Vanni chieftaincies explained

Conventional Long Name:Vanni chieftaincies
Common Name:Vanni
Era:Transitional period
Government Type:Chiefdom
Year Start:13th century
Event Start:Māgha's invasion of Polonnaruwa
Event End:Death of last Vanni ruler Pandara Vanniyan
Event2:Vanniyar Rebellion
Date Event2:1782
P1:Kingdom of Polonnaruwa
Flag S1:Flag of Ceylon (1875–1948).svg
S1:British Ceylon
Flag Type:Flag of Pandara Vanniyan
Image Map Caption:Sri Lanka in the 1520s

The Vanni chieftaincies or Vanni tribes was a region between Anuradhapura and Jaffna, but also extending to along the eastern coast to Panama and Yala, during the Transitional and Kandyan periods of Sri Lanka. The heavily forested land was a collection of chieftaincies of principalities that were a collective buffer zone between the Jaffna Kingdom, in the north of Sri Lanka, and the Sinhalese kingdoms in the south. Traditionally the forest regions were ruled by Vedda rulers. Later on, the emergence of these chieftaincies was a direct result of the breakdown of central authority and the collapse of the Kingdom of Polonnaruwa in the 13th century, as well as the establishment of the Jaffna Kingdom in the Jaffna Peninsula. Control of this area was taken over by dispossessed Sinhalese nobles and chiefs of the South Indian military of Māgha of Kalinga (1215–1236), whose 1215 invasion of Polonnaruwa led to the kingdom's downfall. Sinhalese chieftaincies would lay on the northern border of the Sinhalese kingdom while the Tamil chieftaincies would border the Jaffna Kingdom and the remoter areas of the eastern coast, north western coast outside of the control of either kingdom.

The chieftains, who were known as Vanniars, would function like feudal lords in their territories. During much of the Transitional period when the island was politically unstable, depending on the situation at the time, the chieftains would owe their allegiance to one or the other kingdom. They offered military protection to those who came under their authority. Vanniars referred to a broad category of people who could have been appointees of the Sinhalese kings, who administered outlying districts or autonomous rulers of large, sparsely populated and undeveloped lands. The Vanniars in general paid tribute to the Kingdom of Kotte and later to the Kingdom of Kandy, apart from Confederation of Northern Tamil Vanniars paid tribute to the Jaffna Kingdom until its collapses.

Vanniar

See main article: Vanniar (Chieftain). Vanniar or Vanniyar was a title used by tribute-paying feudal chiefs in medieval Sri Lanka. It was also recorded as the name of a caste of Mukkuvars amongst Sri Lankan Tamils in the Vanni District of northern Sri Lanka during the early 1900s.

Origin theories

The Vannimai ruling class arose from a multi-ethnic and multi-caste background. According to primary sources such as the Yalpana Vaipava Malai, they were of Mukkuvar, Karaiyar, Vellalar and other caste origins.[1] [2] [3] Some scholars conclude the Vanniyar title as a rank of a local chieftain which was introduced by the Velaikkarar mercenaries of the Chola dynasty.[4]

Some Sri Lankan historians derive the title Vannimai from the Tamil word vanam, meaning "forest", with Vannia or Wannia meaning "person from the forest", and Vannimais being large tracts of forested land.

Feudal chiefs

Tamil chronicles such as the 18th-century Yalpana Vaipava Malai and stone inscriptions like the Konesar Kalvettu recount that the Chola royal Kankan, a descendant of the legendary King Manu Needhi Cholan of Thiruvarur, Chola Nadu, restored the Koneswaram temple at Trincomalee and the Kantalai tank after finding them in ruins. Kankan visited the Munneswaram temple on the west coast of Sri Lanka, before settling in the east of the island. According to the chronicles, he extensively renovated and expanded the shrine; he was crowned with the ephitet Kulakottan, meaning Builder of Tank and Temple.[5] [6] [7] In addition to this reconstruction, Kulakottan paid attention to agriculture cultivation and economic development in the area, inviting the Vanniar chief Tanniuna Popalen and other families to a newly founded town in the Thampalakamam area to maintain the Kantalai tank and the temple itself.[8] As a result of his policies, the Vanni region flourished. The Vanniar claim descent from this chief.[8] [9] [10] Modern historians and anthropologists agree as historically factual the connection of the Vanniars with the Konesar temple, and some cite epigraphical evidence to date Kullakottan's renovations to 432-440 AD. Others cite poetic and inscriptional evidence to date his renovations to as early as 1589 BC.[8]

After the re-rise of the Tamil kingdoms and the demise of the Rajarata after the twelfth century AD, many petty chiefs took power in the buffer lands between the northern Jaffna Kingdom and the southern kingdoms of Kotte and Kandy. These petty chefs paid tribute to the Jaffna Kingdom. Sometimes they were independent of any central control, or were subdued by the southern kingdoms for strategic advantages, before eventually being restored. Many kings and chiefs with titles such as Vannian or Vannia ruled in northern areas of modern Sri Lanka during the Jaffna era. Some of the Vanni chieftains were immigrants from southern India, and ruled over a populace known as rate-atto in Sinhalese. The Vanni chieftains ruled following local custom, supported by a coterie of local officials. Their rule had a noticeable influence on the language of the local populace.[11]

Northern chieftaincies

Among the medieval Vanni chieftaincies, those of Panankamam, Melpattu, Mulliyavalai, Karunavalpattu, Karrikattumulai, Tennamaravadi and Trincomalee in the north of the island were incorporated into the Jaffna Kingdom. Hence the Tamil Vanni just south of the Jaffna peninsula and in the eastern Trincomalee district is ruled by Confederacy of Vanni rulers usually paid an annual tribute to the northern kingdom instead of taxes. The tribute was in cash, grains, honey, elephants, and ivory. The annual tribute system was enforced due to the greater distance from Jaffna.[12] [13] [14] The arrival of the Portuguese to the island caused a brief loss of some of Jaffna's territory. Queirós, an historian of Portuguese origin, says of the Jaffna kingdom: which indicated the kings of Jaffna just prior to capitulation to the Portuguese had jurisdiction over an area corresponding to the modern Northern Province of Sri Lanka and parts of the northern half of the eastern province and that the Portuguese claimed these based on their conquest.[15] Following Portuguese defeat by the Dutch, the Mannar, Jaffna islands and the Vanni lands were reincorporated into the Tamil Coylot Wannees Country by the early 18th century.

Western and Eastern chieftaincies

See main article: Demala Pattu. Vannimais in the Batticalao and Puttalam districts were under the control of chiefs of Mukkuvar origin. Puttalam was under Jaffna kingdom sovereignty in the 14th century, where it served as the second capital of the kingdom during the pearl fishing season. With the strengthening of Portuguese influence in the Kandyan and Kotte kingdoms, Vannimais in the eastern Batticaloa and Ampara districts came under the nominal control of the Kandyan Kingdom after the sixteenth century, although they had considerable autonomy under their chiefs. The Vanni Chieftaincy in the Puttalam districts came under the control of Kotte Kingdom.[1] [16] [13]

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. McGilvray, Mukkuvar Vannimai: Tamil Caste and Matriclan Ideology in Batticaloa, Sri Lanka, p.34-97
  2. Book: McGilvray, Dennis B.. Crucible of Conflict: Tamil and Muslim Society on the East Coast of Sri Lanka. 2008-05-07. Duke University Press. 978-0822341611. 156. en.
  3. Book: Arasaratnam, Sinnappah. Ceylon and the Dutch, 1600-1800: External Influences and Internal Change in Early Modern Sri Lanka. 1996-01-01. n Variorum. 9780860785798. 422. en.
  4. Book: History and Archaeology of Sri Lanka. Guṇavardhana. Raṇavīra. Rōhaṇadīra. Măndis. 2000. Central Cultural Fund, Ministry of Cultural and Religious Affairs. 9789556131086. 210. en.
  5. Schalk . Peter . 2002 . Buddhism Among Tamils in Pre-colonial Tamilakam and Ilam: Prologue. The Pre-Pallava and the Pallava period . Acta Universitatis Upsaliensis . . 19-20 . 159, 503 .
  6. Hellmann-Rajanayagam . Dagmar . 1994 . Tamils and the meaning of history . Contemporary South Asia . Routledge . 3 . 1 . 3–23 . 10.1080/09584939408719724.
  7. Book: Pillay. K. . 1963 . South India and Ceylon . . 4285088. The Tamil stone inscription Konesar Kalvettu details King Kulakottan's involvement in the restoration of Koneswaram temple in 438 A.D..
  8. Book: Pridham, Charles . An historical, political, and statistical account of Ceylon and its dependencies. Trincomalee - Its Early History. T. and W. Boone . 1849 . London . 2556531 . 544–546.
  9. Book: Sivaratnam. C . 1968 . Tamils in early Ceylon. Colombo . 84313. As for cultivators he got fifty one tribes of Vanniyars, a caste of agriculture experts from the Pandyan coasts... on the invitation of Kulakoddan in c 493 for the noble purpose of cultivating the land at Tambalakamam..
  10. Book: Arumugam. S . 1980 . The Lord of Thiruketheeswaram, an ancient Hindu sthalam of hoary antiquity in Sri Lanka. S.Arumugam . Colombo . 10020492. Kulakottan also paid special attention to agricultural practice and economic development, the effects of which made the Vanni region to flourish ; temples were cared for and regular worship instituted at these, .
  11. Web site: Book review of Spoken Language of Nuwarakalaviya . 2008-02-04 . D.G.B.de Silva . https://web.archive.org/web/20120210192940/http://wanni.org/south-vanni.htm . 2012-02-10 . dead.
  12. Peebles, History of Sri Lanka, p.31-32
  13. Gunasingam, Sri Lankan Tamil Nationalism, p.53
  14. Web site: Vannimai. 2007-12-23 . University Of Madras, Tamil Lexicon.
  15. Tambiah, Laws and customs of Tamils of Jaffna, pp. 62–3.
  16. Karthigesu, Sri Lankan Tamil Society and Politics, p.7-9