The Pallavas and the Pahlavas
  • http://www.hindu.com/mp/2008/03/31/stories/2008033150300500.htm

    Several readers have responded to last Monday's piece which raised
    two questions. One was on the origin of the Pallavas and the other
    on whether the lion motif spread from India eastwards or came from
    the east to South India.

    There were a surprising number of correspondents who agreed that
    there was every likelihood of the Pallavas being descended from the
    Parthians of Persia. A corruption of the term `Parthian' is the
    word `Pahlava', sounding so similar to `Pallava'. Pahlavi is a
    recognised ancient language of Persia, deriving from the Aramaic,
    and, if I remember right, `Pahlavi' was part of the old Shah's
    name/title.

    Amongst all the responses I received was a learned paper sent to me
    by a reader, titled India's Parthian Colony. It is by a Dr. Samar
    Abbas, a Bhubaneshwar-based scientist. Among the points he makes is
    that many of the sculptures in Mamallapuram have an unquestionable
    affinity to Persian/Pahlava features. Apart from the lion symbol, so
    frequently found in Persia, he points to the numerous statues
    featuring the tall, cylindrical headdresses so common in Persia at
    one time. The pillars too resemble those of Perseopolis, and some of
    the roofs of the Pancha Rathas, as well as the tower of the
    Kailasanatha Temple in Kancheepuram, show a definite affinity to
    similar features in the shrines of Babylon, once part of the
    Parthian empire. Referring to anthropological evidence in many of
    the sculptures, he points out that many of the nobles are tall and
    are depicted with long, thin noses and elongated heads, typical
    Persian characteristics. These features are found in northern Tamil
    Nadu and southern Andhra Pradesh, amongst the Vellalas and the
    Reddis, many of whom are as fair and as thin as the Persians, it is
    pointed out.

    The Pahlava hypothesis has it that there was a Parthian migration to
    North India, from where the migrants were pushed southwards by
    invading hordes from the north. In time, they settled in
    Tondaimandalam and evolved as the Pallavas. Like the Normans in
    England, the Germanic Lombards in Italy, and the Greek Ptolemys in
    Egypt, the Pahlavas in time adopted the local religion, Saivism, and
    language, Old Tamil, and became Dravidians.

    Tondaimandalam's bounds were the hills of Tirupati in the north, the
    Eastern Ghats in the west, the Pennar in the south, and the sea in
    the east. It is this sea that the Pallavas learnt to conquer. But
    were the Parthians a seafaring people?

    Reader Pradeep Chakravarthy, a temple buff, feels that the name
    Varman in Pallava and Cambodian royalty is noteworthy. So is the
    brick construction in early Pallava temples and the stonework of the
    towers of Chola temples, both of which are not unlike Angkor Wat. He
    also points out that in many a Tamil Nadu temple there are `sages'
    who have been sculpted with Chinese-style moustaches, and that in
    some Tamil Nadu temples the dwajasthambham over a tortoise can
    occasionally be seen, the significance of this being the Hindu
    cosmological belief that the world is supported by eight white
    elephants that stand over a tortoise. That sounds almost Thai.
    Chakravarthy, however, does not point out whether these influences
    came from the east or spread to it.
  • Hmm.. did any of our scholars comment on this? As per my knowledge of
    history, I think this seems to a very controversial subject that the
    skills we had is not actually ours, brought by somebody else from
    outside.
  • Hi
    the parsees celebrated their new year last week.
    exactly the same day the persian new year was celebrated in iran.

    we had a strong persian immigration in 800- 900 ad in north india.

    but mostly traders and common men.



    and vijay
    this pahlavi dynasty of the shah of iran is a two king dynasty. a
    common soldier after capturing the throne claimed to come fromt he
    2000 year old pahlavi dynasty and the western world kept up that
    image.

    venketesh

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