Tamil Brahmi potsherds found at urn burial site
  • http://www.hindu.com/2010/03/05/stories/2010030554922200.htm


    * Tamil Brahmi potsherds found at urn burial site * T.S. Subramanian
    *Discovery, near Vadalur, opens new chapter in research
    * — Photos: K. Rajan

    * Rare find:(Left) A potsherd with the Tamil Brahmi letters reading “a-m,”
    followed by graffiti marks resembling Indus script and (right) another with
    the inscription reading “a-ti-y(a)-ka-n” found at an urn burial site at
    Marungur in Cuddalore district, Tamil Nadu. *

    CHENNAI: Three potsherds with Tamil Brahmi inscriptions have been discovered
    in an urn burial site at Marungur, 17 km from Vadalur in Cuddalore district.

    The broken pots with the inscriptions were placed in urns that could have
    contained the bodies of the dead or their bones. “This is the first time
    that such inscribed pots, with Tamil Brahmi letters, placed as grave goods
    in urn burials, have been recovered from any archaeological site in Tamil
    Nadu. This opens a new chapter in archaeological research in the State,” say
    three specialists in Tamil Brahmi inscriptions. They are K. Rajan, professor
    of History, Pondicherry University; Y. Subbarayalu, head, Indology, French
    Institute of Pondicherry; and V. Vedachalam, retired senior epigraphist,
    Tamil Nadu Archaeology Department.

    Such inscribed potsherds carrying personal names were earlier found at
    habitational sites at Arikamedu in Puducherry, Kodumanal near Erode, and
    Azhagankulam in Ramanathapuram district, but rarely at burial sites. Only
    two cist burials at Kodumanal and Porunthal in Dindigul district have
    yielded potsherds with Tamil Brahmi inscriptions. But Marungur is an urn
    burial site.

    It was J.R. Sivaramakrishnan, a lecturer in History, Annamalai University,
    who first noticed and collected the potsherds when an earthmover dug up the
    soil for strengthening the Vadalur-Panrutti Road at Marungur. Three red-ware
    urns with capstones were exposed, but the earthmover smashed the urns and
    the capstones. The potsherds with Tamil Brahmi inscriptions were inside
    three different urns. Several grave goods (pottery) were exposed along with
    the urns.

    Of the three potsherds, one can be nearly fully assembled, and it has five
    Tamil Brahmi letters reading ‘a-ti-y(a)-ka-n.' This could probably be read
    as ‘Atiykan.' As the front portion of the potsherd is broken, the preceding
    word, if any, is not known. The second potsherd has four letters, of which
    two are Tamil Brahmi, reading ‘a-m.' The remaining two are graffiti marks,
    resembling the Indus script, says Dr. Rajan. The front portion of the
    potsherd is missing.

    The third has three letters, reading ‘ma-la-a,' and the end portion has not
    been found. “It looks as if all the three inscriptions are personal names.
    Palaeographically, the inscriptions may be dated to the first century B.C.”
    say the three specialists.

    For the first time, in the lower Cauvery delta, Tamil Brahmi letters
    inscribed on pots were found in an urn burial site in an insignificant
    village in Tamil Nadu, says Dr. Rajan. “The discovery conveys, in clear
    terms, that buried grave goods also carried inscribed pots. Besides, it
    shows literacy had reached interior villages in the first century B.C.
    itself. The names inscribed on the pots were, perhaps, the names of the dead
    persons whose bodies were kept in the urns.”

    Others who examined the potsherds were N. Alagappan, head of the Department
    of History, Annamalai University; S. Kannan, P. Kalaiselvan and E.
    Manamaran.

    There are a number of references to urn burials in Sangam poems. At
    Marungur, there is also an early historic habitational mound, called
    ‘Erikaraimodu' and ‘Pidarikollai' that yielded black and red ware, bricks
    and terracotta artefacts on the southern side of the village. A preliminary
    survey suggested that Marungur must have existed from the first century B.C.
    A planned excavation may yield important data on the urn burial culture and
    its relation to the early historic Tamil Nadu, as the site seems to be rich
    in inscribed pottery, say Dr. Rajan and Dr. Vedachalam.

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