Influence of Kannada and its people on Tamil language, regions and its
dynasties since ancient times :
The Mahavamsa mentions that an ethnic Tamil adventurer, a Chola prince
known as Elara , invaded the island Sri Lanka and conquered it around
235 BCE with the help of a Mysore army.
The scholar Iravatham Mahadevan indicated that Kannada was already a
language of rich oral tradition earlier than 3rd century B.C., and
based on the native Kannada words found in Prakrit and Tamil
inscriptions of that period, Kannada must have been spoken by a
widespread and stable population. In some 3rd–1st century BCE Tamil
inscriptions, words of Kannada influence such as ' nalliyooraa' , '
kavuDi' and ' posil' have been introduced. The use of the vowel ' a '
as an adjective is not prevalent in Tamil but its usage is available
in Kannada. Kannada words such as ' gouDi-gavuDi' transform into
Tamil’s ' kavuDi' for lack of the usage of Ghosha svana in Tamil.
Hence the Kannada word 'gavuDi' becomes 'kavuDi' in Tamil. 'Posil'
('hosilu') was introduced into Tamil from Kannada and colloquial Tamil
uses this word as 'Vaayil'.
In a 1st century CE Tamil inscription, there is a personal reference
to ' ayjayya ', a word of Kannada origin. In a 3rd century CE Tamil
inscription there is usage of ' oppanappa vIran '. Here the honorific
' appa' to a person’s name is an influence from Kannada. Another word
of Kannada origin is ' taayviru ' and is found in a 4th-century CE
Tamil inscription. These are some examples that are proof of the
influence of Kannada on Tamil before the common era and in the early
centuries of the common era.
Influence of Kannada dynasties and people on ancient Tamil regions :
Since ancient times, the Kongu Nadu region of Tamil Nadu was under the
influence of Kannada kingdoms like Gangas (350–1004CE),
Nolambas , Banas , etc. Even the Kalabhras (250–600CE) who ruled over
the ancient Tamilakam are said to be a Kannada origin kingdom.
Influence and expeditions of Chalukyas of Badami , the Rashtrakutas of
Manyakheta and the Western Chalukyas over Tamil regions is very well
known. From 1116CE, Hoysala Empire under Vishnuvardhana ousted the
Cholas and captured regions around KonguNadu. Hoysalas under Veera
Someshwara, Veera Ballala III and others, had their 2nd capital at
Kannanur Kuppam, in present Tamil Nadu, controlled Thanjavur Cholas,
fought Madurai Pandyas and extended deep into present Tamil Nadu.
Veera Ballala III fought the Khiljis, Tughlaqs and Madurai Sultans
continuously till their end in Tamil regions. The famous Kannada
origin
Vijayanagara Empire rule over entire South India requires little
introduction. Wadiyar dynasty rule over Tamil regions and conquest by
Hyder Ali and Tipu Sultan have been elaborately explained by Rajiv
Satyanarayana sir in detail. All these contributed to the large
Kannada and Telugu (due to later Vijayanagara period rule) populations
settling in the villages across entire Tamil Nadu and even in the
Palakkad and Malabar regions of Kerala.
In the region between Coimbatore and Pollachi, Kannadigas form up to
30% of the population, most of them being Vokkaliga Gowdas. Also,
people of Kannada Devanga Chettiars, Kurubas, Toreyas, Siviyar,
Parivārattar, Bestas (Mukkuvas), Kabberas (all fishermen), Kannada
Balijas (Naidus), Nayakas, Lingayats, Ganigas, Kannada Brahmins,
Badagas, some Dalits and various other castes speak Kannada. There are
also few Kannada majority villages in this region! (KonguNadu was
always influenced by Kannada). Kannadigas are also present in
Palakkad, Erode, Salem, Namakkal, Dharmapuri, Krishnagiri, Dindugal,
Vellore, Madurai, Tirunelveli, Thanjavur, Ramnad, Kanchipuram,
Cuddalore, etc. basically Kannada and Telugu people are spread
throughout TN.
As per TN’s caste census, Kannadigas form 8% of TN population and
Telugus 15%. The official TN government census includes most of them
as Tamils (who’re actually 70% of TN) and has even made Tamil
compulsory in its 2 language policy which rules out linguistic
minorities from studying their mother tongue as they opt for English
(for livelihood) and Tamil (compulsory).
1.9k Views · 41 Upvotes Answered Oct 12, 2016
படங்கள்
https://www.quora.com/What-is- the-story-of-Kannadigas-who- are-present-in-large-numbers- even-in-interior-districts-of- TN-like-Dindigul-Theni-etc
dynasties since ancient times :
The Mahavamsa mentions that an ethnic Tamil adventurer, a Chola prince
known as Elara , invaded the island Sri Lanka and conquered it around
235 BCE with the help of a Mysore army.
The scholar Iravatham Mahadevan indicated that Kannada was already a
language of rich oral tradition earlier than 3rd century B.C., and
based on the native Kannada words found in Prakrit and Tamil
inscriptions of that period, Kannada must have been spoken by a
widespread and stable population. In some 3rd–1st century BCE Tamil
inscriptions, words of Kannada influence such as ' nalliyooraa' , '
kavuDi' and ' posil' have been introduced. The use of the vowel ' a '
as an adjective is not prevalent in Tamil but its usage is available
in Kannada. Kannada words such as ' gouDi-gavuDi' transform into
Tamil’s ' kavuDi' for lack of the usage of Ghosha svana in Tamil.
Hence the Kannada word 'gavuDi' becomes 'kavuDi' in Tamil. 'Posil'
('hosilu') was introduced into Tamil from Kannada and colloquial Tamil
uses this word as 'Vaayil'.
In a 1st century CE Tamil inscription, there is a personal reference
to ' ayjayya ', a word of Kannada origin. In a 3rd century CE Tamil
inscription there is usage of ' oppanappa vIran '. Here the honorific
' appa' to a person’s name is an influence from Kannada. Another word
of Kannada origin is ' taayviru ' and is found in a 4th-century CE
Tamil inscription. These are some examples that are proof of the
influence of Kannada on Tamil before the common era and in the early
centuries of the common era.
Influence of Kannada dynasties and people on ancient Tamil regions :
Since ancient times, the Kongu Nadu region of Tamil Nadu was under the
influence of Kannada kingdoms like Gangas (350–1004CE),
Nolambas , Banas , etc. Even the Kalabhras (250–600CE) who ruled over
the ancient Tamilakam are said to be a Kannada origin kingdom.
Influence and expeditions of Chalukyas of Badami , the Rashtrakutas of
Manyakheta and the Western Chalukyas over Tamil regions is very well
known. From 1116CE, Hoysala Empire under Vishnuvardhana ousted the
Cholas and captured regions around KonguNadu. Hoysalas under Veera
Someshwara, Veera Ballala III and others, had their 2nd capital at
Kannanur Kuppam, in present Tamil Nadu, controlled Thanjavur Cholas,
fought Madurai Pandyas and extended deep into present Tamil Nadu.
Veera Ballala III fought the Khiljis, Tughlaqs and Madurai Sultans
continuously till their end in Tamil regions. The famous Kannada
origin
Vijayanagara Empire rule over entire South India requires little
introduction. Wadiyar dynasty rule over Tamil regions and conquest by
Hyder Ali and Tipu Sultan have been elaborately explained by Rajiv
Satyanarayana sir in detail. All these contributed to the large
Kannada and Telugu (due to later Vijayanagara period rule) populations
settling in the villages across entire Tamil Nadu and even in the
Palakkad and Malabar regions of Kerala.
In the region between Coimbatore and Pollachi, Kannadigas form up to
30% of the population, most of them being Vokkaliga Gowdas. Also,
people of Kannada Devanga Chettiars, Kurubas, Toreyas, Siviyar,
Parivārattar, Bestas (Mukkuvas), Kabberas (all fishermen), Kannada
Balijas (Naidus), Nayakas, Lingayats, Ganigas, Kannada Brahmins,
Badagas, some Dalits and various other castes speak Kannada. There are
also few Kannada majority villages in this region! (KonguNadu was
always influenced by Kannada). Kannadigas are also present in
Palakkad, Erode, Salem, Namakkal, Dharmapuri, Krishnagiri, Dindugal,
Vellore, Madurai, Tirunelveli, Thanjavur, Ramnad, Kanchipuram,
Cuddalore, etc. basically Kannada and Telugu people are spread
throughout TN.
As per TN’s caste census, Kannadigas form 8% of TN population and
Telugus 15%. The official TN government census includes most of them
as Tamils (who’re actually 70% of TN) and has even made Tamil
compulsory in its 2 language policy which rules out linguistic
minorities from studying their mother tongue as they opt for English
(for livelihood) and Tamil (compulsory).
1.9k Views · 41 Upvotes Answered Oct 12, 2016
படங்கள்
https://www.quora.com/What-is-
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