Showing posts with label Dravidian Languages. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dravidian Languages. Show all posts

Hinduism - What Is The History Of The Tamil Language?

 


Along with Kannada, Telegu, and Malayalam, it is one of the four Dravidian languages spoken largely in southern India.

Tamil is the most widely spoken language in contemporary Tamil Nadu, one of the "linguistic states" established following India's independence.

This state was created to bring individuals who spoke the same language and had a same culture together under one administration.

Despite the fact that all four languages have literary and cultural significance, Tamil has by far the most extensive literary history.

The Sangam literature, eight volumes of poetry that concentrated equally on the exterior depiction of warfare or the inward description of love, dates from the early years of the common period.

The three Tamil epics, the Shilappadigaram, Manimegalai, and Shivaga-Sindamani, followed the Sangam literature.

Between the seventh and tenth centuries, the Alvars and the Nayanars created devotional (bhakti) literature, with the former expressing their devotion to Vishnu and the latter to Shiva.

Because it used daily vernacular language as a magnificent vehicle for deep religious expression, its devotional poetry was unmatched in Hindu religious history.

The Alvars' poetry became a foundational book for the Shrivaishnava community, while the Nayanars' poems became a foundational text for Shaiva Siddhanta, and both collections are still essential in Hindu religious life.

Tamil is still a vibrant literary language and a source of intense regional pride for the people who live there; some of the most violent recent demonstrations in southern India were the so-called language riots, protesting the imposition of Hindi as the government language, which was seen as a deliberate attempt to marginalize Tamil language and culture.

~Kiran Atma


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Hinduism - What Is The Kannada Language?

 

 

Kannada is one of the four Dravidian languages (the others being Tamil, Telegu, and Malayalam), all of which are spoken in southern India.

Kannada is the most widely spoken language in contemporary Karnataka, one of the "linguistic" states established after India's independence in 1947 to bring people who spoke the same language and had a same culture under one state administration.

Despite its recent political importance, Kannada has a long history as a literary and cultural language, and is especially significant as the language of the Lingayat religious community's devotional (bhakti) poetry.

Also see Tamil language. 


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Hinduism - What Is Dravidian? What Are Dravidian Languages? Who Is Considered A Dravidian?

 


In the strictest linguistic sense, the term Dravidian refers to a language family whose core members are the four southern Indian languages of Tamil, Telegu, Kannada, and Malayalam. 

Aside from these four Dravidian languages, which are all spoken in the southernmost section of the subcontinent, Brahui is another Dravidian language. 

This language is spoken by a tiny and rather isolated group in contemporary Pakistan, distant from any other Dravidian language speakers and surrounded by Indo-Aryan language speakers. 

The Dravidian languages were initially spoken all throughout the subcontinent, but when Indo-Aryan language speakers—better known as the Aryans—came into India, they were progressively moved toward the south, according to one idea. 

According to this belief, the Brahui-speaking community is a lone relic from a previous era that has somehow managed to survive. 

This belief has an impact on how southern Indians define themselves. 

A southern Indian or someone whose native tongue is one of the four basic Dravidian languages is referred to as a Dravidian. 

It is a method for southern Indians with a strong regional identity to separate themselves from northern Indians and northern Indian culture's "imperialism." It's also said with a sense of pride that they're Dravidians, ancestors of the subcontinent's original occupants



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