UPSURGE OF ALLEPPEY TOWN BY MEANS OF GUJARATIS
UPSURGE OF ALLEPPEY TOWN BY MEANS OF GUJARATISanjalyb1994@gmail.com
It
is believed that 250 years back forty two Gujarati families from Kutch district
arrived at Alappuzha for business purpose. They settled in the North-East
coastal areas of Alleppey town. The Gujarati community contributed vehemently
for the enrichment of trade and mercantile activities of Alappuzha. They
established a Jain temple and an Upper Primary school there. At present only
six families continued to settle here. This paper enquires the circumstances
functioning and present day scenario of the Gujarati communities in Alleppey
town.
Travancore was
one of the most important dynasties in Indian sub-continent. Shungoony Menon
describes its name as “Sreevalumcode”
or “Tiruvarumcode.”[1]The
other name was “Vanjibhumi” which
means the land of treasureor the land of piety.[2]Rulers
of Travancore were well-versed in administrative affairs. Diwan Kesavadasa,
tried his best to make Travancore an eminent administrative power. Kesava Pillai
was appointed as the first Diwanof Travancore on the 8thKanni 964
M.E (22nd September 1789). [3]The
Governor General Lord Mornington had good remarks about Diwan Kesava Pillai and
in recognition of his ability and prudence and firm attachment to the East
India Company, he was conferred the tittle of ‘ Raja ’.
In the second half of the 18th century, English East India Company
became an indispensible force in India. During this period Travancore was one
of the principal states in South India.
Eventually India was divided in to a number of petty states which were
suspicious to one another .Company also made trade contacts between Travancore
and other areas and later interfered in their internal affairs. Later its
primary aim became colonization rather than trade and commerce. Gradually it
tried acquired political supremacy over Travancore.
The British East
India Company increased the tribute of Travancore from time to time. When that
heavy tribute became unaffordable to Travancore, Raja Kesavadasa feared of a
financial crisis in his sphere. As a measure to face this he decided to
establish a port at Alleppey to acquire wealth by means of export and import.
Business experts like Gujarati’s were invited to this area.
The background
of the arrival of Gujarati merchants to Alleppey goes back to the second half
of 18th century. It had two reasons. One was the invitation of
business community by Raja Kesavadasa to overcome the financial crisis of
Travancore. He assumed that the efforts of a business community would promote
income generation of Travancore.
The growing
prosperity of Travancore and its relation with English East India Company
irritated Tipu Sultan of Mysore. He ordered conversion of all the Hindus
including low caste and high caste to the Islamic faith and suggested to
acknowledge the divinity of Prophet Muhammad.[4]
Fearing this conversion all the high caste Hindus left from Malabar.[5]
The refugees sought asylum in Cochin. But the Raja of Cochin refused their
request as he was a tributary of Tipu Sultan. They begged for protection before
Dharmma Raja, the King of Travancore. The migrants including the royal family
of the Zamorins of Calicut, Brahmins, Kshatriyas, Nairs, Ezhavas
etc. who had fled from North Malabar in the wake of Mysorean invasion got all
facilities to settle down in different parts of his territory.
Dharmma Raja
refused to obey the supremacy of Tipu and his demand to send the refugees back.
This issue ended with a peace settlement.[6] But
after some years during the time of Dassara
festival Tipu sent his Sirdar to meet
Maharaja and to convey the news about his expedition. Maharaja instructed
KesavaPillai to meet the representative of Tipu Sultan at Mavelikkara.[7]
The representative carried a letter from Tipu Sultan demanding the immediate
surrender of all chiefs of Malabar who had taken refuge in Maharaja’s dominion.
Maharaja tried to avoid this unhealthy situation. But unfortunately it led to a
war. English East India Company helped Travancore to fight against Mysorean
threat. After the death of D’Lenoy the Dutch navigator Raja Kesavadasa was
appointed the head of military department. His soldiers defeated Tipu and
Treaty of Sreerangapattanam was signed in 1792.[8]
While by the
agreement of 1788, Travancore was forced to station two regiments of East India
Company in Travancore for its protection. After the victory upon Mysorean
attack the Company demanded rupees seven lakhs for the expenses incurred by the
Company’s military expenses in protecting Travancore against Tipu. Kesavadasa paid the amount by several
instalments. Sir Charlse, the new Governor of Madras was not satisfied with
this. He demanded rupees ten lakhs as expense of the war. Madras government and
Lord Conwalis decided in favour of Maharaja.
As the heavy tribute was paid off to Company the economic foundation of
Travancore was shaken.
Raja Kesavadasa
decided to strengthen trade and commercial activities by developing the coastal
areas in Travancore for overcoming the financial crisis. He visited coasts and
sea ports from Cape Comorin to the north.[9]He
renovated the ports of Kulachal, Poowar,
Vizhingam, Purakkad and Alleppey. Alleppey was situated few miles north of
Purakkad. It was a sandy strip of land intercepted by lagoons, rivers and
canals. This geographical peculiarity was good enough to bring hill products
from Western Ghats to Alleppey.
Raja Kesavadasa
ordered a survey of the sea by some experienced sea men and found the existence
of a good anchorage protected by a band. He resolved to open a port there also.
The mud banking system throughout the coast was very suitable for anchoring
vessels.[10]It
is the specialty of some part of Kerala coast where sea waves were mild due to
the presence of mud deposits in sea water. Under Kesavadasa’s guidance a man
-made canal was constructed from Pallathuruthy to Arabian Sea.
Alleppey which
was then a mere jungle inhabited by monkeys and jackals and other wild beasts.[11]
The area covered by wild thorny bushes turned in to a port city.[12]
Raja Kesavadasa invited professional merchants like Parsis, Banyas, Hindu Setttis,MuslimSettis andMarvadis.
He communicated his friends at Bombay and induced influential Kutch and Sindh
merchants and they were given every facility for carrying on a successful
trade. To make their stay permanent, a Hindu temple and a Cutchery were built.[13]
There is an
indigenous reason behind the arrival of Gujarati merchants to Alleppey. In
those days Gujarat also witnessed many famines.[14] The
revenue reforms of British government in north India also ruined the
agriculture and food sufficiency. Failure of monsoon also made their life
miserable. Severe famine occurred in Gujarat during this period and the decline
of trade and commerce due to it persuaded the Gujarati’s to re allocate them to
Travancore.
The King
provided many facilities to them. Thus the forty two Gujarati’s arrived at
Alleppey from Kutch, Sindh and Halar regions in the eve of the 18thcentury.[15]They
settled down in the North Western coastal parts of Alleppey. This area is later
known as Gujarathi Street in Alleppey. They were also well-versed in spice
trade. They knew to face the fluctuations and instability in business. The
Gujarati’s were permitted to construct pandikasalas
or large godowns on the banks of canal constructed by Diwan from Pallathuruty
to Beach. [16]Kesavadasa
realized that the only sudden measure to overcome the debt was spice trade. The
growing demand of Malabar spices on European markets was exploited by him.
Spices like
ginger ,pepper ,cardamom ,clove and
commodities like coconut ,copra ,coconut oil ,grains ,sugar ,tea ,rubber ,areca
nut and ayurvedic medicines were accumulated in large godowns.[17]
They processed these products. And it also exported to Middle-East and Europe.
A pier projecting to Arabian was constructed to upload goods in anchoring
vessels from abroad and to bring out goods from them.
The Gujarati
merchants converted Alleppey in to an important port city within two or three
decades. Two groups from Kutch merchants of Alleppey also went to Kochi and
Kozhikkode to develop their business and settled there. Ward and Conner in
their ‘Memoir of The Survey of The Travancore and Cochin States’ stated that in
that period “Alleppey was a well-designed town and there were government
godowns on the beach and there were canals through the town bridges across
these canals and roads on the banks and there was a fort with twelve bastions
on the North –East part of the town. ”
The Gujarati
gentle-men with their families began their lives at new dwelling. They moulded
the area around them in Gujarati style. They constructed large houses in a
linear pattern. Each and every house was constructed in Gujarati style. They
had large ground floors with various rooms for storage and other purposes. They
used the upstairs for residential purposes and ground floor for business. The
back guards were common for adjacent houses. Each and every house was
inter-connected with a long varanda.
They founded an
Upper Primary School namely Gujarati Hitavardhak Vidyasala in Gujarati street
.This attempt was meant for the education of their children approximately in
the 19th century. Through this institution they popularized the
Gujarati medium of education. [18]
They also learned Malayalam and English. This school taught both Gujarati
children and local students. The building was very spacious and highly
ventilated. The school walls were thicker and decorated with arches. The roof
was made with seasoned timber and tiles. The compound was separated with large
walls in Gujarati style.
This Gujarati
community followed Jainism. A Sreedhara Menon in his ‘A Survey of Kerala
History’ opined that “few families of Gujarati businessmen professing Jain
faith lived in such commercial canters at Alleppey.” They constructed Sri Jain
SweatambarTemple in the Gujarati Street. It is believed that Jainism came to
South India especially in Kerala before the Christian era. The Sangham works Chilappatykaram and Manimekhalai
also dealt with Jainism. In the 8th century A.D Jainism begin to
decline and in 16th century it reached its zenith.[19]
Sri Jain
Sweatambar Temple was built by forty two Jain families brought from Kutch
district. Earlier they constructed a small temple and it was renovated in 1994.
This temple shows their devotion of four Tirthankaras. Icons of 11thTirthankara Sreyesanatha,
12thTirthankara, Vasupujya , 15thTirthankara Dharmmanatha
and 24thTirthankara Parswanatha
are sited there. This temple became a center of meeting and worship of
Gujarati’s. A trust elected from the currently residing families looks after
the administrative affairs.[20]
Now there are only six families. Even now the temple stands as their spiritual
centre, following rigid Jain rites and rituals.
The Jain Temple
in Alleppey had its own fascinating style and architectural peculiarities. It
is the only Jain temple in Kerala that did not use iron to build and also
exhibits flaunt a dome atop. The temple was carefully constructed with
Rajasthan stones and White marbles.[21] One
of the striking features of the temple is that it exhibits numerous figurines
of Tirthankara’s curved in single marble piece.The statue of 12th Tirthankara Vasupujya Swami placed at the center. The statue
of Dharmmanatha and Sreyesanatha have
been place at the right and left side of Vasupujya. Statue of Parswanatha was also installed on the upstairs.
The community
has a very strict and stern code of rituals and rites. All of them follow it
without any hesitation. Every day ‘Sunatrapooja’
and ‘Ekasantrapooja’ is conducted for
around one and half hours which is believed to bring spiritual sanctity and
Nirvana to their lives. The festival conducted by Jain’s is known as ‘parvaparyushana ’ lasts for eight days and usually
celebrated in August – September. During
the time of Parvaparyushana many Jain
Saints from Gujarat came to Alleppey. They also read the history of twenty four
Tirthankaras during this occasion.
Jain followers are pure vegetarians. They are forbidden from consuming alcohol.
They do not consume anything that grows underground. According to their
religious belief they only eat such food that grows above the ground getting a
lot of sunlight.
The arrival of Gujarati’s to Alleppey
was an important incident in the history of modern Travancore. Their presence
led to social-economic and cultural breakthrough. Their contribution in the fields
of trade and commerce was matchless. This business group played a dominant role
in uplifting Alleppey into the level of a central port which is later known as
the ‘Venice of the East’. Combination of Gujarati and Kerala style is seen in
weddings, festivals, dressing and food habits. After the death of Raja
Kesavadasa and the emergence of new ports Gujarati’s of Alleppey lost their
power and position. The new system of governance and rise of trade unions
retarded. Present day the people doing small jobs like courier carrier, school
peons, bakery workers etc. Thus we see deterioration of a brilliant and
aristocratic tradition in the long path of time.
[1]P Shungoony Menon,History of Travancore
(Madras,1878),p.1.
[2]Ibid.
[3]Ibid,p.157.
[4]Shangoony Menon,Op.cit.,p.158.
[5]Ibid
[6]Ibid,p.168.
[7]P
Nagam Aiya,Travancore State Manuel,Gazetteers Department of
Kerala(Thiruvananthapuram,1994),p.401.
[8]Shangoony Menon,op.cit, p.177.
[9]Ibid,p.170.
[10] Interview with Kallelil
RaghavanPillai,December 23,2016,5 P M.
[11]P Nagam Aiya,Op.cit,p 404.
[12]A Sreedhara Menon,A
Survey of Kerala History(Kottayam,2000),p.25.
[13]P Nagam Aiya, Op.cit,p.404.
[14]www.shodhganga.com.
[15]Katchi Dasa Oswal Vasti
Pathrak,2016.p.10.
[16]Kattakkada Divakaran ,Kerala
Sancharam (Trivandrum,2005) P.373.
[17]Op.cit,Katchi Dasa Oswal Vasti
Pathrak.p.45.
[18]Kattakkada Divakaran, Op.cit,.,p.373.
[19]A Sreedhara Menon,Kerala
Samskaram ( Kottayam,1978), P.22.
[20]Katchi Dasa Oswal Vasti
Pathrak,Op.cit.,p. 46.
[21]Ibid,p.46.




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ReplyDeleteSilappatikaram and Jivaka Chintamani were Jain literatures.
ReplyDeleteKeralites were Jains until 600 AD. Chera prince Ilangovadikal was a Jain whoused to stay at Kanavayil Kottam ie Thrikana temple. Kodungaloor Bhagavati temple built for Jain godess Kannagi. Sripadmanabha Swami temple had been a Jain temple. Nedumchadaya Pandiyan in 786 AD consecrated Padmanabha idol in the Jain temple. Nagaraja temple at Nagercoil had been a Jain temple until 16th century. After the Turkish invasion in 1311 AD Tamil Villavar kingdoms came to an end in Kerala and Tamilnadu. Villavar alias Nadars had been Jains.
The Nairs, Nambuthiris and Samantha Kshatriya who ruled Kerala after 1333 AD were Tulu-Nepali people. They were not indigenous to Kerala. Matrilineal dynasties such as Kolathiri dynasty, Samuthiri dynasty, Kochi dynasty and Travancore dynasty were not Malayali dynasties but founded by Tulu- invader called Banapperumal who invaded Kerala in 1120 AD with a large Nepali Nair mercenary army. Matriarchy, Polyandry or Fatherlessness were not Kerala customs but Nepali customs brought to Tulunadu by Nepali Nagas.
Nadars alias Shanars were Tamil Villavars who ruled Chera dynasty until 1333 AD. Villavars had migrated from Kodungaloor to Kollam in 1102 AD.
Tulu Alupa dynasty invader Banapperumal and his Nepali Nair mercenary army occupied Malabar in 1120 AD with Arab support.
Banapperumal founded Tulu-Nepali matrilineal Kolathiri dynasty in 1156 AD with capital at Valarpattanam near Kannur. Kolathiri princesses had Sambandam with Nambuthiris who were from Ahichatram.
After the invasion of Malik Kafur in 1311 AD the Tulu-Nepali clans occupied all Kerala in 1333 AD.
British Factory manager Robert Adams brought petty Tulu chieftains from Beypore Thattari dynasty which was a branch of Kolathiri dynasty and installed them as kings of Travancore in 1704 AD. Travancore dynasty was a puppet dynasty of British. Travancore was a fake Tulu-Nepali mayrilineal dynasty who pretended to be Tamil Cheras and Ays.
Travancore Beypore Thattari dynasty was the most oppressive and Barbaric Tulu-Nepali dynasty ever to rule Kerala. Travancore dynasty was protected by Arcot Nawab and British until 1947 AD.
Shangoony Menon claimed that his own Nepali Nair people were indigenous to Kerala.
The traditional rulers of Kerala until Turkish invasion were Tamil Villavar-Nadazhwar clans. Chera kings were known as Villvarkon, Magathai Nadazhwar and Panantharakan ie Nadars.
But at Travancore Villavar-Nadar clans were harassed by matrilineal Nepali Nairs who had the British protection.
Menava were a subgroup of Tulu Bunt community. In Kerala they were known as Menavan and later Menon.
Pillamar were sons of Matrineal Vellala women
born through Sambandam with Nairs.
British made Travancore's Beypore Thattari dynasty kings of Parappanad to marry rebellious Pillamar families. Pillamar were half Tamil half Nepalis.
The five Royal houses of Pillamar were
Arumana Ammaveedu, Thiruvattar Ammaveedu, Nagercoil Ammaveedu and Vadasseri Ammaveedu.
Until Independence the Tulu-Nepali dynasty of Travancore Beypore Thattari dynasty ruled Travancore.
The last king Chitrathirunal with the tacit approval of British wanted to secede from India.
Punnapra Vayalar uprising had earned him the animosity of people.
The Chera title Kulasekharapperumal title and Ay title Thiruvadi were used by Travancore kings.
But they were not Tamils at all.
Travancore kings descended from Tulu invader Banapperumal and his son Udhayavarman Kolathiri. Karippa Kovilakam established Udhayavarman Kolathiri controlled Beypore Thattari dynasty of Travancore kings.
Beypore Thattari dynasty of Ittamar Rajas were petty Tulu chieftains living near British factory at Kozhikode. Robert Adams Beypore Thattaari princes and prinvcesses to Venad and got them adopted into Venad's defunct Ay dynasty in 1696 AD. Between 1704 AD to 1947 AD British extracted Tax through this puppet dynasty.
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