07 Chapter 2
07 Chapter 2
07 Chapter 2
HISTORICAL BACKGROUND OF
THE KALLAR COMMUNITY
16
CHAPTER - II
Situated principally between 70 571 and 110 101 of north latitude and
between 770 301 and 790 851 of east longitude, Madurai lies entirely within the
tropics.1It extends from the Western Ghats in the west to the Bay of Bengal in the
east. On the north, it was bounded by the state of Pudukkottai and the districts of
perennial rivers and irrigational facilities, poor productivity of the soil etc., the life
people were divided in to numerous communities of whom the prominent were the
Mukkulathor and of the three the Kallar alone formed about 1/3 of the total
17
Many theories have been put forward with regard to the origin of the
overall view of the origin of the Mukkulathor, etymology and settlement of the
Kallars in general and the Piramalai Kallars in particular have been dealt with.
Mukkulathor4 is the common term to denote the cluster of three identical clans of
the Dravidian stock viz, Kallar, Maravar and Agamudaiyar. These three Tamil-
themselves Mukkulathor in recent times. These people were one of the earliest
settlers in southern peninsula. They are known for their valour, courage and
Tamilnadu. They claim to be the offspring of same parents. The origin of the
Mukkulathor is mythologically traced to Lord Indra, the General of the Holy forces
Indra and Rishi Gautama were, among others, rival suitors for Aghalia. Somehow
Rishi Gautama was the successful one. This so incensed Indra that he was
4. To exhibit the solidarity of the three clans was founded "All India Mukkulathor Sangam" on January
28th, 1934, under the Presidentship of Rajaram Pandiyan, the Sethupathy of Ramnad. Thence forth the
term Mukkulathor came into vogue.
P. Muthu Thevar , Muvendra Kula Thevar Samuga Varalaru, (Tamil) III ed.,R.K.K. & sons,
Thirumangalam, (Madurai) 1994, p. 309.
18
determined to win Aghalia at all hazards. By means of a cleverly devised ruse he
succeeded and Aghalia bore him three sons, who respectively took the names
Kalla, Marava and Ahamudya. The three castes have the agnomen Theva or God,
advantage of his absence, debauched his wife and three children were born. When
the Rishi returned, one of the three hid himself behind a door, and as he thus acted
like a thief, he was henceforth called Kallan. Another climbed on a tree and was
therefore called Maravan from maram, a tree whilst the third brazened it out and
stood his ground, thus earning for himself the name of Ahamudaiyan, or the
sons later went with their mother to meet their father Indra in order to obtain a
position for themselves. Since it was impossible to get them a share in the
heavenly institutions, Indra created village occupations for them so that they could
5. F.S. Mullaly, Notes on Criminal Classes of the Madras Presidency, Govt. Press, Madras, 1892, p. 85.
6. Edgar Thurston, Castes and Tribes of Southern India, Vol III, Asian Educational Services, New Delhi,
1987, p. 63.
7 . Louis Dumont, A South Indian Sub-Caste: Social Organisation and Religion of the Piramalai Kallar,
Oxford University Press, New York, 1986,p. 12.
19
dispense with justice and recover lost objects. He distributed them geographically -
the Kallar to the north, the Maravar in the centre and the Agambadiyar to the
south.
Ganapathy suspects,8 it might have been from the orthodox elite with a fertile
brain of invention to maintain their superiority over the native tribes by branding
their origin from Indra, the 'Warrior God', and hence they style themselves Indra
Kulathavar (People of the clan of Indra) and adorn their names with the common
agnomen Thevar (sons of God). There is a very close connection among the three
clans in their appearance, customs, manners, traditions and war like qualities.
According to tradition, these people formed the important and strategic sections of
the armies of the Tamil Kings and Chiefs in olden days when fighting was even
But at present all the three have taken up farming. In spite of the alleged common
8. A. Ganapathy, History of the Kallars of Melur Region, Unpublished Ph.D. Thesis, Madurai Kamaraj
University, Madurai, 1987, p. 33.
9. A. Ramaswami, Gazetteer of India, Ramanathapuram District, Govt. of Tamil Nadu, 1972, pp. 137 -
138.
20
ancestry, these three classes in early times formed themselves in to distinct castes
and inter-marriage between the Kallars and the other two was not allowed.
However this trend has changed to a great extent in the twentieth century mainly
nut shell.
The Maravars
districts and the Arantangi taluk of the present Pudukkottai district at the beginning
of the eighteenth century. The Ramnad district, then known as the Marava country,
was the place where the Maravas originally settled and from there they had
migrated to Tirunelveli country of the Nayak kingdom of Madura. The head of the
Maravas was the Sethupathi or the Raja of Ramnad.10 According to the traditional
stories the Maravas of the Ramnad region helped Sri Rama in his war against the
demon Ravana and as a token of gratitude for their services, Rama gratefully
exclaimed in Tamil Maraven (I will never forget) and that they have ever since
been called Maravans and thenceforth they were hailed as Deva or Theva meaning
gods.11
10. S. Kadhirvel, A History of the Maravas, Madurai Publishing House, Madurai, 1977, pp 6-7.
11. Ibid.,p. 6.
21
With more probability, the name may be connected with the word
maram which means killing, ferocity, bravery and the like as pointing to their
unpleasant profession of robbing and slaying their neighbours. Being noted for
their military prowess, they assisted the Pandyas and the Nayaks and were a
service to the chiefs or were rendering police duties.13 To this class belonged most
of the poligars or feudal chieftains like the Marudu brothers. They did not evince
people whose solemn duty was to protect others and not to till or toil.14
caste which is numerous and influential, as a man of superior physique and bold
independent spirit, thief and robber, village policeman and detective combined is
Agamudaiyars
districts. Since their profession is agriculture, they are found in most of the
12. B.K. Roy Burman, K.K. Misra, Buddhadeb Choudhuri and Subhadra , ed., Encyclopaedia of Indian
Tribes and Castes, Vol. XIV, Cosmo Publications, New Delhi, 2004, p. 4340.
13. S. Kadhirvel, Op. cit., p. 13.
14. Ibid.
15. Roy Burman, et al., Op. cit., Vol. XIV, p. 4342.
22
districts of Tamilnadu such as Chingelput, North Arcot, Salem, Coimbatore and
Trichirappalli. They are much less in number than they were some thirty years ago
may be due to the fact that they have risen in the social hierarchy and have
identified themselves as Vellalas. But in Thanjavur, the number has nearly doubled
due to the assumption of the name by the Maravans and Kallans. In their manners
This fact has been corroborated by Dumont when he says that from
Vellalan than to a Kallan.17 Of the three clans, the Agamudaiyars alone are said to
have been greatly influenced by contact with Brahmanism. They engage Brahmin
priests and perform their birth, marriage and death ceremonies like the Vellalas.18
many of them even call themselves Pillai, Adhigari and Mudaliar.19 Agamudaiyars
are not so ferocious and martial as the Maravars or Kallars. Because of their
economic prosperity, they have adopted a more respectable attitude to life. They
23
Kallars
as a dark race of small stature and of many distinctive peculiarities pointing them
out as having sprung from an aboriginal tribe.21 Here it would be more appropriate
to take into account the view of B.S. Guha regarding the term aborigines. He feels
that the term aboriginal population of India is not usually applied to the tribal
population of India, not in any derogatory sense but to indicate their being the
The Kallars are known for the retention of their customs and
historians alike. According to Nelson, the Kallars are in many respects the most
remarkable of all the castes in the Madurai district and have played an important
part in history.23 The Kallars are numerically large and form the primary unit in
1971 shows that the population of the Kallars was 9.75 lakh, the Maravars and the
24
Agamudaiyars were 8.31 lakh and 6.70 lakh respectively.24 In view of their
economic factors. Because of the inflow of the river Cauvery, the districts of
Thanjavur and Trichirappalli are blessed with fertile soil and copious water. Hence
the Kallars of these wet land areas have mostly taken to agriculture and a settled
living whereas the Kallars of Madurai district where large portions of land remain
dry, have continued to remain with their primitive agriculture, subsistence living
The following table shows the district wise distribution of the Kallars
in Tamil Nadu.
24. Backward Class Commission, Tamil Nadu Pirpattor Nalakkuzhu Arikkai, Part II, Govt. of Tamil Nadu,
1974. p. 5.
25. K. Bose, Forward Bloc, Tamil Nadu Academy of Political Science, Madras, 1988, p. 54.
25
District Number of People Percentage
Trichirappalli
community constitutes nearly 12% and the Kallar community, about 10% of the
total population.26
H.A. Stuart is of strong opinion that the Kallars must have been one
of the first of the Dravidian tribes that penetrated into the southern peninsula, thus
were the oldest among the South Indian tribes. Hence the origin of this ancient
tribe poses to be a baffling question to the historians. Many theories have been
26. P.K. Nambiar, Census of India, 1961, District Census Hand Book, Madurai, Vol. IX, Govt. of Madras,
1966, p. 19.
26
advanced by learned historians, identifying them with so many tribes/clans. The
1. Naga theory
descendants of Eyinar or Vedar, the most lawless branch of the Naga tribe who
were a primitive people of the early Tamil land. His theory rests on the basis of the
commonality of their profession viz. cattle lifting, pillaging and murder and also of
their worship of the dreaded goddess Kali with animal sacrifices, to secure her
favour in their plundering raids and justifies that their descendants are now known
by the appropriate title of Kallars or thieves. He tries to adduce that one Dhirataran
Murti Eyinar, the great chief of Viramangalam, referred to in the Plates of Jatila
Varman, a Pandya King of the 12th century A.D., appears to have belonged to this
tribe.27
2. Kurumba theory
with the Kurumbas, the martial clan of Tondaimandalam, who were the very old
27. V. Kanagasabhai, The Tamils 1800 Years Ago, rpt., Asian Educational Services, New Delhi, 1979,
p. 43.
27
inhabitants of Tamilaham. He firmly believes that on the capture of
regarded as the very old inhabitants of this land who could contest with their
Dravidian kinsmen the priority of the occupation of the Indian soil. His view has
been ratified by one S. Radha Krishna Iyer who opines that the earliest settlers in
the Pudukkottai region must have been Kurumbars, the modern representatives of
the ancient Pallavas who were once so powerful in Southern India. They were
found in Tondaimandalam, the land of the Pallavas, in large numbers and must
have drifted to these parts from that tract or directly come over here from the
Canarese country through the Palani Hills.29 Moreover the relics of the Pallava
rule, found in Pudukkottai region which could be assigned to the 8th century A.D.,
has made Rev. Taylor surmise that the Kurumbars might have settled in the
Pudukkottai region in the earliest centuries of the Christian era, after driving out
28. Gustav Oppert , On the Original Inhabitants of Bharatvarsha or India, Oriental Publishers, Indian rpt.,
Delhi, 1972, pp. 257-258.
29. S. Radha Krishna Iyer, A General History of the Pudukkottai State, Brihadamba State Press,
Pudukkottai, 1916, p. 43.
30. William Taylor, Catalogue of Oriental Manuscripts in the Tamil Language, trans., Vol. III, Madras,
1857-62, p. 409.
28
Hence it is proved beyond doubt that the Kurumbars were the very
and the worship of the Kurumba goddess Viralakshmi by the Kallars of the
Pudukkottai district.31
person. No wonder the Kallars who would have proved wicked to their neighbours
might have been referred to as Kurumbans. Regarding the worship of the goddess
of the Kurumbas, it would not have been a matter at all to the Kallars, since they
Pallava theory
29
inclines to the view that the Kallars had a regal status in northern Tondaimandalam
from ancient times and were reduced to the status of feudatories when the Pallavas
conquered their territory. To him the similarity of the Pallava titles and those of
certain modern Kallar clans especially of the Kallars of Thanjavur district such as
link between the two.32 A. Somasundaram supplements it by his claim that on the
fall of the Pallava dynasty, their descendants lost their occupation as soldiers and
took to other occupations. While the fortunate settlers of the fertile areas took to
farming, their unfortunate brethrens who settled in dry and infertile areas took to
Pallavas were a tribe, class or caste which was formed in the Northern part of the
existing Madras Presidency possibly in the Vengi country between the Krishna and
the Godavari. The persistent hostility of the Pallavas to the territorial Tamil states
and the fact that tradition does not assign any territorial limits to the Pallava
dominion are clear indications that the Pallavas were distinct in race from the
Tamils. According to constant tradition their rule was super-imposed upon that of
32. N.M. Venkatasamy Nattar, Kallar Charithram (Tamil), Nadukkaveri, Tiruchirappalli, 1923, pp. 20-42.
33. A. Soma Sundaram, Kallarum, Kallar Abhiviruthiyum (Tamil), Vittuvan A. Shanmuga Sundaram,
Thanjavur, 1956, pp. 8-9.
30
the Rajas of the Pandya, Chola and Chera countries, which covered the whole area
of the South. In the subsequent lines, the point Smith tries to drive home is that
the Pallavas were a mixed race of many predatory clans who governed and welded
them together into an aggressive force.34 Thus the Pallava race must have been
cosmopolitan in character just like the Rajput race which included all those who
had war as their profession i.e., the Kshatriyas. This hypothesis is testified by the
view of Sir Walter Elliot who feels that the Kallars, a predatory clan, with their
bold, indomitable and martial habits resembled more the ancient Pallavas in their
characteristics.35 Perhaps that could have been the reason for the cultural and
religious semblance between the Kallars and the other predatory clans such as the
Nagas, the Kurumbas, the Kalabhras etc. The Raja of Pudukkottai, a tributary
principality, who was the recognised head of the Kallars styled himself Raja
Pallava (Tondaman), claiming descent from the ancient royal family.36 Gradually
the Pallava power declined and the later Pallava Chiefs sank into the position of
mere feudatory nobles and officials in the service of the territorial kingdoms. By
the close of the 17th century, all traces of the Pallavas as a distinct race disappeared
and their blood is now merged in that of the Kallars, Palli, Vellalar castes.37
34. V.A. Smith, The Early History of India, IV ed., Oxford University Press, London, 1967, p. 466.
35. V.A. Smith, Op. cit., p. 492.
36. Ibid., p. 493.
37. Ibid.
31
The last sentiment partakes of the nature of an ex cathedra utterance
and Smith nowhere elucidates how he has arrived at that positive conclusion.
Regarding the foregoing, only two remarks seem necessary. Firstly the mere fact
that there had been persistent hostility between the Pallavas and the Tamil
Kingdoms need not necessarily connote different racial origins where there is no
other testimony on the point. Secondly it has not been shown of the Pudukkottai
Raja claiming lineal or racial descent from the Pallavas. But it would appear that
the name Pallava must have had its origin still further south than imagined by
Smith and implied a ruling dynasty and not a mere tribe or clan. It is difficult to
assert if the Vellalar or Kallar in South India claim any relationship with the
Pallavas.38
Chola theory
Kallars are the descendants of the Cholas and hold that the Agambadiyars, Kallars
and Maravars who form the Mukkulathor jati-cluster, are the descendants of the
early Tamil Regal Trinity the Chera, Chola and Pandya respectively. But they
38. Indian Antiquarry, Vol. III ,The Journal of Oriental Research ,The Educational Societys press,
Bombay, 1923, p. 80.
39. C. Sivanandi Servai , Muvendra Kula Charithai (Tamil), Muvendra Kula Publishing House, Madurai,
1940, p. 31.
40. P. Muthu Thevar, Op. cit., pp. 104 - 106.
32
have failed to substantiate their claims with solid evidences and thereby making it
appear as a tall claim. However there is a possibility for the inference that it is the
Cholas who have been misnamed Kallar. It is pertinent and necessary to bring to
light that the foreign historians like William Taylor in Vol. I & II of Oriental
Survey of Southern India have misspelt the word Chola and the word Cholan
the Chola kings, Kalvar Koman after whom the name Kalla in modified form must
have arisen. Further the General History of Pudukkottai State also adds strength
to the aforesaid hypothesis. It states that the Raja of Pudukkottai was the head of
the great Kalla and robber caste of South India, mentioned in the edicts of Asoka.
Confirmatory of the fact is the detail given in the same history of eleven more
tribes that settled there along with Tondaman whose cognomens, with very many
others, are in common use with this community, Tondaman being not a title or
rank but a family name, borne by many ryots of the Tondaman Stock.41
Kalabhra theory
This theory has been analysed by many historians who speak for and
33
M. Rajamanickam42 and Paramasivanantam43 trace the Kallar descent from the
Kalappirar (Kalabhras) who came from beyond the northern frontiers and ruled
the Tamil land for about three centuries, from the middle of the third century to the
end of the sixth century A.D. Thus they attribute non-Tamil identity to the
Kalappirar. But R. Gopalan, despite his positive note on the Kallar Kalabhra
descent, considers them as a set of Tamil speaking people living on the frontier of
Sanskrit and later Kallar in Tamil.44 Mayilai Sreeni Venkatasamy disagrees with
the view that Kallar and Kalappirars were one and the same. He identifies the
Tamil scholar, agrees with the first part but holds that Kalappirar were Tamil
42. M. Rajamanickam, Pallavar Varalaru (Tamil), Then Indiya Saiva Siddhanta Nur Padhippuk
Kazhagam, Tirunelveli, 1944, pp. 37, 43.
43. Paramasivanantam , Tamizhkkalai Varalaru (Tamil), Tamizhkkalai Padhippakam, Chennai, 1972,
p. 178.
44. R. Gopalan, Pallavas of Kanchi, Madras University, Madras, 1928, p. 28.
45. A. Ganapathy, Op. cit., p. 38.
46. Ibid.
34
S. Krishnaswamy Iyengar also subscribes to this theory and states
emphatically that the Kalabhras were none but the Kallars of old Tamil poetry. He
holds the view that the Kalvar or Kalavar flowed to the South under the Pallava
converted into a Pallava territory, reached south Arcot and Tanjore and there
the anarchy, following the decline of the Cola State (Chola), they established
themselves in the frontier region between the Cola and Pandya Kingdoms
He also tries to substantiate his theory by adding that the word Kallar is the
synonym of the term Kalvar. Kalvar was usually written in ancient manuscripts
without the dot on the head of l became Kalavar which turned into Kalabar,
this subject. Since in Sanskrit the word Steya denotes 'Kalvar', the need to
Sanskritize the word is rendered unnecessary. He has also arrived at the conclusion
that the place of the origin of the Kalabhras was not Venkatam and they have not
35
Though Nadana Kasinathan has identified Kalpappunadu, the
Kalabhras, he identifies the Kalabhras with Kalvar in the strength of the inscription
intricate one, worth dining into by a researcher who could focus attention on this
aspect alone.
to be called so. Different interpretations of the derivation and meaning of the word
Comale, a Tamil writer, opines that the word Kal means to collect
secretly. Since the Kallars had originally served the Tamil Kings as spies and
collected information secretly, they might have been called so.51 This view is
36
and spies, the Kallars formed an important section of the armies of the Tamil
Kings and collected information about enemies secretly for their masters.52
or agricultural area and were called Kalamar meaning agriculturists which might
have got corrupted into Kallar subsequently.53 But Sivanandi Servai slightly
differs. To him, the word Kalamar is the derivation from the word Kalam meaning
N.M. Venkatasamy Nattar feels that the Tamil word Kallan means
a dark person and also an enemy who seizes others property. In view of their dark
colour and hostile nature, the Aryans must have used the word Kallan to the
ancient Tamilians.55
acceptable to some others who equate the word Kallan to thief. B.S. Baliga says
the name Kallan literally means a thief and there is ample evidence to show that
37
N. Subramanian is of strong opinion that the Kallars were never
soldiers of an organised army. According to him the word Kallars literally means
robbers since they lived by banditry, under the pretext of their 'more hilly and less
fertile' lands.57 Gustav Oppert also expresses the same view. He strongly believes
that as the Kallars made themselves obnoxious by their theft and robberies, the
term Kallan (thief) was applied and stuck to them as a tribal appellation.58
M.A. Ghani also states that in view of their thieving habits, the
his Madura District Manual wherein he says that they having been after fearful
from southern parts from whom sprang a large community struggling for
independence and imbued with a bold independent spirit which they never failed to
evince.60
57. N. Subramanian, Sangam Polity : The Administration and Social Life of the Sangam Tamils, Asia
Publishing House, Bombay, 1966, p. 143.
58. Gustav Oppert , Op. cit., p. 257.
59. Muhammad Abdul Ghani, Notes on the Criminal Tribes of the Madras Presidency, Thompson & Co.,
Madras, 1915, p. 74.
60. J.H. Nelson, Op. cit., p. 44.
38
Sir Athelstane Baines feels that though it is probable that the
original meaning of the name Kallan was different, in view of the absence of any
between the words Kalvar and Kallar. The word Kalvar definitely means thief as it
is derived from the root word Kal meaning theft or robbery. But the word Kallar is
Kalathavar etc. which denotes one who is closely attached to the field. In the
Sangam age, under the Tamil Regal Trinity, there were many feudatories. One
among them was Pulli of Venkatam, a feudatory of the Chola. He was a bounteous
patron and was the chief of the Kallar clan. Apart from him, there were many other
chieftains and Zamindars among the Kallars. The Raja of Pudukkottai was a Kallar
chieftain of a later date. Such was the decency and decorum and hence the name
bring home how a community came to be named that way neither dignifying nor
61. Sir Athelstane Baines, ed., Ethnography (Castes and Tribes), Indian rpt., Concept Publication, Delhi,
1976,p. 47.
62. A. Ganapathy, Op. cit., p. 31.
39
tho;e;jhd;
relishing and susceptible of a debasing interpretation. The saying that tho;
nfl;lhy; tiu Nahl;Lf; fhfhd; is familiar to all meaning that a mud pot
worshipped and respectably carried on the priests head and used for divine
adulations is cast away as refuse when broken, implies all the heart rending
degradations, a subject class will be put to. It is to be borne in mind that what goes
by the name of diplomacy among fighting Rajas and Kings will be summarily
Likewise, a community once served the Kings and Emperors as vanguards, risking
their lives came to be denounced as thieves, robbers, dacoits, culler, colleries etc.
nature of the duty of the different sections of the army. It is believed that the army
of the Pallava was divided into three sections kalla padei or a corps for
reconnaissance and harassment; the mara padei, the main body i.e., field soldiers
and the aga padei, the guard or garrison force. This arrangement was borrowed by
the Tamil Regal Trinity.63 In ancient India, when the chief wealth, even of the
kings consisted in the number of herds of cattle, many of the battles were fought
for the sake of cattle wealth. Thus cattle were synonymous with wealth in Vedic
society. In Rig Veda, the character of Indra has been depicted as that of an
unscrupulous war leader of the pastoral people, an ideal king of later times,
40
plundering one district after another for the sake of cattle wealth.64 Consequently
cattle-lifting was celebrated as one of the popular themes of the early Tamil
popular that it was elevated to the level of science by grammarians who had
framed the modus operandi. From that it could be gleaned that the King sent his
vanguards to capture the cattle of his enemy before starting a major war.65 In
Purapporul Venbamalai, the process has been described vividly. While engaging
in cattle raids the raiders used to wear garland of vetchi flowers (Ixora Coccinia)
and so cattle raid was called Vetchippadalam. The rescue operation involved
attempts to recover or recapture the lost cattle and repel the raiders. Since the
Akananuru also contain many references of such cattle raids.67 From Akananuru it
is evident that lifting of cattle took place in the early hours of morning and the
64. N.N. Bhattacharya, Ancient Indian Rituals and Their Social Contents, Publishers not traceable, Delhi,
1975, p. 28.
65 . Tolkappiam Purattinai, 2.
66. Purapporul Venbamalai Stanza 6.
67. Purananuru: 257 265; 269, 270, 279 etc.
Akananuru: 97, 105, 309, 338, 372, etc.
41
Thus cattle-raid was employed as a conventionalised signal for
warfare and for that purpose, a section of the Maravars i.e., the warrior class who
were known for maram meaning valour and agility were deployed. Since they had
to execute their operation stealthily, in all probability, they might have been
branded as kalla padei, originating from the root word kal meaning to collect
secretly. Later on with the fall of the kingdoms this community lost its occupation
as soldiers. And they fell into evil days. These victims of the situation had the
N.M.Venkatasamy Nattar is pretty right when he asserts the fact emphatically that
if the term Kallar is a derogatory one, no community on earth would have come
It will thus be seen that the word Kallar far from signifying felon,
will mean a class whose ways are inscrutable, the how and the wherefore whereof
will become unintelligible. Since the term, when shorn of its venom, becomes
dignifying and honorific so much so, that one of the Chola kings was called Kalvar
42
te;J nts;shsd; MdhN
MdhNd meaning a Kallan may come to be a Maravan. By
degrees become a Vellala, from which he may rise to be a Mudaliar68 has been
affluent caste.
who had never been inferior in status to the other two, the metamorphoses might
have been misinterpreted by the foreigners. With proper knowledge about the
(Kavalkarar) during times of peace and settlement, slowly and surely became a
were not the natives of Madurai district but only settlers who came from the north.
Tondaimandalam must have been the original abode of the Kallars, and from there
43
they were brought down to the south by one Pandya king called Kalavar
Perumakan Tennan during the Sangam Age i.e., by the second century A.D.69
Francis tries to establish that the Chola country or Tanjore was their
original abode and from there they migrated to the Pandya Kingdom following its
of census 1901) that a Cola (Chola) princess brought the reconnaissance section or
Kalla padei as dowry for her marriage with a Pandya. More modestly it is said that
the Kallars have spread out from the east to the west from Tanjore towards
Madurai and this could have been due to a victory of the Colas over the Pandyas.72
Pandyas, the sons of Abhirami, the dancing girl of Kalayar Kovil, brought a few
Kallars from the Chola country to operate against the Government. From then on
44
Turnbull gives out yet another account of the Kallar settlement in
Madurai. To him, the original abode of the Kallars was Vellanadu (Valanadu) near
Kancheepuram. On a hunting expedition, they came down to the south with a pack
of hounds. They were astounded at the fighting spirit displayed by a peacock and
took it as a clue for a fortunate land and settled in that place which they thought
was ideal for valiant hunters and served the Vellalas who were the Lords of the
soil. In due course, they grew mighty and gradually encroached on the prerogatives
of their masters and ousted them and also setup their own independent rule over
the newly acquired territory by the singular appellation of Tun Arasu Nadu i.e., a
Madurai district, Francis and Nelson put forth two different views. According to
Nagamalai and drove out the Vedars from there and settled. This section only
came to be known as Piramalai Kallars.75 But Nelson inclines to the view that
about the year 1640, the Madurai king Tirumalai Nayak appointed certain Kallars
of Melur as Kavalkarars and granted them the right to collect kaval fees from
74. T. Turnbull, "Account of Cullaries," Prefaced to B.S. Ward, Memoir of Madura and Dindigul, Vol. III,
Madurai Collectorate, 1895, p. 6.
75. W. Francis, Madras District Gazetteer, Madurai, Govt. Press, 1906, pp. 93-94.
45
Tirumbur area near Madurai in consideration of their protecting it from robbery
and deeds of violence. Relying up on this grant, the recipients encroached in to the
district step by step until at last they and their descendants penetrated as far as the
village of Anaiyur and firmly established there. With the passage of time, they
grew isolated from the parent stock and were distinguished as Anaiyur or Mel
nadu Kallars.76
Kanchipuram up to the south western region of Pudukkottai state and settled in and
around Ponnamaravathi area. From there the second stage of expansion took place,
one in the direction of Melur region and the other of Tanjore. From Melur further
expansion took place westward and it was the settlement of the Piramalai Kallars
on the western side of the city, Madurai. He also tries to substantiate it through the
relationship between the Melur Kallars and Anaiyur Kallars. The Piramalai Kallars
alias Anaiyur Kallars even today regard the Melur Kallars as their elders and give
46
section of the Kallars from the north came down to the south and settled in
Madurai district.
among the Kallars. But no special significance can be attached to these names
except for the regions they live in. The following are the most important among
them.
The Kallars who live in the Thanjavur region are called Esa Nattu
Kallars. These people, blessed with fertile delta lands with copious water, have
thrived well economically. Also with their contacts with the Brahmins who lived
in large numbers in this region earlier, their outlook has undergone a drastic
change. They have become more conformists and refined and this has made them
look with scorn their Madurai brethren who are still unrefined and coarse in their
outlook.78 The Esa Nattu Kallars customs, rites and rituals have a Brahmanical or
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Seruvasal Kallars
Therkattiyar
Kallars. They have many things in common with their brethren Esa Nattu Kallars.
Ambalakara Kallars
Piramalai Kallars
Thirumangalam taluks of Madurai district. Thus in Madurai alone the Kallars are
generally use the agnomen Ambalam and sometimes use the agnomens Servai and
Thevar also.
48
(ii) Mel Nadu Kallars or western country Kallars
records they are referred to as Anaiyur Kallars which place was the strong hold of
the Piramalai Kallars during the early years of their settlement.79 Invariably the
Madurai as the dividing line. Those Kallars who lived in the east of the Naga hills
were denominated the Kil nadu Kallars and those who lived in the west of the hills
Mel nadu Kallars or Piramalai Kallars. Earlier members of these divisions did not
This hill, referred to as Parambumalai in the Sangam literature, reached the zenith
49
of its glory during the rule of its chieftain Pari, known for his munificence. So
catholic was the philanthropy of this patron that at the sight of a jasmine creeper
struggling hard for support, left his car at its proximity for the tendril to spread on
and walked back home. This Parambumalai of Pari in course of time got changed
into Piranmalai.80 It is also believed that during the westward movement the Melur
Kallars first settled at this place and so were known by this name.
location of this Piranmalai, i.e., 20 miles further east at the eastern edge of the
ambalakkarar area to be their original abode since the villages they left were very
close to Madurai.81
on the Marriage, Kinship and Clan system of the Piramalai Kallars, that the
word Piramalai is the distorted form of the word Puramalai which means
beyond the hill. As these people lived beyond (west of) the Nagamalai, were called
the Melur Kallars claim Alagar hills which falls into their territory as their own,
50
with a view to ascertain their ownership of the rest of the hills, other than Alagar
hills such as Nagamalai, Pasumalai, Puthurmalai etc., they might have called
sagacious one seems to be that of C.N. Natarajan since their settlement area is
extending from the Tiruparankpundram hills in the east to the Western Ghats in the
west and from the Nagamalai hills in the north to the river Guntar in the south.84
Dumont has defined their territory thus - "The Kallar Nadu consists roughly of the
northern part of Tirumangalam taluk, one of the taluks making up Madurai district.
Its northern boundary is marked by a range of hills called Nagamalai, In fact the
Kallar overflow this boundary on to the northern slope of the hills, but do not reach
83. Personal interview with Prof. M. Namasivayam, aged around 55,a Piramalai Kallar and Librarian, T.N.
State Archives Library, Chennai, on February 20,2006, at Chennai.
84. P. Muthu Thevar, Op. cit., p. 148.
85. C. Sivanandi Servai, Op. cit., p.64.
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the river From east to west, one enters Kallar country beyond a village called
Pudukkottai, about six miles from Madurai, To the south, the town of
Tirumangalam is beyond the border, but the Piramalai Kallar has spread widely to
the south west across the road from Thirumangalam to Usilampatti. Thus the
Kallar Nad is a rectangle about eighteen miles by ten, crossed by just three roads.
The east to west road from Madurai to Usilampatti; the south east-north west road
rather marginal road in the west, running from Usilampatti south.86 This was their
traditional habitat.
Thus this Kallar Province or the area of the Piramalai Kallar did not
have a precise territorial definition and its boundaries were mostly blurred.87
the Piramalai Kallars, they form the focal area of the Piramalai Kallars habitat and
are deemed to constitute the Kallar Nadu. The Kallar Reclamation Section of the
Madurai district Collectorate has made a rough estimate of the number of the
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Piramalai Kallars for the year 1975 which works out about 3.5 lakh.88 However
1993.89 A small number of them have spilled over to Srivilliputhur taluk of the
The other aspects of the community will be dealt with in detail in the
subsequent chapters.
88. Brief Notes on the Kallar Reclamation Scheme in Madurai, Collector's Office, Madurai, 1975, p. 1.
89. A Short Note on Kallar Reclamation Scheme in Madurai and Anna Districts, Kallar Reclamation
Office, Madurai, 1993, p. 1.
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