of Ramnad.

    Waterbodies in Tamilnadu fall under three categories: lakes or yeris,
    tanks or kulams and ponds or kuttais.

    A yeri was a large earthenware tank dug out of the ground with the
    dug out mud making the side walls or bunds.
    A kulam was built with bricks (and occasionally granite) and was
    attached to a temple, giving it the name kovil kulam or temple tank.

    A kuttai was a small pond. In Tamilnadu there are a few tanks that
    irrigate more than 1000 ha and even one which serves 6000 ha. Uranis
    are natural springs. Rectangular tanks are constructed above them to
    collect the water coming out from the ground. A winding staircase is
    provided for people to go down and collect the water for their
    domestic use.


    The village community decided what crops to grow and where to grow
    them, how long the sluice gates of the yeris should be kept open, how
    much water should flow to each field and so on.

    Tanks can be classified into system and non-system tanks. System
    tanks receive plenty of water as they catch the overflow from a
    reservoir, nearby stream and the runoff from around their catchment.

    They help farmers to raise more than one crop. Non-system tanks
    depend entirely on rainfall and can support only one crop. The tanks
    used a system of canals and sluice gates to control and transport the
    water.

    Several tanks linked by canals were also built in the watershed
    areas. The surplus of water in the higher tank thus flowed into the
    lower one, following the natural slope of the land.



    source edited from



    http://cpreec.org/04_phamplets/19_traditional_water/traditional_water.
    html
  • Dear Bala

    Very Nice to Read ur message. One interseting information is that KALLANAI was the Oldest Civil Engineering Marvals of Human as per the Hydrology Wing of World BanK andThe Government of The Netherlands's Report.

    GS Krishnan.
  • Dear Bala,

    Interesting info about the irrigation system. But the
    link is not working.

    Unfortunately, Kallanai was not built by Karikalan.
    Sangam literatures mention that Karikal valavan built
    banks for kaveri on both sides. It is not present day
    kallanai. One research student of Delhi Jawaharlal
    Nehru University did his Ph.D on kallanai and proved
    that it is around 400 years old. Might have been built
    during late nayak or early british period.

    The earliest evidence of dams built by tamil people is
    by first empire pandyas. Lalgudi inscriptions talk
    about this.

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