Tamil
Tamil was the oldest
spoken literary language of south India that is South of Nilgiris. Evidence as
it is shows that there was a body of literature in Tamil which has had unbroken
development over 20 centuries the first period of that literature is associated
with the sangam ara. Tamil tradition refers of three literary Academic
(Sangams) which met at Madurai. The first was attended by gods and legendary
sages but all its works have perished. Of the second only one
survives-Tolkappiyam the earliest surviving Tamil grammar. Munch of the
literary writings of this period have perished. Legendry and traditional
accounts mention the loss of many texts on the occasion of a deluge. Today's
extant body of sangam literature is but a fraction of a vast literature.
The book Agattiyam
presumed to be written by St. Agattiyar is present in small shreds of sutras
here and there as quoted by medieval commentators.
The second well-known
work was Tolkappiyam. It was written by Tolkappiyar who was supposed to be a
disciple of Agattiyar along with eleven other scholars. It is a work on Tamil
grammar literature tradition and sociology. Tolkapiyam lays down grammatical
rules governing the literary compositions. This book is the fountain of all
literary conventions in Tamil literature. All later changes and innovations
occurred only under the sanction of permissive clauses incorporated indue
places in that work.
The poets of the third
Sangam worte Ettutogai (eight anthologies). These anthologies contain well over
2,00 poems ascribed to more than 200 authors.
The other major
collection of the Sangam works is the pattuppattu of Ten dyle. They are long
poems.
After the period of
the eight anthologies Tamil literature reveals the influence of Sanskrit. It
also reveals Jaina influence. The classical work revealing these features is
Tiru Kurral sometimes called the Bible of Tamil land. It consists of series of
metrical proverbs and many aspects of life and religion.
And by the 6th century
A.D. Aryan influence had penetrated the whole of Tamil land. Her kings and
chiefs worshipped and supported the gods of Hinduism Jainism and Buddhism.
Tamil poets book to writing long poems which they called by the Silappadikaram
(the Jewelled anklet). A little later oppeared Manimekali attributed to the
poet sattanar of Madurai. This book reveals Buddhist influence.
And the books
Silappadikaram and Manimekalai belong to the early centuries of the Christian
ere. They were attributed to Ilango adigal and Sat anar. The former book has
been referred to by king Gajabahu of Ceylon who ruled in the second half of the
second century A.D.
Manimekalai abounds in
fine poetry and its dramatic element is handled with mastery. Also this book
gives us glimpses of the development of fine art in the angam age.
Probably sattanar the
author of Manimekalai was a Buddhist. A good deal of social and historical
information is found in this work just as in silappadikaram. Added to this book
has a peculiar grace which makes it unique in the books of Tamil literature.
And it is alsoheld by
scholars that in the age prior to the imperial pallavas many Tamil works were
written like kural. The chief quality of the Sangam works is their adherence to
standards and literary conventions. Kural by thirulluvar has been translated
into many languages both Indian and foreign.
The end of the Sangam
era may be said to herald the birth of a new Tamil literature. This new age
witnessed devotional poetry on Shiva and Vishnu. The age of the Sangam
literature was religious but stranger to the Bhakti cult. The writings of the
Alvars and Nayan are in the later period were quite distinct. Both of them
began some where in the 5th or the 6th century A.D.
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