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History |
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There is no
unanimity among historians about the history of ancient Kerala,
since so little written accounts exist. Much of the history is
cloaked in myths and conjectures. One such myth centres around
the legend of Parasurama, the warrior-sage who is regarded as
the incarnation of Vishnu . After destroying the Kshathriya
kings, goes the legend, the warrior-sage asked an assembly of
learned men a way of penance for his past misdeeds. |
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On being advised
to hand over the lands he had conquered to the Brahmins to save
his soul from eternal damnation, he readily agreed and sat in
penance at Gokarnam, those days considered to be land's end.
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There
having got boons from Varuna, the God of the Oceans and
Bhumidevi, the Goddess of earth, he proceeded to Kanya
Kumari (Cape Comorin) and threw his battle axe northwards
across the waters. The waters subsided and what was left
over was called the land of Parasurama, that is today's
Kerala.
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Fiction ?
Hardly so, since geologists have pointed out that the elevation
of Kerala from the sea was the result of some seismic activity,
either sudden or gradual. There is also another theory. The
rivers of Kerala emptying into the Arabian seas bring down
enormous quantities of silt from the hills. The ocean currents
transport quantities of sand towards the shore. The coastal
portions could well be due to the accumulation of this silt over
thousands of years. |
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Ancient Kerala
occupied a unique place in the commercial world. The teak found
in the ruins of Ur must certainly have come from the Malabar
Coast. This means trade flourished around 3000 BC. Cotton from
this region was a favourite in Egypt, the Phoenicians visited
the coast of Malabar around the same time to trade in ivory,
sandalwood and spices. King Solomon is said to have sent his
commercial fleet to Ophir which is said to be somewhere in
Southern Kerala. |
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Muziris (Kodungalloor
or Cranganore) was reputed to be the ancient world's greatest
trading centre in the East for such highly prized possessions as
pepper, cinnamon, cardamom, ginger and other spices. Pliny , the
younger is said to have lamented the fact that trade with the
East was draining the treasury of Rome ! The trade flourished by
ships riding on the monsoon winds from Africa and back to
Arabia, from where the overland caravan took the prized items to
the markets along the Mediterranean ports. |
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By common
consent among the historians, the earliest inhabitants of Kerala
were the Pulayas, Kuravas and Vetas . It is at a much later time
that migratory populations from the north subjugated them and
ultimately enslaved them, a state to which they were in till the
abolition of untouchability in the recent past. |
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By the
beginning of the Christian era, there was a noticeable increase
in the influence of the Chera dynasty of across the Western
Ghats and into the political and cultural life of ancient Kerala.
The armies of the northern empires of the Mauryas could not
enter the lands of the Cheras, but Buddhism and Jainism did
enter in a big way. But it was the entry of Brahmins from the
boundaries of modern day Karnataka which really changed the
power structure of Kerala for the next millenium . |
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