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'''Mudaliar''' (alternatively spelled: ''Mudaliyar'', ''Mudliyar'', also ''Mudali'' or ''Moodley'') is a caste title used by the people belonging to various ] ]s and in the ]. Castes using Mudaliar title speak ] as their native language. '''Mudaliar''' (alternatively spelled: ''Mudaliyar'', ''Mudliyar'', also ''Mudali'' or ''Moodley'') is a caste title used by the people belonging to various ] ]s and in the ]. Castes using Mudaliar title speak ] as their native language.in large numbers they are doing weaving in kanchipuram tamilnadu


==Etymology== ==Etymology==

Revision as of 02:03, 24 February 2017

Ethnic group
Mudaliar
Regions with significant populations
Tamil Nadu, Sri Lanka
Languages
Tamil
Religion
Hindu

Mudaliar (alternatively spelled: Mudaliyar, Mudliyar, also Mudali or Moodley) is a caste title used by the people belonging to various Tamil castes and in the Tamil diaspora. Castes using Mudaliar title speak Tamil as their native language.in large numbers they are doing weaving in kanchipuram tamilnadu

Etymology

The surname is derived from the honorary title Mudali meaning a person of first rank in the Tamil Chola feudal society which was bestowed upon top-ranking bureaucratic officials and army commanders in medieval South India. The surname is generally prevalent among Indian Tamils and the Tamil diaspora though it is also used in other parts of South India.

Some of the Mudali clans of Thondaimandalam migrated to Sri Lanka during the period of the medieval poet Kambar. For example, some of the Tamils in Ceylon trace their lineage to this group, some of whom had become saints called Nayanars. The book The Tamils in Early Ceylon by C. Sivaratnam traces some of the Mudaliyars in Ceylon to Thaninayaka Mudaliyar (among others), a rich Saiva Vellalar who emigrated to Ceylon from Tondaimandalam.

Castes using the Mudaliar title include:

Notable people

Main article: List of Mudaliars

References

  1. Irschick, Eugene F. Dialogue and History: Constructing South India, 1795-1895. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1994. direct web reference: http://content.cdlib.org/xtf/view?docId=ft038n99hg&brand=eschol
  2. History of Tirupati: The Tiruvengadam Temple By T. K. T. Viraraghavacharya
  3. Some Contributions of South India to Indian Culture - Page 161 by S. Krishnaswami Aiyangar
  4. The Tamils in Early Ceylon By C. Sivaratnam, https://books.google.com/books?vid=0PrqSaY8TV9DtgCG9v&id=hlocAAAAMAAJ&q=mudaliyar+vellala&dq=mudaliyar+vellala&pgis=1
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