Guest guest Posted December 4, 2001 Report Share Posted December 4, 2001 Dear List Members, The most controverial issue about fixing the date of old literature is, perhaps, that of tolkAppiyam, the oldest extant Tamil grammar. Dr B G L Swamy has mentioned 20 different dates by different authors at p.292 of his article entitled "The Date of Tolkappiyam - a Retrospect", Annals of Oriental Research, Univ. of Madras, 1975, pp.292-317. These dates vary from 8000 BC to 8th century AD, the last one arrived at by A C Burnell. The author of this article concludes:"The fact that five of its commentaries appeared in the 13th century AD alone suggests that the treatise could have been written a century or two earlier". This means that as per Dr Swamy, the date of Tolkappiyam should be about 11th or 12th century AD. Dr Naga Ganeasan has mentioned another reference dealing with the date of Tolkappiyam:"S N Kandaswamy, The Age of Tolkappiam, JTS 20 (Dec.1981) 37-71." (vide his message dated 3 Nov. 2001 to <CTamil> under the subject "Enquiry about Tamil Grammars"). Could somebody having access to this journal make us aware of the date (age) of Tolkappiyam arrived at by Dr Kandaswamy ? Best regards. Narayan Prasad ______________ Nokia 5510 looks weird sounds great. Go to http://uk.promotions./nokia/ discover and win it! The competition ends 16 th of December 2001. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 10, 2001 Report Share Posted December 10, 2001 INDOLOGY, narayan prasad <prasad_cwprs> wrote: > Dear List Members, > > The most controverial issue about fixing the date > of old literature is, perhaps, that of tolkAppiyam, > the oldest extant Tamil grammar. > [...] > > Dr Naga Ganeasan has mentioned another reference > dealing with the date of Tolkappiyam:"S N Kandaswamy, > The Age of Tolkappiam, JTS 20 (Dec.1981) 37-71." > (vide his message dated 3 Nov. 2001 to > <CTamil> under the subject "Enquiry > about Tamil Grammars"). Could somebody having access > to this journal make us aware of the date (age) of > Tolkappiyam arrived at by Dr Kandaswamy ? Dear Narayan Prasad, Here is what S.N. Kandaswamy writes in the conclusion of his article, on p. 68: "As a result of the study on the historicity "of the prologue, comparative analysis "of the language structure of tolkAppiyam "and the Tamil-Brahmi inscriptions, some "observations on meyppATTiyal, uvamaiyiyal "and ceyyuLiyal and the social and religious "conditions as gleaned in tolkAppiyam, "it is proper to conclude that the major portion "of tolkAppiyam (say 90% or even more), "should have been composed "not later than 300 B.C." (_The Age of tolkAppiyam_, Journal of Tamil Studies, N°20, pp.37-71) > > Best regards. > > Narayan Prasad Warm regards -- Jean-Luc CHEVILLARD (Paris) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 11, 2001 Report Share Posted December 11, 2001 INDOLOGY, narayan prasad <prasad_cwprs> wrote: > The most controverial issue about fixing the date > of old literature is, perhaps, that of tolkAppiyam, > the oldest extant Tamil grammar. > > Dr B G L Swamy has mentioned 20 different dates > by different authors at p.292 of his article entitled > "The Date of Tolkappiyam - a Retrospect", Annals of > Oriental Research, Univ. of Madras, 1975, pp.292-317. > These dates vary from 8000 BC to 8th century AD, the > last one arrived at by A C Burnell. The author of this > article concludes:"The fact that five of its > commentaries appeared in the 13th century AD alone > suggests that the treatise could have been written a > century or two earlier". This means that as per Dr > Swamy, the date of Tolkappiyam should be about 11th or > 12th century AD. Before scholars decide on the dates of layers of tolkAppiyam, Gift Siromony's discovery of puLLi letter in rock inscrptions dating to mid 2nd century, and R. Nagasamy found the unique puLLi letter used in mid 2nd century AD Satakarni inscription. The definition of puLLi is in tolkAppiyam. CTamil/message/311 Iravatham Mahadevan was dating TolkApiyam sections to 5th century. Conclusive archaeological data discovered by Gift Siromony, Prof. S. Raju, ... made him revise his 5th century date backward by at least 300 years. I. Mahadevan was talking about puLLi in 5th century back in 1960. Now he has revised his earlier guesses. INDOLOGY/message/1516 Tolkaapiyar tradition comparable to Buddha or Socrates: INDOLOGY/message/833 The TolkAppiyam grammar's antiquity and the recent archaeological discoveries of Tamil Brahmi inscriptions in Sri Lanka may be related. Brahmi was invented in Ceylon in 4th century BCE, we have archaeological occurence of earliest Brahmi there. Given the similarities between Semitic alphabets and early Brahmi, did the trade with Arabic lands trigger Brahmi development in Sri Lanka? Regards, N. Ganesan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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