Veerapandiya Kattabomman | |
Palaiyakkarar of Tenkasi | |
Reign: | 1792-16 October 1799 |
Father: | Jagaveera Kattabomman nayakar |
Mother: | Arumugathammal |
Spouse: | Jakkammal |
Birth Place: | Panchalankurichi (in present-day Thoothukudi District, Tamil Nadu, India) |
Death Place: | Kayatharu (now in Thoothukudi District, Tamil Nadu, India) |
Veerapandiya Kattabomman[1] was an 18th-century Palayakarrar and king of Panchalankurichi[2] [3] in Tamil Nadu, India. He fought the British East India Company and was captured by the British with the help of the ruler of the kingdom of Pudukottai, Vijaya Raghunatha Tondaiman, and at the age of 39 he was hanged at Kayathar on 16 October 1799.[4]
Veerapandiya Kattabomman was born to his parents Jagaveera Kattabomman Nayakar and Arumugathammal in a Telugu origin family. His father Jagaveera was the polygar of Panchalankurichi. He belonged to the Bommu and Aathi Kattabomman clans of Panchalankurichi. He inherited his father's position as the polygar of Panchalankurichi when he turned 30, becoming the 47th polygar of the village.[5]
To acquire the support of the local Tamil people, his father Jagaveera Kattabomman Nayakar named his son Pandiya Kattabomman Nayakar and added a shorter version "Veera" from his own name Jagveera.
See also: Polygar Wars.
Veerapandiya as a polygar retained the right to collect taxes and recruit soldiers in his domain, the British viewed the polygars as illegitimate rulers and wanted to end their taxation powers, and curtail their power and influence. To this end they introduced a new tax policy through which they intended to completely bypass the polygars and other intermediaries during tax collection.[6] Kattabomman saw this as an attempt to usurp his sovereignty over his domain by the British and stopped paying them tributes contending that his taxes ought to be waived due to the prolonged drought in his domain,[7] whilst fighting against polygars allied with the British.
In 1798 Kattabomman and the then Tirunelveli collector Jackson got into a disagreement over left over taxes, when Kattabomman was able to meet with Jackson three months later in Ramnathapuram, where there was an altercation between company troops and the polygar resulting in the death of the deputy commandant of the company's forces Clarke, Kattabomman was acquitted from this following an inquiry. In 1799 following his refusal to meet with the collector, the British sent an armed force under Major John Alexander Bannerman.[8]
Kattabomman had to make a stand at his fort in Panchalankurichi, largely unprepared, although his forces were able to hold back the company troops initially, his fort was incapable of taking on British artillery, so he withdrew from the fort into nearby forests, fighting a guerilla campaign till his capture on October 1 1799 with the assistance of polygars allied to the British like Ettappan of Ettaiyapuram and the king of Pudukkottai Vijaya Raghunatha Thondaiman.[9]
Following his capture, Kattabomman was interrogated for 15 days and sentenced to death. He was hanged to death at Kayathar on 16 October 1799.
His surviving relatives including his deaf-mute brother Umaidurai were also arrested and locked up in the fort of Palayamkottai, however Umaidurai escaped, joined up with other polygars and continued fighting the British. After his defeat and capture in October 1801, he too was hanged along with the other polygars who resisted the British, while the Panchalankurichi fort was razed to the ground, with its site ploughed over and planted with castor seeds, and its name expunged from all registers in the district.
The historian Susan Bayly says that Kattabomman is considered a Robin Hood-like figure in local folklore and is the subject of several traditional narrative ballads in the kummi verse form. The site of his execution at Kayathar has become a "powerful local shrine" and at one time sheep were sacrificed there.[10] The Tamil Nadu government rebuilt the Panchalankurichi fort in 1974. The Government of Tamil Nadu maintains a memorial at Kayathar and the remnants of the old fort at Panchalankurichi is protected by the Archaeological Survey of India.[11] [12] In 2006, the Tirunelveli district administration organised a festival at Panchalankurichi on his birth anniversary.[13]
The 1959 Tamil-language film Veerapandiya Kattabomman, starring Sivaji Ganesan, is based on his life.[14]
To commemorate the bicentenary of Kattabomman's hanging, the Government of India released a postal stamp in his honour on 16 October 1999.[15] The Indian Navy communications centre at Vijayanarayanam is named INS Kattabomman.[16]