Iravatham Mahadevan's Early Tamil Epigraphy - review by Indira Parthasarathy - 7
  • Mahadevan says that D-evas-ena, the author of Darsan-asara, a
    Prakriti work written in 853 A.D. has mentioned that Vajranandi, the
    pupil of P-ujyap-ada, founded the Dravida Sa.mgha in Madurai in 468-
    469 A.D. The Dravida Sa.mgha was so famous that it has been referred
    to in the Kannada inscriptions from Karnataka. Mahadevan's
    speculation that the legends relating to the three successive Tamil
    Sangams (literary academies) at Madurai are probably based on
    later recollection of the name. Dravida Sa.mgha deserves a further
    probe by Tamil scholars. That many of the outstanding authors like
    Tolk-appiyar, Tiruvalluvar, I.la.nko and Tirutthakkathevar were
    Jainas is also a significant point.

    The Sangam society as reflected in its poetry (ca. First-Third
    Centuries A.D.) was free from hierarchy of any kind, social or
    cultural. The poets, who wrote these poems, came from all sections of
    the society, princes, Brahmins, farmers, merchants, workers and
    women. This is no surprise. Mahadevan says that the Early and Late
    and Va.t.te.luttu inscriptions depicted a high literate society,
    literacy of very popular and democratic character. It was free from
    elitism. Literacy was widespread covering almost all the regions,
    urban and rural, as evidenced by the inscribed pottery obtained
    during the excavations and explorations. The number of such finds is
    much more than elsewhere in the country. The author states, "the
    pottery inscriptions are secular in character and the names occurring
    in them indicate that common people from all strata of Tamil society
    made these scratchings and scribblings on pottery owned by them;
    on the other hand, inscribed pottery excavated from Upper Sou!
    th Indian sites are all in Prakrit and mostly associated with
    religious centres like Amaravathi and Salihundam."

    How did this happen? The author has a very convincing reason for this
    that cannot be bettered. The mother tongue (Tamil) was the vehicle of
    social transaction between all sections of the people. Literacy can
    be "meaningful and creative", only if the society conducts its
    activity of any nature in its own mother tongue. The political
    independence of Tamil country was also one of the important factors
    for the popular literacy ratio in this region. The Upper South India
    was under the Nanda-Maurya domination and the administrative language
    was Prakrit, the language of the Northern rulers and the local ruling
    elite. The common people were alienated and they had no participatory
    role in the Government. Mahadevan's brilliant analysis of the
    situation is one of the crowning achievements of this book.



    Copying of cave inscriptions by the author and his team (1992). (go
    the website - mathy)


    Nothing has been written until now, on Tamil Epigraphy, so rewarding
    and communicating, as this book is. It is a comprehensive in-depth
    treatise, in which a multi-disciplinary learning of an awesome
    dimension is much in evidence. Mahadevan brings to bear upon this
    book, running to 719 pages, his rare insights, cool objectivity,
    immense patience, intense and rigorous scholarship, backed by a
    thorough knowledge of Sanskrit, Tamil and Prakrit.

    The book, jointly published by Cre-A, Chennai and the Sanskrit
    Department of Harvard University, U.S., (the first ever book Harvard
    has issued on Tamil Studies) would go a long way in establishing the
    historicity and antiquity of Tamil, in the context of the earliest
    inscriptions found in this ancient language.

    A.D.,

Howdy, Stranger!

It looks like you're new here. If you want to get involved, click one of these buttons!

Top Posters