Kundavai Pirāttiyār Explained

Kundavai
Princess of Tanjore
Birth Name:Ālvār Sri Parāntakan Sri Kundavai Nachiyar
Birth Date:945 CE
Birth Place:Tirukoilur, Chola Empire
(modern-day Tamil Nadu, India)
Death Place:Pazhaiyarai, Chola Empire
(modern-day Tamil Nadu, India)
Spouse:Vallavaraiyan Vandiyadevan
Dynasty:Chola (by birth)
Bana (by marriage)
Father:Parantaka II
Mother:Vanavan Mahadevi
Religion:Hinduism (Shaivism sect)

Kundavai Pirattiyar, commonly known mononymously as Kundavai, was a Chola Indian princess who lived in the tenth century in South India.[1] She was the daughter of Parantaka II and Vanavan Mahadevi.[2] [3] [4] She was born in Tirukoilur and was the elder sister of Chola emperor Rajaraja I. She had title as Ilaiyapirātti Kundavai Nachiyar.

However, when her husband Vallavaraiyan Vandiyadevan was crowned king in his hometown Bana Kingdom, she did not accept the offer to become queen of the kingdom and remained as the princess of Tanjore.

Life

Kundavai (also transliterated as Kundhavai or Kunthavai) was born in 945 CE. She was the only daughter of the Chola king Parantaka II and queen Vanavan Mahadevi. She had an elder brother – Aditha Chola II, and a younger brother – Raja Raja Chola I.

Kundavai married Vallavaraiyan Vandiyadevan, a member of the Bana Dynasty, a feudatory of the Cholas mentioned in the Tanjore inscriptions. He was also the commander of the Chola infantry that fought in Sri Lanka in the days of Rajaraja l. The territory under his authority was known as 'Vallavaraiyanadu', and occasionally 'Brahmadesam'.

Along with her great-aunt Sembiyan Mahadevi, Kundavai brought up her nephew, Rajendra I, who was the son of Rajaraja I and Thiripuvana Madeviyar, princess of Kodumbalur. Rajendra I spent most of his childhood in Pazhaiyarai with Kundavai and Sembiyan Mahadevi.

In popular culture

Kundavai is celebrated as mentor to Rajaraja I. Her influence continued into the next generation as she helped rear Rajendra Chola. Uniquely for her era, where royal women were used to forge alliances, Kundavai's father allowed her to exercise her free will, whereupon the princess resolved to stay in the Chola kingdom all her life. Esteemed throughout the Chola realm for her taste and learning, Kundavai was requested to look after the daughters of other royal clans, tutoring them in art, music, and literature.

Life and works

Kundavai commissioned many temples for Tirthankars, Vishnu and Siva. She revered many Jain Monks and Vedantic seers .[5] [6] She features in Chola inscriptions.[7] [8]

She is believed to have built many Jain temples but at least two Jain temples have inscriptions that records to have been built by her, one at Rajarajeswaram later known as Darasuram and the other at Tirumalai.[8] She built a hospital after her father named Vinnagar athura salai at Thanjavur and donated extensive lands for its maintenance.[9] She made lavish donations to the Brihadeeswarar Temple at Thanjavur during the reign of her younger brother Rajaraja Chola I and her nephew Rajendra Chola I.

One of the inscriptions reads:

[10] Some of the images or idols set up by princess Kundavai include:[11]

Here is an excerpt from the 29th year of Rajaraja that lists some of her gifts to Brihadeeswarar Temple:

Kundavai spent the last days of her life with her nephew Rajendra I at the palace in Pazhaiyarai.[12] [13] [14]

In popular culture

See also

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Lalit kalā, Issue 15, page 34
  2. Early Chola art, page 183
  3. A Topographical List of Inscriptions in the Tamil Nadu and Kerala States: Thanjavur District, page 180
  4. Worshiping Śiva in medieval India: ritual in an oscillating universe, page 5
  5. Women in Indian life and society, page 49
  6. South Indian Inscriptions – Vol II-Part 1 (Tanjore temple Inscriptions)
  7. Śrīnidhiḥ: perspectives in Indian archaeology, art, and culture, page 364
  8. Encyclopaedia of Jainism, page 1000
  9. Ancient system of oriental medicine, page 96
  10. Portrait sculpture in south India, page 34
  11. Middle Chola temples:Rajaraja I to Kulottunga I (A.D. 985–1070), page 42
  12. Great women of India, page 306
  13. Encyclopaedia of Status and Empowerment of Women in India: Status and position of women in ancient, medieval and modern India, page 176
  14. Middle Chola temples: Rajaraja I to Kulottunga I (A.D. 985–1070), page 381