Nagarathar Temples
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History of the Temples Tradition
has it that when the Chettiars migrated from Chola nadu, they settled
in and around a village called Illayathangudi in Pandya nadu. And
here he Pandya king granted to their care the village temple. Over
the next decade or so, groups of Chettiars moved on from here to
settle in other villages not far from their first settlement and
in time, eight other clusters of villages with Chettiar settlement
had been established. To each of them the Pandya king granted a
temple in perpetuity The nine temples, thus, became the 'family'
temples of the clusters and each cluster evolved as a subdividesion
of the Chettiars or what might be described as a |
fraternal clan. These fraternal members and their
families are called pangalis. Once, when everyone knew
eaach other, the pangali bond was one of the strongest
factors in keeping the community cohesive. Over theyears, the pangalis
have spread further and further an, today, few know any both the
pangalis in villages imediately neighbouring theirs and
more often only those pangalis with whom they share a common
ancestor. The growth of the community has also resulted in the three
bigger temples forming sub-groups within themselves, the sub-groups
themselves taking the characteristics of separate fraternal clans.
All the temples are said to have been granted to the Nagarathar
in the early 8th Century, but neither their earlier history nor
these grants have been convincingly documented. However, renovation,
restoration, even reconstruction by the Chettiars in the 19th and
20th centuries are well recorded.
(Source: "The Chettiar Heritage"; S. Muthiah, Meenakshi
Meyappan, Visalakshi Ramaswamy; 2000) |
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