Iravatham Mahadevan's Early Tamil Epigraphy - review by Indira Parthasarathy - 3
  • Pandya Copper coin with Tamil Brahimi Legend, Karur, First Century
    B.C. (go the site - mathy)


    The chapter on "Language" is a significant part of this book.
    Mahadevan studied and restudied the inscriptions over and over again
    and found the confusion was not in them but in the minds of those who
    read them wrongly. He says, "The argument for the present study is
    that starting from accurately copied texts and applying the
    orthographic rules which can be empirically formulated for
    reading the texts, it can be demonstrated that the language of the
    cave inscriptions despite the Prakrit loan words, is Old Tamil not
    materially different from the language of later Tamil inscriptions or
    even literary texts in its basic phonological, morphological and
    syntactical features." He made several expeditions to those caves and
    edited directly from the stone that helped him arrive at this most
    significant conclusion. Though Br-ahm-i was the mother of all the
    scripts in India, Devan-agari and Dravidian, it was adapted
    in a way to suit the genius of the language of the region. There
    were ! five variations of the Br-ahm-i script such as (1) Northern Br-
    ahm-i. (2) Southern Br-ahm-i, (3) Bhattiprolu script, (4) Sinhala- Br-
    ahm-i and (5) Tamil- Br-ahm-i.

    Tamil- Br-ahm-i evolved after certain changes were made in Br-ahm-i
    to suit the phonetic system in the Tamil language.

    Tamil- Br-ahm-i omitted sounds not present in Tamil viz., voiced
    consonants, aspirates, sibilants, the anusv-ara (.m) and the visarga
    (-h). Tamil has certain sounds for which there were no signs in Br-
    ahm-i, which called for additional letters viz. -l, .l, -r, -n.

    By introducing a diacritical mark called pu.l.li (dots) three things
    were achieved: (a) basic consonants in final position were indicated
    (b) ligaturing of consonant clusters was avoided (c) the short vowels
    `e,' `o' were differentiated from the respective long vowels.

    more to come...

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