Tamil-Brahmi script found at Pattanam in Kerala
  • Hi All,

    The Tamil-Brahmi script with the letters "a ma na," meaning Jaina, found at
    Pattanam in Kerala. The letters are followed by two megalithic graffiti
    symbols which could not be identified.
    http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/article1535109.ece

    A Tamil-Brahmi script on a pot rim, reading “a ma na”, meaning a Jaina, has
    been found at Pattanam in Ernakulam district, Kerala, establishing that
    Jainism was prevalent on the west coast at least from second century CE
    (Common Era). The script can be dated to circa second century CE. The three
    Tamil-Brahmi letters are followed by two symbols generally called Megalithic
    graffiti and these two symbols could not be identified. This is the third
    Tamil-Brahmi script to be found in the Pattanam excavations.

    The Kerala Council for Historical Research (KCHR) has been conducting
    excavations at Pattanam since 2007, with the approval of the Archaeological
    Survey of India. The pot-rim was found during the sixth season of the
    excavation currently under way. Pattanam is now identified as the thriving
    port called Muziris by the Romans. Tamil Sangam literature celebrates it as
    Muciri.

    P.J. Cherian, Director of the Pattanam excavations, said: “The discovery, in
    the Kerala context, has a great significance because of the dearth of
    evidence so far of the pre-Brahminical past of Kerala, especially in
    relation to the socio-cultural and religious life of the people. We have
    direct evidence from Pattanam now with the Brahmi script which mentions “a
    ma na” [Jaina] and so we have evidence that Jainism was present in Kerala.”

    Iravatham Mahadevan, a scholar in Indus and Tamil-Brahmi scripts, said the
    discovery showed that “there was Jainism on the west coast at least from
    second century CE. The importance of the finding is that it
    stratigraphically corroborates the earlier datings given to the Tamil-Brahmi
    cave inscriptions in Tamil Nadu on palaeographic evidence. I will date this
    sherd, on palaeographic evidence, to circa second century CE.”

    The Tamil word “a ma na” meaning a Jaina was derived from Sanskrit Sramana
    via Prakrit Samana and Tamil Camana, said Mr. Mahadevan. The two megalithic
    graffiti, following the three Tamil-Brahmi letters, could not be identified.
    “But we know from similar finds in Tamil Nadu, especially at Kodumanal, that
    Tamil-Brahmi letters and megalithic graffiti symbols occur side by side,” he
    said. Mr. Mahadevan was sure that “many more exciting finds will be made at
    Muciri [Pattanam] which was a flourishing port on the west coast during the
    Sangam age in Tamil Nadu, which coincided with the classical period in the
    West.”

    Mr. Cherian, who is also Director of KCHR, said the discovery “excites me as
    an excavator because it was for the first time we are getting direct
    evidence relating to a religious system or faith in Kerala.” The pot might
    have belonged to a Jaina monk. The broken rim with the script was found at a
    depth of two metres in trench 29 in the early historical layer which “by our
    stratigraphic understanding could belong to third-second CE period,” he
    said. The associated finds included amphora sherds, iron nails, and beads
    among others.

    In a trial trench laid earlier at Pattanam by Professor V. Selvakumar,
    Assistant Professor, Department of Archaeology and Epigraphy, Tamil
    University, Thanjavur and K.P. Shajan of KCHR, a pot-sherd with the
    Tamil-Brahmi letters reading “ur pa ve o” was found. Later, another
    Tamil-Brahmi script with the letters “ca ta [n]” was found. Mr. Mahadevan
    praised the Pattanam excavations as “the best conducted excavations in south
    India.” He said it was “a potentially important site and excavations are
    being done in a competent way by Mr. Cherian and his team from the KCHR and
    they have involved experts from around the world.”

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