Kanchipuram,
the temple capital of India, and one of the seven most sacred cities considered
to be mukthisthalas – cities that can help one reach heaven – was the capital
of the Pallava kingdom for several centuries.
The city
is most likely named after the Kacci
or Kaanchi tree, Trewia nudiflora.
Poets
have merrily punned on the word Kanchi, (Sanskrit:
girdle), to imply that Kanchi is the beautiful girdle on the waist of Bhudevi.
Sources of history
The
political history of Kanchipuram can be gleaned from inscriptions on temples,
copperplates, and coins, which mention several dynasties, wars, land grants,
donations, judgments, and descriptions of administration, law, rituals,
finance, the arts, medicine and education. A number of literary sources in
several languages also help us discover Kanchi’s history. The religious
literature, especially the poems of the Vaishnavite Alwars and Saivite
Nayanmars, commentaries by Acharyas and other scholars,also are quite
informative. Literary sources in foreign languages, add to the trove. But as
typical of Indian history, most of it has been deduced and reconstructed; few
contemporary accounts remain.
Literature
The
earliest literary reference is in Mahabhashya, a commentary on Panini’s
Sanskrit grammar, wherein the city KanchipuraH is mentioned. Scholars estimate
that Patanjali composed MahabhashyaH in the 2nd century BC.
PerumpaaN
aaRRuppadai and Purananooru, an epic poem and an anthology of the Sangam era,
respectively, are Tamil sources that mention Kanchipuram. The former, composed
by Kadiyalur Uruthiran Kannanaar, has a poet – a paanan - advising another to
visit the city of Kanchipuram, famous for the generosity of its ruler
Tondaimaan, and detailed descriptions of the sights and villages on the way,
and paints a vivid picture of society two millenia ago. The latter includes a
poem by the lady Avvaiyar, advising Tondaimaan, with his armoury of shiny
weapons, to avoid war with the army of Athiyamaan, whose armoury reeks with old
rusted and blood stained weapons, gently but shrewdly describing the latter’s
expertise and experience.
The city
was contained in a fort, in the shape of a lotus or peacock, perhaps at
different times. No remnant of any fort or palace survives today.
A later
work, Manimekalai, describes the eponymous heroine entering the city in direr
times.
Literary
giants adorned the royal courts, temples, streets, schools and arenas of
Kanchipuram. One of first three Tamil Vaishnavite poets, muthal aazhvaars, was
born here and bears the name Poygai. Local legend claims that he was born in
the temple tank (poygai) of the Tiruvekkhaa temple, but perhaps he was born in
a village of that name, now merged into the city.
The poet
Bharavi, author of the Sanksrit Brhatkaavya, Kirataarjuniyam, visited
Kanchipuram, perhaps in the time of SimhaVishnu around the late sixth century
AD, and was so awestruck by its beauty and splendor that he immortalized the
city in a poem with the phrase Nagareshu
Kanchi.
SimhaVishnu’s
son, the most creative and unusual king Mahendra Varma Pallava, composed at
least two Sanskrit plays, Matta Vilasa and Bhagavad Ajjukam, which have
survived till date. They were perhaps lost but rediscovered in a collection in
Trivandrum in Kerala, around the beginning of the twentieth century. The Matta
Vilasa is performed at an annual temple ritual in Kerala.
Simha Vishnu Pallava, Adi Varaha cave, Mamallapuram |
Huen
Tsang, the Chinese pilgrim, visited Kanchipuram, most likely during the rule of
Mahendra’s son Narasimha Pallava. He records several thousand buddhist monks,
many monasteries, and a stupa built by Asoka Maurya, none of which are extant.
Dandin,
the great Sanskrit poet and author of two Sanskrit plays Dasa Kumara Charitam
and Avanti Sundari Katha, and a study of poetics, Kaavya Darsha, lived during
the reign of Parameshvara and his son Rajasimha. This last work inspired a
Tamil composition Dandi Alangaaram.
Nandi
Kalambagam, a magnificent Tamil anthology, has as its hero Nandivarma III,
called Tellarru Erindaan or victor of Tellaru. He is also refered to as
MallaiyarKon and Myali Kaavalan, Ruler of Mallai and Protector of Mylai.
The
Kalingathu Barani, an epic poem describing the Chola conquest of Kalinga, has
as its hero Karunakara Tondaiman, the Pallava general of Kulothunga Chola’s
army.
Kachiyappa
Sivachariyar, composed the Tamil Kanda Puranam, and inaugurated it in the
Kumara Kottam temple. Vedanta Desika (1268–1369) and Appaya Deekshita (1520 – 1593), were multilingual
scholars who spent several years of their lives in Kanchi. Lists of their composition are too extensive to be mentioned here.
Parimelazhagar,
a priest of the Ulagalanda Perumal temple, wrote a monumental commentary on the
Tirukkural.
Numerous
scholars have been left out of this section, for the sake of brevity.
Geography
About
seventy km from the eastern shores of the Coromandel Coast of the Bay of
Bengal, and today’s capital of Tamilnadu, Madras, lies ancient Kanchi. The
river Vegavathi flows through it, though sadly dry and dilapidated. The river
Paalaaru and Cheyaaru, run south of the city.
Dr
Nagaswamy opines and Dr Sankaranarayan concurs, that Ulagalanda Perumal,
mentioned as Ooragam in literature and inscription, must have been the heart of
the historic cities. Though of diminished importance now, it sits at the heart
of four streets still referred to as Raja Veethis or Royal roads, and most of
the oldest temples not only surround it, but also face it, in some manner. From
the position of some of these temples, relative to Ooragam, it can be inferred
that it was indeed the centre of the city.
In the
era of Kulothunga Chola, the city expanded southward, and the Varadaraja temple
gained both prominence and patronage, and became the locus of Vaishnavism.
Inscriptions
in Varadaraja temple mention four divisions, Siva Kanchi, Vishnu Kanchi, Buddha
Kanchi and Jaina Kanchi. The first two regions are extant. While no conclusive
evidence for Buddha Kanchi survives, Tiruparithikunram west of the city is most
likely Jaina Kanchi.
Political History
The
architecture of the temples in Kanchi amazingly reflect the various co-eval
dynasties that ruled Kanchi. This chart summarizes this commonality.
Kanchi
was capital of the Pallavas, and had its most glorious era during the period
between the regins of Simha Vishnu to Aparajita Pallava, roughly from mid fifth
to late ninth centuries AD. After the fall of this last Pallava, to Aditya
Chola, it remained an important political and military center well into the era
of the Chola’s successors, the Pandyas and their successors the Vijayanagar empire.
Few
remnants of its grandeur under the Pallavas survive today.
A site called
Pallavamedu, now occupied, may have archaeological remains. Samudragupta’s
Allahabad pillar describes his conquest of Kanchi and triumph over VishnuGopa
in the fourth century.
In the mid sixth century, Simha Vishnu established this
city as his capital by defeating the Cholas and Kalabhras. Chalukya Pulikeshi
conquered parts of the northern Pallava empire, and enthroned his brother
Vishnuvardhana as the first eastern Chalukya king in Vengi, during the reign of
Mahendra. But Pulikeshi’s seige of Kanchi failed. Mahendra’s son Narasimha,
invaded Vatapi, and ruled the Chalukya kingdom for some years, but then
returned to Kanchi. The Chalukyas invaded Kanchi multiple times after his
death, but serious devastation was avoided as Parameshvara Pallava tempted the
Chalukya army to chase him all the way to the Kaveri, then turned around and
conquered Vatapi.
The reign of Rajasimha (690-728), son of Parameshvara saw not
even an attempt at invasion, but the death of his issueless son Parameshvara II
caused turmoil. A descendant of a brother of SimhaVishnu, a young prince called
NandiVarma Pallavamalla was coronated. His long reign saw frequent battles, but
Kanchi stayed in Pallava hands under his 65 year monarchy, and those of his son
Dantivarma and grandson NandiVamra III, also called Tellarrerinda Nandi.
An
enormous remapping of the city happened under Kulotunga Chola as can be seen
from various inscriptions in various temples. His detailed inscription in
Ooragam states that his Pallava queen objected to a community of merchants
taking over the temple and its surroundings. Kulotunga conducted an inquiry.
The merchants stated that they had merely occupied abandoned buildings and
restored them, and were willing to hand over the temple and its lands to
rightful owners as determined by the king. The merchants then were settled
around the Varadaraja temple, which acquired a primacy in SriVaishnavism
thence, which was cemented with services of Ramanuja and his legacy.
Kulotunga
also allocated lands belonging to the Kailasanatha temple to the
Anekatangavadam temple, which were restored by Kumara Kampanna centuries later.
The city
was spared the ravages of Malik Kafur and Ulugh Khan, because it had was no
longer as big a political center under the Pandyas, but revived under the
Vijayanagara kingdom. Krishnadevaraya built the towering gopuram of the Ekamra
and Varadaraja temples, and the inscriptions of Achyutha Raya are also all over
the latter temple especially. Krishnadevaraya resolved an internecine feuds
between the Saivas and Vaishnavas. References to Siva and Vishnu Kanchi as Big
and Little Kanchi start appearing around this period.
Inscriptions
of various dynasties including Sambuvarayars, Telugu Cholas especially of
Vijaya GandaGopala, the Warangal Kakatiyas are found in Kanchi. It was an
important town for the Nawabs of Arcot role, who buit some mosques and
established the nearby towns of Walajahpet and Walajahbad. The French and
British armies skirmished, using temples as their fortresses.
Religion
Vaishnavism
Ayodhya
Mathura and Dwarka are Vaishnava mukti sthalas. Kashi Haradwar and Ujjain are
Saiva mukti sthalas. Kanchi alone makes both lists, in an ancient convention.
The
Alwars and Nayanmars, Tamil poets par excellence, are considered by historians
to have lived during the sixth to eighth centuries, and composed their famous
poems, which refer to fourteen Vishnu and five Siva temples in Kanchi. Ooragam,
Paadagam and Tiruvekhaa linked in a very beautiful poem by Tirumashizai Alwar,
may be the oldest temples in Kanchi, since the images of the primary deities in
their sanctums are made of stucco, rather than the granite or sandstone that
was common in the Pallava and later eras. They are today popularly known as
Ulagalanda Perumal, Pandava Thootha Perumal and Sonna Vannam Seytha Perumal.
Unfortunately, we have only such literary religious references to the period
preceding Rajasimha Pallava in Kanchi. Even these temples were rebuilt during
the Chola era, and bear only Chola or later inscriptions.
Fourteen
DivyaDesam temples, that is, shrines important to SriVaishnavites, because they
have been sung at length by the Alwars exist in Kanchi. Two of these, oddly,
may be found inside a Siva and Shaakta temple. Respectively, they are the
NilaTingaL Tundattu Perumal and Kalvar Perumal. The walls of Ooragam enclose
three other DivyaDesams, Neeragam, Kaaragam and Karvaanam, all perceptibly
recent structures with far later primary sculptures than Ulagalanda Perumal
himself.
The
others are Ashtabhujakara, Dipaprakasa at Thooppul, Pachia Vannar, Pavala
Vannar, Azhagiya Singar at Tiruvellukkai, Vaikunda Perumal and what is today
the largest temple, Varadaraja, referred to as Athiyur in the paasurams of the
Alwars. Several Vaishnava acharyas including Ramanuja, Tiru Kacci Nambi, and
Vedanta Desika have extensive connections with Kanchi, and especially the
Varadaraja Perumal temple.
Saivism
Five
temples, Ekamra, Merrali, Anekatankaavadam, Onam Kaanthan, and Kachi
Nerikaraikkaadu (now called Satyanatheshvara) are the பாடல் பெற்ற கோயில் paadal perra sthalas of
Saivism, sanctified by the songs of the Nayanmars.
Six
historical Siva temples of the Pallava era, Piravasthanam, Iravasthanam (also
called Mrtyunjeshvara), Airavathesvara, Matangeshvara, Mukteshvara and Amareshvara
retain some traces of their original structure. The first five are still
substantially sandstone, with few Chola or Vijayanagar modifications, but bear
some feature of modern attempts at restoration. Amareshvara, originally called
Tripurantakeshvara, is a brick structure, but its originally stucco koshtam
sculptures have been eradicated and replaced.
The
Jvarahareshvara and Chokkeeshvara (also called Kaushikeshvara) temples are
fascinating for their architecture and preserve their granite Chola features.
The
Kaayarohanam temple, attributed to the Lakulisa sect of ancient Saivism, one of
three surviving in Tamilnadu, has unfortunately been renovated with no trace of
its age.
The Kailasanatha temple built by Rajasimha, is the pinnacle of art and architecture in Kanchi, aptly described by its author the Ocean of Arts, Kalaasamudra as the Gem of Kanchi - Kanchi Mahamani
Shaaktam
The
Kamakshi or Kamakoti shrine, is at the heart of the city, and is referred to in
the poems of the Nayanmars and has historical inscriptions of various eras. It
serves as the only Ambal shrine for the major Siva temples.
Jainism
Tiruparithikundram
to the west of the city, nestling as a separate village, is considered the remnant
of Jaina Kanchi. It has an ancient Pallava temple dedicated to the tirthankara
Chandraprabha, mentioned also in the Pallankoil inscription of SimhaVarman. It
is now not in worship. It is a two storey structure,with the sanctum in the
upper floor.
The
larger but later Trailokyanatha temple is a temple complex, with sanctums for
several tirthankaras, of the Chola period, with later additions in the
Vijayanagar era. A significant feature is the Gajaprashta vimana for one shrine
and a tree with its own inscription. The sangeetha mandapa in front, with every
pillar and the entire celeing painted, was the contribution of a Vijayanagar
general Irugappa, who features in a small sculpture at the base of a pillar.
Beside the painted images of Mahavira, Vasupuja and Pushpadanta, there are
smaller shrines to Parshvanatha, and Dharmadevi or Padmavati Yakshi. This
temple also has an extensive collection of bronzes of several tirthankaras and
yakshis. It is taken care of a by a small family nearby, and the serves the
small community of Tamil Jains of
Digambara sect. This community is better known as the Nainars today.
Ceiling painting, Jain temple Tiruparithikunram |
Mutts
Adi
Sankara, the founder of Advaita doctrine, is said to have estabished a mutt
here, which continues today as the famous Kanchi Sankara Mutt.
Several
other mutts of various sects are also to located in Kanchipuram. The mutt of
Upanishad Brahmendra, now preserved as a memorial, is near the Anekatangavadam
temple.
One of
the leading lights of the Dravidian movement, which spearheaded Atheism and Rationalism,
CN Annadurai, who was Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu, was born in Kanchipuram.
His house is now a museum of his artifacts.
There is
also a Jumma Masjid near the Ekamresvara temple and mosque near the Vaikunta
Perumal temple. Several churches are also active in Kanchi.
Water
Water
management, intricately linked with managament of agricultural land, called kaani aatchi, in Tamil, was accorded
great importance in Kanchi, a somewhat dry area. The agricultural communities
of the present 2018, boast that they surpass the fertile Kaveri delta in farm
productivity, due to superior and more efficient practices. Ekambaresvara Padigam, a poem of the
twin poets Irattai Pulavar, one lame,
the other blind, illustrates this brilliantly with the following poem.
பாணியிற்
கங்கை நதி மலையினிற் கயிலைமலை பாரழகினிற் தண்டகம்
பழமொழியில்
ஔவை சொல் அரசரிற் சேரமான் பத்தியிற் சிறிய தொண்டன்
காணியிற்
தொண்டை புகழில் வேளாளர் புகழ் கான்முனையினிற் பகீரதன்
Among rivers Ganga, mountains Kailasa, beauty Dhandaka
Among proverbs Avvai, kings Cheraman, devotion SiRuTondan
In Land Management
Tondai, fame Vellalas, children Bhagirathan
The
Mamandur lake, mentioned in Mahendra’s inscription in a nearby cave temple as
Chitra Megha Tadaakam, still serves as a major reservoir for agriculture. A
similar huge lake near Uthiramerur is called Vaira Megha Tadaakam, also dating
from the Pallava era. Hundreds of ponds lakes and catchments dot the former
Pallava territory, though the city of Madras and industrial growth have drained
a significant portion. Glorious temple tanks still dot the city, but some are
often dry nowadays.
Modern
piped water and sewerage systems were laid in the nineteenth and twentieth
centuries following their advent in Madras city. A slab proclaiming Conjeevaram
Water Works in a building on the north street of the Mangala Theertham water
tank.
Kachapeshvara temple water tank |
Education
கல்வியைக் கரையிலாத காஞ்சிமாநகர் Kanchi, unbounded in its
learning, lauds Appar in his Tevaram, and indeed it was a center of great
learning for millenia. A ghatika for Vedic learning is mentioned in Kadamba
copper plate inscriptions from the fifth century, and in Vikramaditya the
Second’s inscription in Kailasanatha temple.
Art and sculpture, music and dance
flourished, as did medicine, commerce, and the textile industry. A number of
dancers’ names are listed in the inscriptions of the Mukteshvara temple.
Mahendra Varma and Rajasimha take pride in their knowledge of music and mention
it in their inscriptions. Inscriptions at the Tirumukkoodal temple describe
provisions for medicines and treatment.
The textile heritage of silks, and silk looms continue to this day, though the industry went through several transformations with the introduction of mechanized looms and imported textiles. Cultural performances by communities, in villages and towns in the geographical terrain of the Pallava domain, continue an unbroken tradition, whose origins are lost in time.
Note This document was created for the Tamil Heritage Trust 2018 Kanchipuram Site Seminar and for the preparatory lecture to serve as an Introduction to the history of Kanchi
Note March 9,2018 I had written wrongly, that Vedanta Desikar and Appayya Deekshitar were contemporaries. I have corrected this.
Note March 9,2018 I had written wrongly, that Vedanta Desikar and Appayya Deekshitar were contemporaries. I have corrected this.
Good one. I hope a multi volume book on the history of Kanchipuram. As a man whose ancestral village lies in Tondaimandalam, near SingaperumalKoil, I am keen to give Kanchi it's due place and prestige in the galaxy of world cities of bygone times
ReplyDeleteCould you please share the name of the book and it's author
DeleteGreat summary on 2000+ years of Kanchi, this would help me in preparing for this year site seminar. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteWhat a treasure if information about Kanchi ,right from ancient days,across beliefs of Saiva, Vaishnavas and across religion and even about athiests and life style then and now .Thanks for the wonderful blog post.All in a nutshell.
ReplyDelete
ReplyDeleteRVNATHAN17 January 2018 at 17:18
What a treasure of information about Kanchi ,right from ancient days,across beliefs of Saiva, Vaishnavas and across religion and even about athiests and life style then and now .Thanks for the wonderful blog post.All in a nutshell.
I like the valuable info you provide in your articles. I will bookmark your weblog and check again here frequently.
ReplyDeletehttp://chennaitotirupaticarrentals.com/kanchipuram-tour-packages.php
Amazing! I know nothing about traveling all over the country, what a wonderful looking place to explore.
ReplyDeleteI have enjoyed it from your blog and looking forward to see more from you.
ReplyDeleteThanks....!
Regards,
Making the Most of Your Kanchipuram Tour Package - Sribhavani Travels