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{{Short description|Royal house of Yadu dynasty}}
{{For|the American web-development company|Velir (company)}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2019}}
{| border=1 align=right cellpadding=4 cellspacing=0 width=250 style="margin: 0 0 1em 1em; background: #f9f9f9; border: 1px #aaaaaa solid; border-collapse: collapse; font-size: 95%;"
{{Use Indian English|date=August 2019}}
|+<big>'''வேளிர்'''</big><br /> Vēḷir
{{Royal house|| image = பாரி முல்லைக்குத் தேரீதல் (படிமம்).JPG|image_caption =A statue of the Sangam period Velir king |alt=A statue of Sangam period Velir kingcoat of arms=|country=]|titles=Satyaputra|founder=|final ruler=|region= ]|current head=|founding year=|dissolution=|cadet branches=|other_families=]<br />]<br />]<br />] <br /> ]<br />Nanan<br />]<br />Vel Avi Pekan}}
|-
| ''']''' || ]
|-
|'''House''' || Vēḷir (''Satyaputo'') - Fraternity of Truth
|-
| '''Family Dynasties''' || *]<br />*]<br />*]<br />*Vēl Āviyar<br />*]<br />
|}


The '''Velir''' <ref name="Pruthi Sharma 1995 p.99">{{cite book | last1=Pruthi | first1=R. | last2=Sharma | first2=B.R. | title=Buddhism, Jainism and Women | publisher=Anmol Publications | series=Encyclopaedia of women society and culture series | year=1995 | isbn=978-81-7488-085-7 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BvoQAQAAIAAJ&q=velirs+or+vellalas | page=99}}</ref><ref name="Sivaratnam 1964 p.36">{{cite book | last=Sivaratnam | first=C. | title=An Outline of the Cultural History and Principles of Hinduism | publisher=Stangard Printers | year=1964 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=H7xWAAAAMAAJ&q=velirs+or+vellalas | access-date=2022-12-12 | page=36}}</ref><ref name="Chakravarti 1953 p.25">{{cite book | last=Chakravarti | first=A. | title=Tirukkural | publisher=Diocesan Press | year=1953 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nBx4AAAAIAAJ&q=velirs+or+vellalas | language=lt | page=25}}</ref><ref name="Orr 2000 p. 209">{{cite book | last=Orr | first=L.C. | title=Donors, Devotees, and Daughters of God: Temple Women in Medieval Tamilnadu | publisher=Oxford University Press | series=South Asia Research | year=2000 | isbn=978-0-19-535672-4 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=F___xKcP8lMC&dq=term%20velir&pg=PA209 | access-date=2022-12-12 | page=209}}</ref><ref name="Iyer 1968 p.4">{{cite book | last=Iyer | first=L.A.K. | title=Social History of Kerala: The Dravidians | publisher=Book Centre Publications | series=Monographs on man in India | year=1968 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=UU5DAAAAYAAJ&q=velirs+or+vellalas | access-date=2022-12-12 | page=4}}</ref> were a ] of minor dynastic kings and aristocratic chieftains in ] in the early historic period of ].<ref name="Meluhha and Agastya">{{cite web|url=http://www.harappa.com/arrow/meluhha_and_agastya_2009.pdf|title=Meluhha and Agastya : Alpha and Omega of the Indus Script|last=Mahadevan|first=Iravatham|year=2009|location=Chennai, India|page=16|quote=The story of the southern migration of the Vēḷir from Dvārakā under the leadership of Agastya is narrated by Naccinarkkiniyar in his commentary on Tolkāppiyam (pāyiram; Poruḷ. 34). According to this legend, the gods congregated on Mount Meru as a result of which the earth tilted, lowering Meru and raising the southern quarter. The gods thereupon decided that Agastya was the best person to remedy this situation and requested him to proceed to the South. Agastya agreed and, on his way, visited Tuvarāpati’ (Dvārakā) and led the descendants of neṭu-muṭi-an{{!}}n{{!}}al (Viṣṇu or Krṣṇa) including eighteen kings, eighteen families of the Vēḷir and the Aruvāḷar' to the south, where they settled down clearing the forests and cultivating the land.}}</ref> They had close relations with ], ] and ] rulers through ruling and coronation rights.<ref name="de Laet Herrmann 1996 p. 382">{{cite book | last1=de Laet | first1=S.J. | last2=Herrmann | first2=J. | title=History of Humanity: From the seventh century B.C. to the seventh century A.D. | publisher=Routledge | year=1996 | isbn=978-92-3-102812-0 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=WGUz01yBumEC&pg=PA382 | access-date=2022-12-12 | page=382}}</ref><ref name="Singh Thirumalai Manoharan Anthropological Survey of India 1997 p.1647">{{cite book | last1=Singh | first1=K.S. | last2=Thirumalai | first2=R. | last3=Manoharan | first3=S. | author4=Anthropological Survey of India | title=Tamil Nadu | publisher=Affiliated East-West Press Anthropological Survey of India | series=People of India | issue=pt. 3 | year=1997 | isbn=978-81-85938-88-2 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9XLiAAAAMAAJ&q=velir+coronation | access-date=2022-12-12 | page=1647}}</ref><ref name="Cuppiramaṇiyan̲ Tirunāvukkaracu International Institute of Tamil Studies 1983 p.269">{{cite book | last1=Cuppiramaṇiyan̲ | first1=C.V. | last2=Tirunāvukkaracu | first2=K.T. | author3=International Institute of Tamil Studies | title=Historical Heritage of the Tamils | publisher=International Institute of Tamil Studies | series=Publication (International Institute of Tamil Studies) | year=1983 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FXIeAAAAMAAJ&q=velir++relation | access-date=2022-12-12 | page=269}}</ref> Medieval inscriptions and Sangam literature claim that they belong to the ].<ref>{{cite book |last=Padmaja |first=T. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pzgaS1wRnl8C&q=yadu-kula&pg=RA1-PA34 |title=Temples of Kr̥ṣṇa in South India: History, Art, and Traditions in Tamilnāḍu |date=2001 |publisher=Institute of Asian Studies |isbn=9788170173984 |pages=33–35 |quote=}}</ref><ref name="van Bakel Hagesteijn van de Velde 1994 p. 175">{{cite book | last1=van Bakel | first1=M. | last2=Hagesteijn | first2=R. | last3=van de Velde | first3=P. | title=Pivot politics: changing cultural identities in early state formation processes | publisher=Het Spinhuis | year=1994 | isbn=978-90-5589-007-1 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=TXOc1WJVpoQC&pg=PA175 | access-date=2022-12-22 | page=175}}</ref><ref name="Ayyar Government Museum (Chennai 2002 p.15">{{cite book | last1=Ayyar | first1=K.R.S. | last2=Government Museum (Chennai | first2=India) | title=Inscriptions in the Pudukkóttai State | publisher=Commissioner of Museums, Government of Tamilnadu | issue=pt. 1 | year=2002 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jk5mAAAAMAAJ&q=Vikramakesari+yadhu | access-date=2022-12-20 | page=15}}</ref> Velir may refer to master of land.<ref name="Art And Culture Of Tamilnadu">{{cite book|title= Art And Culture Of Tamilnadu |first= Naga Swami |last= R |publisher= Delhi Sundeep Prakashan |year=1980 |page=12|url=https://archive.org/details/bUeW_art-and-culture-of-tamilnadu-by-r.-naga-swami-1980-delhi-sundeep-prakashan-delhi/page/11/mode/2up?q=velir
The '''Vēḷir''' ({{lang-ta|''வேளிர்''}}) were a ] of minor dynastic kings and aristocratic chieftains in ] in the early historic period of ].<ref name="Meluhha and Agastya">{{cite web|url=http://www.harappa.com/arrow/meluhha_and_agastya_2009.pdf |title=Meluhha and Agastya : Alpha and Omega of the Indus Script |first=Iravatham |last=Mahadevan |year=2009 |location=Chennai, India |page=16 |quote="The Ventar-Velir-Velalar groups constituted the ruling and land-owning classes in the Tamil country since the beginning of recorded history and betray no trace whatever of an Indo-Aryan linguistic ancestry"}}</ref><ref name="Fairservis">{{cite book| last = Fairservis| first = Walter Ashlin| title = The Harappan civilization and its writing. A model for the decipherment of the Indus Script| origyear = 1921| year = 1992| publisher = Oxford & IBH| isbn = 978-81-204-0491-5| pages = 52–53 }}</ref> They were vassals of the ] and ].<ref>International Institute of Tamil Studies, 1970. Journal of Tamil Studies, Volume 2, p.207</ref>
}}</ref>


==Origin==
The Vēḷir had close relations with them through marriages and coronation right.<ref name="Venkatasubramanian">{{cite book|title=Political Change and Agrarian Tradition in South India |first= T. K. |last=Venkatasubramanian |pages=63–67 |publisher=Mittal Publications |year=1986 |location=Delhi}}</ref><ref name="K.A.N. Sastri">{{cite book|first=K. A. Nilakanta |last=Sastri |title=The Colas |page= 49 |year=1955 |publisher=] |series=Madras University historical series |volume=9}}</ref>
]
{{refn|group=note|Quote verbatim from both sources to support the statement}} The Vēḷir were crowned with the epithet ''Satyaputo'' "members of the fraternity of truth" for their virtues, and their lands were often hill/mountainous terrain.{{cn|date=December 2013}} ''Vēḷir'' became a title inherited by Veḷḷālar chiefs of the medieval period.<ref>{{cite book| last = Dirks| first = Nicholas B.| title = The Hollow Crown: Ethnohistory of an Indian Kingdom| date = 2007-12-03| publisher = Cambridge University Press| isbn = 978-0-521-05372-3| page = 149 }}</ref>{{refn|group=note|Quote verbatim from the source to support the statement}}


The ], one of the ] of ], praises King ], a 49th generation descendant of the Vēlir clan whose ancestors appeared from the pitcher (தடவு) of a Northern sage (]), and said to have ruled Thuvarai (]) with a fort containing tall huge walls made of bronze.<ref name="Hart Heifetz 2002 p. 127">{{cite book | last1=Hart | first1=G.L. | last2=Heifetz | first2=H. | title=The Four Hundred Songs of War and Wisdom: An Anthology of Poems from Classical Tamil, the Purananuru | publisher=Columbia University Press | series=Translations from the Asian Classics | year=2002 | isbn=978-0-231-51252-7 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mVdBeeiYxh4C&pg=PA127 | access-date=2023-05-16 | page=127}}</ref> According to a commentary on '']'', the earliest long work of ], eighteen clans of the Velirs came from the city of '']'' under the leadership of the sage ].<ref name="Meluhha and Agastya"/><ref name="pivotpolitics">Pivot politics: changing cultural identities in early state formation processes By M. van Bakel page 165: "The Velir were an instrusive group in South India... It is now suggested that (...) may have been associated with the ] of Dvaraka..."</ref><ref>{{cite book|title=Ancient Indian Social History: Some Interpretations|author=Romila Thapar|publisher=Orient Blackswan, 1978 - India - 341 pages|page=224}}</ref> The legend goes that all the gods and sages went to the Himalayas to attend the marriage of ] with ] due to which the earth started tilting to one side. Agastya was then requested to proceed south to restore the balance. On his way south, Agastya married Lopamudra and is said to have brought with him sage Jamadagni's son Trnadhumagni or Tholkappiyar, the author of ] grammar, and eighteen members of the ] family along with eighteen crore Velir and Aruvalar.<ref>{{cite book|title=Insights into Hinduism|author=Ramchandra Narayan Dandekar|publisher=Ajanta Publications, 1979|page=376}}</ref> It has been suggested by some like Thapar and Champakalakshmi, that the ancestors of the Velir may have been related to the Yadava of Dvaraka and the inhabitants of the post ]n Chacolithic Black and Red ware sites. According to Thapar, the Yadava may have belonged to a non Indo-Aryan language group.<ref name="pivotpolitics"/> They eventually reached ], and as the Velir-Perumakan group, cultivated its ancient society as a political, sociocultural and economic structure in South India and Sri Lanka.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Thapar |first1=Romila |last2=Champakalakshmi |first2=Radha |last3=Gopal |first3=Sarvepalli |title=Tradition, Dissent and Ideology: Essays in Honour of Romila Thapar |date=1996 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=9780195638677 |page=309 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Ay9uAAAAMAAJ&q=velir+perumakan |access-date=5 July 2019 |language=en}}</ref>
==Sangam period==
In Sangam literature, the Velir were divided into a number of groups, which were most probably, exogamous phratries, such as ''aim-peru- velir'' or the Five Great Velir (Akam., 125), ''eru-velir'' or the Seven Velir (Akam., 36), and ''patinoru velir'' or the Eleven Velir (Akam., 135).<ref>International Institute of Tamil Studies, 1970. Journal of Tamil Studies, Volume 2, p.185</ref> Seven kings from seven dynastic clans of the Vēḷir royal house formed the ''Kadai Ezhu Vallal'' (The last of the 7 (lines) of Great Patrons), liberal patrons of arts and literature in ancient Tamilakam.{{cn|date=December 2013}}


Historian ] writes that quite a number of these velirs were indigenous and natives of Tamil country but some of the velirs seem to have migrated from dvaraka.<ref name="Art And Culture Of Tamilnadu"/>
Early Tamil history was marked by a battle for supremacy between the Velir confederacy and the Kōcar,<ref name="ts207">International Institute of Tamil Studies, 1970. Journal of Tamil Studies, Volume 2, p.207. Page 207 states: "Early Tamil history can be re-interpreted as virtually a battle for supremacy between the Velir and the Kōcar. The Velir occupied most of the fertile plains on the eastern and western coasts and built up the powerful ChOla and Chera empires which were really grand confederacies of the Velir chieftains. The Kōcar, true to their origin as the hill people, occupied the central highlands included in the Kongu and the Pandya territories and built up the Pandya Kingdom. The traditional division of the old Tamil rulers into the three Ventar (kings) and the many Velir (chieftains) has obscured the fact that the original and fundamental division was between the Velir (including the Cholas and the Cheras) and the Kocar (including the Pandyas). The bitter Chola-Pandya wars lasting for centuries in the Tamil country were the final echoes of the conflict between the ruling citadel-dwellers and the oppressed city dwellers of the Proto-Indian civilization."</ref> with Pandyas being the ruling clan of the Kōcar confederacy.<ref>International Institute of Tamil Studies, 1970. Journal of Tamil Studies, Volume 2, p.220. Page 220 states: "Velaikkarar (related to the Velir as indicated by their name) considered themselves socially superior to the Pandyas who seem to be the ruling clan of the Kocar confederacy. Similarly the Velaikkarar groups figure as temple attendants only in the Chola inscriptions."</ref> The Kōcar entered the Tamil country from Konkana and Tulu lands, the same regions from which the Velir migrated into the Tamil land.<ref name="ts248"/> Territories which came under the control of Kōcars came to be known as koṅku or kō-nāṭu.<ref name="ts248">International Institute of Tamil Studies, 1970. Journal of Tamil Studies, Volume 2, p.248. Page 248 states: "According to Tamil tradition, the Kōcar entered the Tamil country from Konkana and Tulu lands, a fact which immediately connects them with the migration of the Velir from the same regions. The territories under the control of the Kōcar came to be known as koṅku or kō-nāṭu though the Kōcar clans were to be found throughout the Tamil country."</ref> The Velir occupied most of the fertile plains on the eastern and western coasts and built the powerful Chola and Chera empires which were infact grand confederacies of the Velir Chieftains; whereas the Kōcar were hill people who occupied the central highlands included in the Kongu and the Pandya territories and built the Pandya Kingdom.<ref name="ts207"/> The traditional division of the old Tamil rulers into the three Ventar (kings)(of Chola, Chera, Pandya) and many Velir chieftains obscured the fact that the original and fundamental division was between the Velir (including the Cholas and Cheras) and the Kōcar (including the Pandyas); with the bitter wars between Cholas and Pandyas lasting for centuries.<ref name="ts207"/>


The ] kings trace their lineage to the clan of ]; one of the inscriptions at Kodumbalur belonging to one of the kings in the Irunkovel line, namely Tennavan Irunkōvēl.<ref name="Ayyar Government Museum (Chennai 2002 p.15"/><ref name="India. Archæological Dept 1913 p.122">{{cite book | author=India. Archæological Dept | title=Epigraphia Indica | series=.: New imperial series | issue=v. 12 | year=1913 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4LBCAAAAYAAJ&q=The+Ko%E1%B8%8Dumb%C4%81%C4%BC%C5%ABr+inscription+of+Vikramak%C4%93sari+,+also+called+Tennavan+Ilang%C5%8Dv%C4%93l,+declares+that+he+belonged+to+the+Yadava+race | language=it | access-date=2022-12-20 | page=122}}</ref> The ] record of Irukkuvel chief ] lauds his father, Samarabirama, as ''Yadu-vamsa-ketu'' (Banner of the Yadu race).<ref name="Ayyar Government Museum (Chennai 2002 p.15" /><ref name="Indica 1995 p.93">{{cite book | title=Indica | publisher=Heras Institute of Indian History and Culture, St. Xavier's College. | issue=v. 32 | year=1995 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4hZDAAAAYAAJ&q=Vikramakesari+yadhu | access-date=2022-12-20 | page=93}}</ref> Historians consider the ] velirs originated from the pastoralists of ] and they gained preeminence at an early stage in Tamil history.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pzgaS1wRnl8C&pg=RA1-PA33 |title=Temples of Kr̥ṣṇa in South India: History, Art, and Traditions in Tamilnāḍu |publisher=Institute of Asian Studies |date=2001 |first=T. |last=Padmaja |pages=33–34|isbn=9788170173984 }}</ref><ref name="Environment, Development and Society in Contemporary India:An Introduction 2008 p. 23">{{cite book | title=Environment, Development and Society in Contemporary India:An Introduction | publisher=Macmillan India | year=2008 | isbn=978-0-230-63530-2 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Xt9KHerkrkAC&pg=PA23 | access-date=2022-12-12 | page=23}}</ref><ref name="Matlock 2000 p. 100">{{cite book | last=Matlock | first=G. | title=India Once Ruled the Americas! | publisher=iUniverse | year=2000 | isbn=978-0-595-13468-7 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nlnQmHpVSh8C&pg=PA100 | access-date=2022-12-12 | page=100}}</ref>
The Kōcar clans were made up of the Maravars and the Kallars and formed the fighting arm of the Pandya kingdom.<ref>International Institute of Tamil Studies, 1970. Journal of Tamil Studies, Volume 2, p.230. Page 230 states: "The Kōcar clans (including Maravar and Kallar) formed the fighting arm of the Pandya kingdom, the counterpart of Velala or Velaikara forces under the Velir (including the Chera and the Chola kingdoms)."</ref>


==History== ==History==
The Velir were prominent in the ] of Tamil polity, economy, and society. They are traced to the ]s (Yadu descent) of ] and linked up with all important dynasties of ] including the ], ], and ].<ref name="Nākacāmi 1978 p.51">{{cite book |last=Nākacāmi |first=I. |title=South Indian Studies |publisher=Society for Archaeological, Historical & Epigraphical Research |series=SAHER pub |issue=v. 2 |year=1978 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=eW5DAAAAYAAJ&q=yadavas |language=de |access-date=2022-12-22 |page=51}}</ref> In Sangam literature, they are portrayed as independent chieftains who ruled in bordering areas of three major ruling dynasties, had considerable collective power and marriage alliances with ].<ref name="Ganesh 1993 p.49">{{cite book |last=Ganesh |first=K. |title=Boundary Walls: Caste and Women in a Tamil Community |publisher=Hindustan Publishing Corporation |series=Studies in sociology and social anthropology |year=1993 |isbn=978-81-7075-023-9 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=EShuAAAAMAAJ&q=velir |access-date=2022-12-20 |page=49}}</ref> "
According to Tholkappiyam, the Velirs came to south from the city of ] under the leadership of sage ] and belonged to the ] clan.<ref name="Meluhha and Agastya"/><ref>{{cite book|title=Encyclopedia of Indian Tribes |year=1989 |first= S. S. |last=Shashi |page=216}}</ref><ref>Pivot politics: changing cultural identities in early state formation processes By M. van Bakel page 165: "The Velir were an instrusive group in South India... It is now suggested that (...) may have been associated with the ] of Dvaraka..."</ref> Iravatham Mahadevan considers it plausible to assume that the Yadavas were Aryanised descendants of an original non-Aryan people.<ref name>{{cite web|url=http://www.harappa.com/arrow/meluhha_and_agastya_2009.pdf |title=Meluhha and Agastya : Alpha and Omega of the Indus Script |first=Iravatham |last=Mahadevan |year=2009 |location=Chennai, India |page=16 |quote="..it is more plausible to assume that the Yadavas were the Aryanised descendants of an original non-Aryan people than to consider the Tamil Velir to have descended from the Indo-Aryan speaking Yadavas. As M. Raghavaiyangar (2004: 27), has pointed out vel, means ‘one who performs a sacrifice’ (namely a ‘priest’). The Agastya legend itself can be re-interpreted as non-Aryan and Dravidian even in origin and pertaining to the Indus Civilisation.}}</ref>
{{div col|colwidth=13em}}
*]
*]
*]
*Vaidhumbas
*]
*]
*]
*]
*]<ref name="Biodiversity Heritage Library 1909 p.21">{{cite book | author=Biodiversity Heritage Library | title=Journal of the Ceylon Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society | publisher=Colombo Apothecaries Company | issue=v. 20, no. 60 - v. 21, no. 62 | year=1909 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jN0lAAAAMAAJ | access-date=2022-12-22 | page=21}}</ref>
*]
*Dhayanas
*]<ref name="Nākacāmi Nākacāmi Dikshitar 1997 p.192">{{cite book |editor-last=Nākacāmi |editor-first=I. |title=Studies in South Indian History and Culture |publisher=V.R. Ramachandra Dikshitar Centenary Committee |year=1997 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_kRuAAAAMAAJ |access-date=2022-12-22 |page=192}}</ref>
*]<ref name="Ali Mysore. University. Dept. of History 1972 p.48">{{cite book |last=Ali |first=B.S. |title=The Hoysaḷa Dynasty |publisher=Prasaranga, University of Mysore |year=1972 |language=la |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5o8ZnsSwL0kC&q=velir+sangam |access-date=2022-12-21 |page=48}}</ref>
*]
*]<ref name="ReferenceA">Prācī-jyoti Digest of Indological Studies volumes 16-17 (1984), p. 115</ref>
*]
*]
*]
{{div col end}}


While most of the rulers are substantiated by epigraphs and literatures, some of their history of ruling some dynasties is not recorded.
Numerous poems in the ancient ] extol these chieftains' charity and truthfulness. Among the most prominent were the 'seven patrons' (''kadaiyezhu vallal''), namely; ], ], Ori, ], ], Nalli and Veliyan.


Also, some of the medieval dynasties of the western half of the peninsula claim to be descended from ] lineage and the Ay chiefs of ] of the ninth century A.D. claim to be the ] as also the ] kings who link themselves with ] origins.<ref name="Thapar 1978 p. 224">{{cite book | last=Thapar | first=R. | title=Ancient Indian Social History: Some Interpretations | publisher=Orient Longman | year=1978 | isbn=978-81-250-0808-8 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=fK3VTUrWsD0C&pg=PA224 | access-date=2022-12-21 | page=224}}</ref> The ] describes about a Haiheya clan king ], he was a Vellalar saint and Commander-in-chief of the Chola army.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RYjXAAAAMAAJ&q=Eyarkon%20vellala|title=Slaves of the Lord: The Path of the Tamil Saints|publisher=Munshiram Manoharlal|year=1988|last=Dehejia|first=Vidya|page=178 |isbn=978-8-12150-044-9}}</ref><ref name="The Religion And Philosophy Of Tevaram With Special Reference To Nampi Arurar In Four Volumes">{{cite book |title=The Religion And Philosophy Of Tevaram With Special Reference To Nampi Arurar In Four Volumes: Rangaswamy, M. A. Dorai |date=2015-06-30 |url=https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.90325/page/n463/mode/2up?q=eyarkon |access-date=2022-12-22}}</ref> The Ay velir chieftains, who settled down in Ay county (near Kanyakumari), were quite prominent in Tamil Nadu during the sangam age.<ref name="Padmaja 2002 p. 127">{{cite book |last=Padmaja |first=T. |title=Temples of Kr̥ṣṇa in South India: History, Art, and Traditions in Tamilnāḍu |publisher=Abhinav Publications |year=2002 |isbn=978-81-7017-398-4 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pzgaS1wRnl8C&pg=PA127 |language=la |access-date=2022-12-22 |page=127}}</ref>
]'s ] mentioned a clan of rulers called '']'' along with three crowned Tamil kings<ref name="history south india">{{cite book|last=Sastri |first=K. A. Nilakanta |title=A History of South India |year=1955 |page= 77}}</ref> Sathiyaputo as mentioned in the Asoka's second rock edict is the same as Sathiyaputo mentioned in the Jambai inscription. The Jambai inscription was issued by Adigaman Chieftain. The Sanskrit name means "members of the fraternity of truth".<ref name="history south india"/> It is known later that ''Satiyaputo'' is a term used to describe Atiyaman, a popular Velir noble based on a ] epigraph found recently at Jambai near ] in Tamil Nadu which says '' satiyaputo atiyan netuman anci itta pali'' which translates to "Monastery given by Satyaputta Athiyan Nduman Anji"<ref>9.^ Mahadevan, Iravatham (2003). Early Tamil Epigraphy: From the Earliest Times to the Sixth Century A.D.. Harvard Oriental Series vol. 62. Cambridge, Mass: Department of Sanskrit and Indian Studies, Harvard University. ISBN 978-0-674-01227-1. p.&nbsp;399.></ref><ref name=''Scripts of the Tamil Country''>{{cite web |format=pdf |url=http://www.tamilheritage.org/kidangku/DrSwaminathan/scripts/08a_Scripts_of_Tamilnadu_1_Tamil-Brahmi.pdf |title=Scripts of the Tamil Country |deadurl=no |accessdate=17 October 2013}}</ref>


The ] and ] belonging to Manavya gotra as being the descendants of the original ancestress Hariti.<ref name="Krishnarao 1939 pp. 386–410">{{cite journal |last=Krishnarao |first=B. V. |title=The Origin and the Original Home of the Calukyas |journal=Proceedings of the Indian History Congress |publisher=Indian History Congress |volume=3 |year=1939 |issn=2249-1937 |jstor=44252388 |pages=386–410 |url=http://www.jstor.org/stable/44252388 |access-date=2022-12-22}}</ref> The Karmandala Satakam states that the Velirs of karmandalam belong to the same "Manavya" Gotra.<ref name="Vijayalakshmi, Usha R 2010">{{cite journal |journal= "Karmandala Satakam: Politico-Socio-Cultural Analysis of Medieval Tamil Literature on the Vellala Community of South Karnataka |year=2010 |last=Vijayalakshmi |first=Usha R |title= Karmandala Satakam: Politico-Socio-Cultural Analysis of Medieval Tamil Literature on the Vellala Community of South Karnataka |volume=71 |page=430 |jstor=44147510}}</ref> The Chalukya kings were called ''Velpularasar'' and ''Velkulattarasar'' by some communities, that is kings over ''Vel'' country (''pula'' means region or country).<ref>{{cite book|title=Encyclopaedia of Untouchables Ancient, Medieval and Modern|author=Raj Kumar|publisher=Gyan Publishing House|year=2008|page=179}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|title=The Colas|author=K. A. Nilakanta Sastri |publisher=Thompson & Co., Ltd., Printers, Madras|year=1937|page=11}}</ref> Later day references to them in Choļa inscriptions puts the Chalukyas under the Velir community ruling in Deccan.<ref name="ReferenceA"/>
] with ] from the 2nd century BCE found in excavations in ], ] bear several inscriptions, including a clan name—''vela'', a name related to ''velir'' from the ].<ref name="ETEHar">{{cite book |last=Mahadevan | first=Iravatham |title=Early Tamil Epigraphy: From the Earliest Times to the Sixth Century A.D. |year=2003 |publisher = Department of Sanskrit and Indian Studies| isbn = 978-0-674-01227-1| page = 48 |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=DZBkAAAAMAAJ&q=Early+Tamil+Epigraphy:+From+the+Earliest+Times+to+the+Sixth+Century+A.D.&dq=Early+Tamil+Epigraphy:+From+the+Earliest+Times+to+the+Sixth+Century+A.D.&hl=en&sa=X&ei=5uRfUsqmKu6A2QXL14GwCA&ved=0CC8Q6AEwAA |deadurl=no |accessdate=17 October 2013}}</ref>
Note: *The Puranhaanhuuru poem 201- written by the poet Kapilan and not Paranan; Please alter accordingly in the text.


] in the ] ]]
==Velir Chiefs==
The names of Velir chiefs are to be found across Tamil literature. In Sangam literature the more prevalent word used is Vel, such as in the names Vel Avi and Vel Paari.


The ] were one such Velir group that ruled the territory in and around ] during the Sangam period. The word Venad is derived from ''Vel'' -nadu, that is the country ruled by ''Vel'' chieftains.<ref>{{cite book|title=History of Kerala|author=R. Leela Devi|publisher=Vidyarthi Mithram Press & Book Depot|page=117}}</ref> We know of a queen of Vikramaditya Varaguna, an Ay king of 9th century who is referred to as Murugan Chenthi and as Aykula Mahadevi from inscriptions. Her father, an Ay chief called Chathan Murugan is described as a Vennir Vellala that is a Vellala by birth,<ref>{{cite book|title=Peasant State and Society in Medieval South India|author=Burton Stein|publisher=Oxford University Press|page=350|year=1994}}</ref> in the Huzur plates of king Karunandakkan, the predecessor of Vikramaditya Varaguna.<ref>{{cite book|title=Encyclopaedia of Untouchables Ancient, Medieval and Modern|author=Raj Kumar|publisher=Kalpaz Publications|year=2008|page=181}}</ref>
] and his son Ezhini, were ] chieftains, based in ]. They were contemporaries of ]. The Sangam poem "''Thagadur yathirai''", now lost, was written about his battle with the Chera king. Another Velir was ] (Purananur-201 by Paranar*) who ruled from Koval (modern day Tirukovilur) on the banks of the Pennai, (the present ]) which presently discharges into the sea at ] in ]. It is likely that the course of the river has changed to the south over many centuries. Other Velir chiefs of repute include Alumbil Vel, Alandur Vel and Nangur Vel<ref name="Pivot politics">{{cite book| author = M. van Bakel| first = Martin| coauthors = Renée Hagesteijn, Piet van de Velde| title = Pivot politics: changing cultural identities in early state formation processes| year = 1994| publisher = Het Spinhuis| location = Amsterdam| isbn = 978-90-5589-007-1| page = 172 }}</ref><ref name="Ancient India">{{cite book|title=Ancient India: collected essays on the literary and political history of Southern India |first=Sakkottai Krishnaswami |last=Aiyangar | page=351 |publisher=Asian Educational Services |year=2004 |location=Delhi |origyear=1911}}</ref>


The ] lines of Velir kings are considered to be of the same stock as the ]s as in one of the Sangam poems, the ancestor of the Irungovel chieftain is said to have ruled the fortified city of Tuvarai. This city is identified with the Hoysala capital ] by some historians.<ref>{{cite book|title= The Tamilian Antiquary Volume 1, Issue 5|author= T.A. Society (Tiruchchirāppalli, India)|publisher=Asian Educational Services|year=1986|page=28}}</ref> Also, the legend of the chief killing a tiger (''Pulikadimal'') has a striking resemblance to the origin legend of the Hoysalas where "sala" kills the tiger to save a sage.<ref>{{cite book|title= The Early History of the Vellar Basin, with Special Reference to the Irukkuvels of Kodumbalur. A Study in Vellala Origin and Early History|author= M. Arokiaswami|publisher= Amudha Nilayam|page=28}}</ref> As per historian Arokiaswami, the Hoysala title "Ballala" is only a variant of the Tamil word "Vellala".<ref>{{cite book|title= The Early History of the Vellar Basin, with Special Reference to the Irukkuvels of Kodumbalur. A Study in Vellala Origin and Early History|author= M. Arokiaswami|publisher= Amudha Nilayam|page=29}}</ref> The Hoysala king ] is even now locally known as the "Vellala Maharaja" in ], the town that served as their capital in 14th century.<ref>{{cite book|title=The Gopuras of Thiruvannamalai|author= F. H. Gravely|publisher=Commissioner of Museums, Government of Tamil Nadu|year=2002|page=2}}</ref>
The Kongu Vēḷir dynasty ruled ], while the ] dynasty produced numerous kings ruling Parambu Nadu, the most popular of whom was a close friend of the poet ].{{cn|date=December 2013}} The ] line ruled over Ko Nadu and their most famous ruler, Pulikadimal, was a contemporary of ] and Kapilar.{{cn|date=December 2013}} The most heralded of the Āviyar line was ], a contemporary of the poet Paranar, and renowned for his generosity{{cn|date=December 2013}}. The ] Vēḷir dynasty ruled Nadu Naadu around ], their royal emblem featured a horse and their most famous king was ].{{cn|date=December 2013}} Both he and his son Thaervann Malaiyan assisted the early Cholas and Cheras. The most famous Vēḷir dynasty was the ] dynasty, and this dynasty's powerful and most famous king was ]. His son Elini ruled ] of the ancient ] and ], a co-ruling contemporary of the famous king ]. These kings belonged to a prolific Tamil horseman tribe.<ref name="Historical heritage of the Tamils, page 256">''Historical heritage of the Tamils, page 256''</ref><ref>Kolappa Pillay Kanakasabhapathi Pillay. (1963). ''South India and Ceylon''. ]. pp. 39</ref> The ancient Tamil Naka Oviyar tribe of the Vēḷir house, whose nation stretched to the Tamil emporiums of Mantai and Kudiramalai, had the famous king ] who ruled this region and is paid tribute to in the ''].''


The Irungovel chieftains were related to the ]s through matrimony.<ref name="Indu Banga Urban History Association of India Nehru Memorial Museum and Library 1991 p.61">{{cite book | author=Indu Banga | author2=Urban History Association of India | author3=Nehru Memorial Museum and Library | title=The City in Indian History: Urban Demography, Society, and Politics | publisher=South Asia Publications | year=1991 | isbn=978-0-945921-17-2 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=M2TaAAAAMAAJ&q=irukkuvel%20chola%20matrimonial | access-date=2022-12-20 | page=61}}</ref><ref name="Tirumalai 1994 p.177">{{cite book | last=Tirumalai | first=R. | title=Collected Papers: Studies in South Indian Epigraphy and History of Land Organisation, Development and Accounts and Select Chola, and Pandyan Townships | publisher=Department of Archaeology, Government of Tamilnadu | series=T.N.D.A. pub | year=1994 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-C9uAAAAMAAJ&q=irukkuvel+chola+matrimonial | access-date=2022-12-20 | page=177}}</ref> These princes assumed both the Chola and Irungovel titles like for example there was one Adavallan Gangaikonda Cholan alias Irungolan during the time of ] and then there was a certain Sendamangalam Udaiyan Araiyan Edirili Cholan alias Irungolan during the reign of ].<ref name="Balasubrahmanyam Venkataraman Ramachandran 1979 p.80">{{cite book | last1=Balasubrahmanyam | first1=S.R. | last2=Venkataraman | first2=B. | last3=Ramachandran | first3=B. | title=Later Chola Temples: Kulottunga I to Rajendra III (A.D. 1070-1280) | publisher=Mudgala Trust | year=1979 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9ujVAAAAMAAJ&q=Gangaikonda+Cholan+alias+Irungolan+during+the+time+of+Kulottunga+I | language=jv | access-date=2022-12-20 | page=80}}</ref>
Each of the Vēḷir dynasties ruled from their own capitals and utilized the seaport of ].


Kaluvul was a velir chieftain of Kamur who fought against the chera supremacy.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DH1uAAAAMAAJ&q=kaluvul+velir|title=
==Inscriptions==
History of Kongu: Pre-historic period to 1300 A.D|last= V |first= Ramamurthy|publisher= International Society for the Investigation of Ancient Civilization|year=2008|page=104}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GnoOAAAAYAAJ&q=kaluvul+chera|title=
] mentions the Satyaputras in his inscriptions along with the Cholas, Pandyas and the Kerala putras.{{cn|date=December 2013}} The Satyaputra-Athiyamān Velirs wielded sufficient power in the time of Asoka (3rd century BCE) almost on par with the ], ] and ], a power which continued for several centuries.{{cn|date=December 2013}}{{refn|group=note|The quotes below obviously show the Satyaputras were a separate unit and not the same as Cholas, Pandyas, Cheras. So clarify connection between Satyaputras and Velirs}}
Social and Cultural History of Tamilnad: To A.D. 1336|last= C. E. |first= Ramachandran |publisher= University of Madras|year=1974|page=50}}</ref> Perum chera irumporai along with fourteen chieftains attacked kamur but perum chera irumporai was impressed with Kaluvuls resistance in battle field and let him rule kamur and accepted friendship from him.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GnoOAAAAYAAJ&q=kaluvul+chera|title=
{{Cquote|Ye Ca anta ata Choda, Pandiya, Satiyaputo, Ketalaputo, Tam bapanni, Antiyogo naama, Yonalaja}}
Social and Cultural History of Tamilnad: To A.D. 1336|last= N |first= Subrahmanian |publisher= Ennes|year=2008|page=42}}</ref> Some of the velirs under Kaluvul joined the chera after the defeat.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=JXkOAAAAYAAJ&q=kaluvul|title=
{{Cquote|Everywhere in the conquered dominions of king Priyadarsin, the beloved of the gods, and the dominions on the borders as those of the Chola, the Pandya, the Satiyaputra, the Cheralaputra, Tamraparni, the Yavana King named Antiyoka and the other neighbouring kings of this Antiyoka...}}
A Study of the Literature of the Cēra Country Upto 11th Century A.D.|last= Ci|first= Pālacuppiramaṇiyan̲ |publisher= University of Madras|year=2007|page=29}}</ref>


===Sangam literature===
In several excavated ] inscriptions found at ], ] of ], ] in ] mention is made again of the dynasty:<ref> - Dr. R. Nagasamy, Tamil Arts Academy</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.whatisindia.com/inscriptions/south_indian_inscriptions/volume_13/introduction_1.html |publisher=Archaeological Survey of India |title=South Indian Inscriptions Volume_13 - Cholas Inscriptions |deadurl=no |accessdate=17 October 2013}}</ref>
The ], one of the ] of ], praises King ], a 49th generation descendant of the Vēlir clan whose ancestors appeared from the pitcher (தடவு) of a Northern sage (]), and said to have ruled Thuvarai (]) with a fort containing tall huge walls made of bronze.<ref name="Hart Heifetz 2002 p. 127"/>


===Velir chiefs===
{{Cquote|<center>''Satyaputō Athiyan Nedumān Añji itta Pali<ref name="Kongu Nadu, a history up to A.D. 1400, page 152">''Kongu Nadu, a history up to A.D. 1400, page 152''</ref>''</center>}}
] Temple Complex built by Irunkovel chieftain Boothi Vikramakesari]]


] and his son Ezhini, were ] chieftains, based in Tagadur (present day village located in ]). They were contemporaries of ]. The Sangam poem "''Thagadur yathirai''", now lost, was written about his battle with the Chera king. Another Velir was ] who ruled over Konaadu, the area in and around ], with their capital in ].<ref>{{cite book|title=Studies in the History of Ancient Townships in Pudukkottai|first=R.|last=Tirumalai|publisher=Institute of Epigraphy, State Department of Archaeology, Government of Tamil Nadu|year=1981|page=1}}</ref> They belong to ] family, ] mentions in his study.<ref>{{cite book |title=The Colas|publisher=G .S .Press |pages= 136 |url= https://archive.org/details/in.gov.ignca.4293/page/n151/mode/2up|author=K. A. Nilakanta Sastri |year=1935}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |title=History of Kodumbalur Velir|pages=150 |url= https://archive.org/details/20241005_20241005_0633/page/149/mode/1up|author=V. Mahadevan |year=2009}}</ref> Nannan was another Velir chieftain who hailed from ].<ref>{{cite book|title=Culture of Creativity: Footprints of Indian Civilization, Volume 3 of Panorama of Indian Culture|isbn=8178880253|author=Rohan Peter, Utsav Manihara|publisher=Dominant Publishers and Distributors|year=2001|page=10}}</ref> Yet another Velir chief was Pekan of the Vel Avi family who ruled over Pothini, the modern ] near ].{{citation needed|date=July 2020}} Other ancient Velir chiefs of repute include Alumbil Vel, Alandur Vel, ] and Nangur Vel.<ref>{{cite book |editor1-last=van Bakel |editor1-first=Martin |editor2-first=Renée |editor2-last=Hagesteijn |editor3-first=Piet |editor3-last=van de Velde |first=Sudharshan |last=Seneviratne |chapter=The Twilight of the Perumakan: South Indian Polity Restructured and Incorporated |title=Pivot Politics: Changing Cultural Identities in Early State Formation Processes |year=1994 |publisher=Het Spinhuis |location=Amsterdam |isbn=978-90-5589-007-1 |page=172 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=TXOc1WJVpoQC}}</ref>
{{Cquote|<center>''The abode given by Athiyan Nedumān Añji, the Satyaputō<ref name="Saptar̥ṣīśvara temple in the lower Kaveri Delta, page 13">''Saptar̥ṣīśvara temple in the lower Kaveri Delta, page 13''</ref>''</center>}}


== See also ==
The inscription, assignable to first century CE, mentions the Athiyā Chief ], a heroic historic king celebrated in volumes of the ] classics '']'' and '']''. This Athiymān king was most likely a descendant of the dynasty mentioned in Asoka's edicts.<ref>Dr. R. Nagasamy, Asoka and the Tamil Country: The Evidence Of Archaeology</ref> The inscription records the endowment of a cave-shelter by the chieftain Atiyan Netuman Anci who sports the title Satiyaputo. The inscription gives the name of his clan (Atiyan), of his father (Netuman) and of himself (Anci). This clear statement enables researchers with absolute certainty, to identify a chieftain mentioned in the ] literature with a personage figuring in a ] inscription.<ref>I. Mahadevan, RECENT DISCOVERIES OF JAINA CAVE INSCRIPTIONS IN TAMILNADU</ref>
*]

*]
The Gummireddipura plates make mention of the Satyaputra-Velir Adigaman dynasty.{{Citation needed|date=September 2011}}
*]

An inscription belonging to one of the kings of the Irunkōvēl line from the Adhipuriswara temple in ] district mentions Velirs :

{{Cquote|<center>''Records in the reign of the Ganga-pallava king Kovijiya Kampavarman, gift of 27 kalanju of gold for offerings by Pudi Arindigai, wife of Videlvidigu-Ilangovelar of Kodumbalur in Ko-nadu. The money was placed in the hands of the residents of Vaikattur, a suburb of Tiruvorriuyur, on interest at 3 manjadi per kalanju per annum<ref name="South Indian shrines: illustrated By P. V. Jagadisa Ayyar, page 57">''South Indian shrines: illustrated By P. V. Jagadisa Ayyar, page 57''</ref>''</center>}}

==See also==
* ]
* ]
* ]


==References== ==References==
{{reflist|group=note}} {{reflist|group=note}}
{{reflist}} {{reflist}}

==External links==
* T.P. Sankaran Kutty Nair.


] ]

Latest revision as of 01:08, 28 December 2024

Royal house of Yadu dynasty

Velir
A statue of the Sangam period Velir king
CountryIndia
Current regionSouth India
TitlesSatyaputra
Connected familiesAy
Athiyamān
Irunkōvēl
Ilanji Vel
Malayamān
Nanan
Vēl Pāri
Vel Avi Pekan

The Velir were a royal house of minor dynastic kings and aristocratic chieftains in Tamilakam in the early historic period of South India. They had close relations with Chera, Chola and Pandya rulers through ruling and coronation rights. Medieval inscriptions and Sangam literature claim that they belong to the Yadu dynasty. Velir may refer to master of land.

Origin

A 12th-century statue of Agastya

The Purananuru, one of the Eight Anthologies of Sangam literature, praises King Irunkōvēl, a 49th generation descendant of the Vēlir clan whose ancestors appeared from the pitcher (தடவு) of a Northern sage (Agastya), and said to have ruled Thuvarai (Dvārakā) with a fort containing tall huge walls made of bronze. According to a commentary on Tholkappiyam, the earliest long work of Tamil literature, eighteen clans of the Velirs came from the city of Tuvarapati under the leadership of the sage Agastya. The legend goes that all the gods and sages went to the Himalayas to attend the marriage of Siva with Parvati due to which the earth started tilting to one side. Agastya was then requested to proceed south to restore the balance. On his way south, Agastya married Lopamudra and is said to have brought with him sage Jamadagni's son Trnadhumagni or Tholkappiyar, the author of Tamil grammar, and eighteen members of the Vrishni family along with eighteen crore Velir and Aruvalar. It has been suggested by some like Thapar and Champakalakshmi, that the ancestors of the Velir may have been related to the Yadava of Dvaraka and the inhabitants of the post Harappan Chacolithic Black and Red ware sites. According to Thapar, the Yadava may have belonged to a non Indo-Aryan language group. They eventually reached Tamraparni, and as the Velir-Perumakan group, cultivated its ancient society as a political, sociocultural and economic structure in South India and Sri Lanka.

Historian R. Nagaswamy writes that quite a number of these velirs were indigenous and natives of Tamil country but some of the velirs seem to have migrated from dvaraka.

The Irunkōvēl kings trace their lineage to the clan of Krishna; one of the inscriptions at Kodumbalur belonging to one of the kings in the Irunkovel line, namely Tennavan Irunkōvēl. The Moovar Koil record of Irukkuvel chief Boothi Vikramakesari lauds his father, Samarabirama, as Yadu-vamsa-ketu (Banner of the Yadu race). Historians consider the Ay velirs originated from the pastoralists of Ayars and they gained preeminence at an early stage in Tamil history.

History

The Velir were prominent in the Sangam period of Tamil polity, economy, and society. They are traced to the Yadavas (Yadu descent) of Dvaraka and linked up with all important dynasties of South India including the Chalukyas, Hoysalas, and Andhras. In Sangam literature, they are portrayed as independent chieftains who ruled in bordering areas of three major ruling dynasties, had considerable collective power and marriage alliances with Three Crowned Kings. "

While most of the rulers are substantiated by epigraphs and literatures, some of their history of ruling some dynasties is not recorded.

Also, some of the medieval dynasties of the western half of the peninsula claim to be descended from Yadhavas lineage and the Ay chiefs of Ay dynasty of the ninth century A.D. claim to be the Vrishni-kula as also the Mushika kings who link themselves with Haihaya origins. The Periya Puranam describes about a Haiheya clan king Eyarkon Kalikama Nayanar, he was a Vellalar saint and Commander-in-chief of the Chola army. The Ay velir chieftains, who settled down in Ay county (near Kanyakumari), were quite prominent in Tamil Nadu during the sangam age.

The Chalukyas and Kadambas belonging to Manavya gotra as being the descendants of the original ancestress Hariti. The Karmandala Satakam states that the Velirs of karmandalam belong to the same "Manavya" Gotra. The Chalukya kings were called Velpularasar and Velkulattarasar by some communities, that is kings over Vel country (pula means region or country). Later day references to them in Choļa inscriptions puts the Chalukyas under the Velir community ruling in Deccan.

Tamilakam in the Sangam Period

The Ay Vels were one such Velir group that ruled the territory in and around Venad during the Sangam period. The word Venad is derived from Vel -nadu, that is the country ruled by Vel chieftains. We know of a queen of Vikramaditya Varaguna, an Ay king of 9th century who is referred to as Murugan Chenthi and as Aykula Mahadevi from inscriptions. Her father, an Ay chief called Chathan Murugan is described as a Vennir Vellala that is a Vellala by birth, in the Huzur plates of king Karunandakkan, the predecessor of Vikramaditya Varaguna.

The Irunkōvēl lines of Velir kings are considered to be of the same stock as the Hoysalas as in one of the Sangam poems, the ancestor of the Irungovel chieftain is said to have ruled the fortified city of Tuvarai. This city is identified with the Hoysala capital Dwarasamudra by some historians. Also, the legend of the chief killing a tiger (Pulikadimal) has a striking resemblance to the origin legend of the Hoysalas where "sala" kills the tiger to save a sage. As per historian Arokiaswami, the Hoysala title "Ballala" is only a variant of the Tamil word "Vellala". The Hoysala king Veera Ballala III is even now locally known as the "Vellala Maharaja" in Thiruvannamalai, the town that served as their capital in 14th century.

The Irungovel chieftains were related to the Cholas through matrimony. These princes assumed both the Chola and Irungovel titles like for example there was one Adavallan Gangaikonda Cholan alias Irungolan during the time of Kulottunga I and then there was a certain Sendamangalam Udaiyan Araiyan Edirili Cholan alias Irungolan during the reign of Kulottunga III.

Kaluvul was a velir chieftain of Kamur who fought against the chera supremacy. Perum chera irumporai along with fourteen chieftains attacked kamur but perum chera irumporai was impressed with Kaluvuls resistance in battle field and let him rule kamur and accepted friendship from him. Some of the velirs under Kaluvul joined the chera after the defeat.

Sangam literature

The Purananuru, one of the Eight Anthologies of Sangam literature, praises King Irunkōvēl, a 49th generation descendant of the Vēlir clan whose ancestors appeared from the pitcher (தடவு) of a Northern sage (Agastya), and said to have ruled Thuvarai (Dvārakā) with a fort containing tall huge walls made of bronze.

Velir chiefs

Moovar Koil Temple Complex built by Irunkovel chieftain Boothi Vikramakesari

Athiyamān Nedumān Añci and his son Ezhini, were Athiyamān chieftains, based in Tagadur (present day village located in Dharmapuri district). They were contemporaries of Auvaiyar. The Sangam poem "Thagadur yathirai", now lost, was written about his battle with the Chera king. Another Velir was Irunkōvēl who ruled over Konaadu, the area in and around Pudukottai, with their capital in Kodumbalur. They belong to Kallar family, K. A. Nilakanta Sastri mentions in his study. Nannan was another Velir chieftain who hailed from Tulu Nadu. Yet another Velir chief was Pekan of the Vel Avi family who ruled over Pothini, the modern Palani near Madurai. Other ancient Velir chiefs of repute include Alumbil Vel, Alandur Vel, Ilanji Vel and Nangur Vel.

See also

References

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