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Muziris

Muchiri (Malayalam: മുച്ചിരി, IPA: [mutːʃiɾi]), commonly anglicized as Muziris (Ancient Greek: Μουζιρίς,[2] Old Malayalam: Muciri (മുച്ചിരി) or Muciripattanam (മുച്ചിരിപ്പട്ടണം)[3] possibly identical with the medieval Muyirikode (മുയിരിക്കോട്)[4]) was an ancient harbour[5] and an urban centre on the Malabar Coast.[3] Muziris found mention in the Periplus of the Erythraean Sea, the bardic Tamil poems and a number of classical sources.[6][7][8][9] It was the major ancient port city of Cheras. Core of the city situated in the present day Kodungallur, North Paravoor area. The exact location of Muziris has been a matter of dispute among historians and archaeologists. However, excavations since 2004 at Pattanam, near North Paravur, have led some experts to suggesting the hypothesis that the city was located just there.[1][8][3] It was an important trading port for Christian and Muslim merchants arriving from other countries.

Muziris
Muciri
Muziris, as shown in the 4th century Tabula Peutingeriana
Shown within India
Alternative nameMuyirikkode
LocationPattanam, Kerala, India[1]
RegionChera Empire
TypeSettlement

Muziris was a key to the interactions between South India and Persia, the Middle East, North Africa, and the (Greek and Roman) Mediterranean region.[10][11] Pliny the Elder, in his Natural History, hailed Muziris as "the first emporium of India".[3] The important known commodities exported from Muziris were spices (such as black pepper and malabathron), semi-precious stones (such as beryl), pearls, diamonds, sapphires, ivory, Chinese silk, Gangetic spikenard and tortoise shells. The Roman navigators brought gold coins, peridots, thin clothing, figured linens, multicoloured textiles, sulfide of antimony, copper, tin, lead, coral, raw glass, wine, realgar and orpiment.[12][13] The locations of unearthed coin-hoards from Pattanam suggest an inland trade link from Muziris via the Palghat Gap and along the Kaveri Valley to the east coast of India. Though the Roman trade declined from the 5th century AD, the former Muziris attracted the attention of other nationalities, particularly the Persians, the Chinese and the Arabs, presumably until the devastating floods of Periyar in 1341.[7][3]

Names, routes and locations of the Periplus of the Erythraean Sea (1st century CE)

Earlier Muziris was identified with the region around Mangalore in southwestern Karnataka.[14][15][16][17][18][19][20][21][22][23] Later hypothesis was that it was situated around present day Kodungallur, a town in Thrissur district.[24] Kodungallur in central Kerala figures prominently in the ancient history of southern India from the second Chola period as a hub of the Chera rulers.[25] But later, a series of excavations were conducted at the village of Pattanam near North Paravoor by Kerala Council for Historical Research (an autonomous institution outsourced by the Kerala State Department of Archaeology) in 2006-07 and it was announced that the lost "port" of Muziris was found and started the new hypothesis.[8][26][27] This identification of Pattanam as the ancient Muziris also sparked controversy among historians.[28] As per texts, Kerala is known to have traded spices since the Sangam era; it is based on this trade that some historians have implied that only foreign countries needed spices (pepper). Some historians and archaeologists criticized this view starting a debate among historians of South India.[29][30][31]

Etymology edit

The derivation of the name "Muziris" is said to be from the native name of the port, "Muciri" (Tamil: முசிறி, Malayalam: മുചിറി). In the region, the Periyar river perhaps branched into two like a cleft lip, thus speculatively leading to the name "Muciri". It is frequently referred to as Muciri in Sangam poems, Muracippattanam in the Sanskrit epic Ramayana, and as Muyirikkottu in the Jewish copper plate of an 11th-century Chera ruler.

Early descriptions edit

 
The Silk Road, a group of ancient trade routes that, linking east and west, carried goods and ideas between the two great civilizations of Rome and China. The land routes are shown in red, the maritime routes in blue.

Sangam literature edit

A tantalizing description of Muziris is in Akanaṉūṟu, an anthology of early Tamil bardic poems (poem number 149.7-11) in Eṭṭuttokai[32]

the city where the beautiful vessels, the masterpieces of the Yavanas [Ionians], stir white foam on the Culli [Periyar], a river of the Chera, arriving with gold and departing with pepper-when that Muciri, brimming with prosperity, was besieged by the din of war.

The Purananuru described Muziris as a bustling port city where interior goods were exchanged for imported gold.[33][34] It seems that the Chera chiefs regarded their contacts with the Roman traders as a form of gift exchange rather than straightforward commercial dealings.[35]

With its streets, its houses, its covered fishing boats, where they sell fish, where they pile up rice-with the shifting and mingling crowd of a boisterous river-bank, where the sacks of pepper are heaped up-with its gold deliveries, carried by the ocean-going ships and brought to the river bank by local boats, the city of the gold-collared Kuttuvan (Chera chief), the city that bestows wealth to its visitors indiscriminately, and the merchants of the mountains, and the merchants of the sea, the city where liquor abounds, yes, this Muciri, were the rumbling ocean roars, is given to me like a marvel, a treasure. .

Akananuru describes Pandya attacks on the Chera port of Muciri. This episode is impossible to date, but the attack seems to have succeeded in diverting Roman trade from Muziris.[35]

It is suffering like that experienced by the warriors who were mortally wounded and slain by the war elephants. The suffering that was seen when the Pandya prince came to besiege the port of Muciri on his flag-bearing chariot with decorated horses

Riding on his great and superior war elephant the Pandya prince has conquered in battle. He has seized the sacred images after winning the battle for rich Muciri.

Navigation of the Red Sea edit

The author of the Greek travel book Periplus of the Erythraean Sea (1st century AD) gives an elaborate description of the Chera Kingdom.[36][37]

...then come Naura and Tyndis, the first markets of Lymrike, and then Muziris and Nelkynda, which are now of leading importance. Tyndis is of the Kingdom of Cerobothra; it is a village in plain sight by the sea. Muziris, in the same Kingdom, abounds in ships sent there with cargoes from Arabia, and by the Greeks; it is located on a river, distant from Tyndis by the river and sea 500 stadia, and up the river from the shore 20 stadia...

There is exported pepper, which is produced in only one region near these markets, a district called Cottonara.

The Periplus reveals how Muziris became the main trade port for the Chera chiefdom. The author explains that this large settlement owed its prosperity to foreign commerce, including shipping arriving from northern India and the Roman empire. Black pepper from the hills was brought to the port by the local producers and stacked high in warehouses to await the arrival of Roman merchants. As the shallows at Muziris prevented deep-hulled vessels from sailing upriver to the port, Roman freighters were forced to shelter at the edge of the lagoon while their cargoes were transferred upstream on smaller craft.[35]

The Periplus records that special consignments of grain were sent to places like Muziris and scholars suggest that these deliveries were intended for resident Romans who needed something to supplement the local diet of rice.[35]

Pliny the Elder edit

Pliny the Elder gives a description of voyages to India in the 1st century AD. He refers to many Indian ports in his The Natural History.[38] However, by the time of Pliny, Muziris was no longer a favoured location in Roman trade dealing with South India.[39]

To those who are bound for India, Ocelis (on the Red Sea) is the best place for embarkation. If the wind, called Hippalus (south-west Monsoon), happens to be blowing it is possible to arrive in forty days at the nearest market in India, Muziris by name. This, however, is not a very desirable place for disembarkation, on account of the pirates which frequent its vicinity, where they occupy a place called Nutrias; nor, in fact, is it very rich in articles of merchandise. Besides, the road stead for shipping is a considerable distance from the shore, and the cargoes have to be conveyed in boats, either for loading or discharging. At the moment that I am writing these pages, the name of the King of this place is Celebothras.

Claudius Ptolemy edit

Ptolemy placed the Muziris emporium north of the mouth of the Pseudostomus river in his Geographia.[40] Pseudostomus (literally, "false mouth", in Greek) is generally identified with the modern-day Periyar River.

Muziris papyrus edit

This Greek papyrus of the 2nd century AD documents a contract involving an Alexandrian merchant importer and a financier that concerns cargoes, especially of pepper and spices from Muziris.[41] The fragmentary papyrus records details about a cargo consignment (valued at around nine million sesterces) brought back from Muziris on board a Roman merchant ship called the Hermapollon. The discovery opened a strong base to ancient international and trade laws in particular and has been studied at length by economists, lawyers, and historians.[42][43]

Cilappatikaram edit

The great Tamil epic Cilappatikaram (The Story of the Anklet) written by Ilango Adigal, a Jain poet-prince from Kodungallur (Muziris) during the 2nd century A.D., described Muziris as a place where Greek traders would arrive in their ships to barter their gold to buy pepper, and since barter trade is time-consuming, they lived in homes living a lifestyle that he termed as "exotic" and a source of "local wonder".[44][45][46]

Concerning Muziris and the Roman spice trade with Malabar, the Cilappatikaram describes the prevailing situation as follows:[46]

When the broadrayed sun ascends from the south and white clouds start to form in the early cool season, it is time to cross the dark, billowing ocean. The rulers of Tyndis dispatch vessels loaded with eaglewood, silk, sandalwood, spices and all sorts of camphor.

Peutinger's Map edit

Peutinger Map, is an odd-sized medieval copy of an ancient Roman road map, "with information which could date back to 2nd century AD", in which both Muziris and Tondis are well marked, "with a large lake indicated behind Muziris, and besides which is an icon marked Templ(um) Augusti, widely taken to mean a “Temple of Augustus".[47] A large number of Roman subjects must have spent months in this region awaiting favourable conditions for return sailings to the Empire. This could explain why the Map records the existence of an Augustan temple.[35] It is also possible that there was a Roman colony in Muziris.[48]

Great "floods" of Periyar edit

Muziris disappeared from every known map of antiquity, and without a trace, presumably because of a cataclysmic event in 1341, a "cyclone and floods" in the Periyar that altered the geography of the region. The historians Rajan Gurukkal and Dick Whittakker say in a study titled "In Search of Muziris" that the event, which opened up the present harbour at Kochi and the Vembanad backwater system to the sea and formed a new deposit of land now known as the Vypeen Island near Kochi, "doubtless changed access to the Periyar river, but geologically it was only the most spectacular of the physical changes and land formation that have been going on [there] from time immemorial". According to them, for example, a geophysical survey of the region has shown that 200–300 years ago the shoreline lay about three kilometres east of the present coast and that some 2,000 years earlier it lay even further east, about 6.5 km inland. "If Muziris had been situated somewhere here in Roman times, the coast at that time would have run some 4-5 km east of its present line. The regular silting up of the river mouth finally forced it to cease activity as a port."[25]

Archaeological excavations edit

A series of excavations conducted at Kodungallur starting from 1945, yielded nothing that went back to before the 13th century. Another excavation was carried out in 1969 by the Archaeological Survey of India at Cheraman Parambu, 2 km north of Kodungallur. Only antiquities of the 13th and 16th century were recovered.[49]

In 1983, a large hoard of Roman coins was found at a site around six miles from Pattanam. A series of pioneering excavations from 2007 carried out by the Kerala Council for Historical Research (KCHR, an autonomous institution) at Pattanam uncovered a large number of artifacts.[50][51][52][53][54] So far, seven seasons of excavations (2007–14) have been completed by KCHR at Pattanam.[55]

The identification of Pattanam as Muziris is a divisive subject among some historians of South India. When KCHR announced the possible finding of Muziris based on Pattanam finds, it invited criticism from historians and archaeologists. Historians such as R Nagaswamy, KN Panikkar and MGS Narayanan disagreed with the identification and called for further analysis.[30][47][54] "Whether Pattanam was Muziris is not of immediate concern to us", the chief of the Kerala Council for Historical Research recently stated to the media.[56] Yet, even the last field report on the excavations (2013) explicitly marks Pattanam as Muziris.[57]

While historian and academic Rajan Gurukkal has spoken in favour of the 'salvage of historic relics at Pattanam' by KCHR given the site's disturbance due to continual human habitation and activity, he thinks it [ancient Muziris] was no more than a colony of merchants from the Mediterranean. "The abundance of material from the Mediterranean suggests that traders arrived here using favorable monsoon winds and returned using the next after short sojourns," he says. Feeder vessels transported them between their ships and the wharf, but it would be incorrect to say that it was a sophisticated port in an urban setting. The place did not have any evolved administration nor any sophistication. "I believe it [Pattanam] was Muziris. Had it been elsewhere, Pattanam wharf and colony would’ve found a mention in available records," he says.[58]

Discoveries from Pattanam edit

Archaeological research has shown that Pattanam was a port frequented by Romans and it has a long history of habitation dating back to 10th century BC. Its trade links with Rome peaked between 1st century BC and 4th century AD.[59]

A large quantity of artifacts represents the maritime contacts of the site with the Mediterranean, Red Sea and Indian Ocean rims. Major finds include ceramics, lapidary-related objects, metal objects, coins, architectural ruins, geological, zoological and botanical remains.[57]

  • Mediterranean: (100 BCE to CE 400) Amphora, terra sigillata shards, Roman glass fragments and gaming counters.
  • West Asian, South Arabian & Mesopotamian: (300 BCE to CE 1000) Turquoise glazed pottery, torpedo jar fragments and frankincense crumbs.
  • Chinese: (CE 1600 to CE 1900) Blue on white porcelain shards.
  • Regional/Local: (1000 BCE to CE 2000) Black and red ware shards, Indian rouletted ware, gemstones, glass beads, semi precious stone beads/inlays/intaglio, cameo–blanks, coins, spices, pottery and terracotta objects.
  • Urban life: (100 BCE to CE 400) burnt bricks, rooftiles, ring-wells, storage jars, toilet features, lamps, coins, stylus, personal adornment items and scripts on pottery.
  • Industrial character: (100 BCE to CE 400) Metallurgy reflected in iron, copper, gold and lead objects, crucibles, slag, furnace installations, lapidary remains of semi-precious stones and spindle whorls indicating weaving.
  • Maritime features: (100 BCE to CE 400) Wharf, warehouse, canoe, bollards.

The major discoveries from Pattanam include thousands of beads (made of semi-precious stone), shards of Roman amphora, Chera-era coins made of copper alloys and lead, fragments of Roman glass pillar bowls, terra sigillata, remains of a long wooden boat and associated bollards made of teak and a wharf made of fired brick.[12][60]

The most remarkable find at Pattanam excavations in 2007 was a brick structural wharf complex, with nine bollards to harbour boats and in the midst of this, a highly decayed canoe, all perfectly mummified in mud. The canoe (6 meters long) was made of Artocarpus hirsutus, a tree common on the Malabar Coast, out of which boats are made.[61] The bollards, some of which are still in satisfactory condition, were made of teak.[62]

Three Tamil-Brahmi scripts were also found in the Pattanam excavations. The last Tamil-Brahmi script (dated to c. 2nd century AD, probably reading "a-ma-na", meaning "a Jaina" in Tamil) was found on a pot-rim at Pattanam. If the rendering and the meaning is not mistaken, it establishes that Jainism was prevalent on the Malabar Coast at least from the 2nd century. This is the first time that excavators have found evidence relating to a religious system in ancient Kerala.[63]

DNA-analyses of skeleton samples discovered from Pattanam confirmed the presence of people with West Eurasian genetic imprints in Muziris in the past. This is considered to be an indication of the huge international importance the ancient port-city once held in the past.[64] However, the ASI was more sceptical, suggesting that more research is required to confirm the Eurasian presence in the site.[65]

Muziris Heritage Project edit

The Muziris Heritage Project is a tourism venture by Tourism Department of Kerala to reinstate the historical and cultural significance of Muziris. The idea of the project came after the extensive excavations and discoveries at Pattanam by the Kerala Council for Historical Research.[66] The project also covers various other historically significant sites and monuments in central Kerala.

The nearby site of Kottappuram, a 16th-century fort, was also excavated (from May 2010 onwards) as part of the Muziris Heritage Project.[67]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Muthiah, S. (24 April 2017). "The ancient ports of India". The Hindu. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 7 May 2022.
  2. ^ Periplus of the Erythraean Sea, 53 and 54
  3. ^ a b c d e "Lost cities #3 – Muziris: did black pepper cause the demise of India's ancient port? | Cities | The Guardian". theguardian.com. Retrieved 7 May 2022.
  4. ^ A. Sreedhara Menon (1967). "Muchiri - A Survey of Kerala History". Retrieved 20 April 2016.
  5. ^ Gurukkal, Rajan (29 June 2013). "A Misnomer in Political Economy: Classical Indo-Roman Trade". Economic & Political Weekly. 48 (26–27). Retrieved 24 April 2020.
  6. ^ "Artefacts from the lost Port of Muziris." The Hindu. 3 December 2014.
  7. ^ a b "Muziris, at last?" R. Krishnakumar, www.frontline.in Frontline, 10–23 April 2010.
  8. ^ a b c "Pattanam richest Indo-Roman site on Indian Ocean rim." The Hindu. 3 May 2009.
  9. ^ George Menachery; Werner Chakkalakkal (10 January 2001). "Cranganore: Past and Present". Kodungallur – The Cradle of Christianity in India. Retrieved 11 May 2016.
  10. ^ Cyclopaedia of India and of Eastern and Southern Asia. Ed. by Edward Balfour (1871), Second Edition. Volume 2. p. 584.
  11. ^ "Search for India's ancient city". bbc.co.uk BBC World News, 11 June 2006. Web [1]
  12. ^ a b Steven E. Sidebotham. Berenike and the Ancient Maritime Spice Route, pp 191. University of California Press 2011
  13. ^ George Gheverghese Joseph (2009). A Passage to Infinity. New Delhi: SAGE Publications Pvt. Ltd. pp. 13. ISBN 978-81-321-0168-0.
  14. ^ J. Sturrock (1894). Madras District Manuals - South Canara (Volume-I). Madras Government Press.
  15. ^ Harold A. Stuart (1895). Madras District Manuals - South Canara (Volume-II). Madras Government Press.
  16. ^ Government of Madras (1905). Madras District Gazetteers: Statistical Appendix for South Canara District. Madras Government Press.
  17. ^ Government of Madras (1915). Madras District Gazetteers South Canara (Volume-II). Madras Government Press.
  18. ^ William Logan (1887). Malabar Manual (Volume-I). Madras Government Press.
  19. ^ William Logan (1887). Malabar Manual (Volume-II). Madras Government Press.
  20. ^ Charles Alexander Innes (1908). Madras District Gazetteers Malabar (Volume-I). Madras Government Press.
  21. ^ Charles Alexander Innes (1915). Madras District Gazetteers Malabar (Volume-II). Madras Government Press.
  22. ^ C. Achutha Menon (1911). The Cochin State Manual. Cochin Government Press.
  23. ^ Sreedhara Menon, A. (January 2007). Kerala Charitram (2007 ed.). Kottayam: DC Books. ISBN 978-81-264-1588-5. Retrieved 19 July 2020.
  24. ^ Romila Thapar. There is no mention of Trade via Sea-Route or of any ports during Sangam era. It were the Vikings who created first of ships which could cross sea, let alone ocean. The Scanidinavians used their ships to cross the sea and reach nearby countryside in Europe, and all that happened in early 12th century. The Penguin History of Early India: From the Origins to AD 1300. pp 46, Penguin Books India, 2003
  25. ^ a b Krishnakumar, P. "Muziris, at last?". www.frontline.in Frontline, 10–23 April 2010. Web. [2]
  26. ^ Basheer, K. P. M. "Pattanam finds throw more light on trade". The Hindu [Madras]. 12 June 2011. Web.
  27. ^ Smitha, Ajayan. "Traces of controversies". Deccan Chronicle. 20 Feb. 2013. Web. [4]
  28. ^ "Expert nails false propaganda on Muziris". newindianexpress.com.
  29. ^ "Historian cautions on Pattanam excavations". The Hindu [Madras]. 6 February 2012. Web. [5]
  30. ^ a b "Archaeologist calls for excavations at Kodungalloor". The Hindu [Madras]. 5 August 2011. Web. [6]
  31. ^ "KCHR asked to hand over Pattanam excavation". ibnlive.in.com CNN-IBN, 16 November 2011. Web.
  32. ^ Kulke, Hermann; Dietmar Rothermund (2004). A History of India. Routledge. ISBN 0-415-32919-1.
  33. ^ Peter Francis. Asia's Maritime Bead Trade: 300 B.C. to the Present, pp. 120 University of Hawaii Press, 01-Jan-2002
  34. ^ Menachery, George; Azhikode-Kodungallur (1987). Kodungallur City of St. Thomas.
  35. ^ a b c d e Raoul McLaughlin. Rome and the Distant East: Trade Routes to the Ancient Lands of Arabia, India and China. pp 48-50, Continuum (2010)
  36. ^ "The Voyage around the Erythraean Sea". depts.washington.edu. Retrieved 23 April 2018.
  37. ^ Martin, K. a; Anandan, S.; Martin, K. a; Anandan, S. (21 January 2012). "Re-enact Muziris voyages, KHA tells Navy". The Hindu. Retrieved 23 April 2018 – via www.thehindu.com.
  38. ^ "Philemon Holland's Pliny". penelope.uchicago.edu. Retrieved 23 April 2018.
  39. ^ Pliny the Elder, Natural History, vi.(26).104.
  40. ^ Peter Francis. Asia's Maritime Bead Trade: 300 B.C. to the Present, pp. 119 University of Hawaii Press, 01-Jan-2002
  41. ^ Romila Thapar. The Penguin History of Early India: From the Origins to AD 1300. Penguin Books India, 2003
  42. ^ Raoul McLaughlin. Rome and the Distant East: Trade Routes to the Ancient Lands of Arabia, India and China. pp 40, Continuum (2010)
  43. ^ For the full text in Greek and its translation, see http://www.uni-koeln.de/phil-fak/ifa/zpe/downloads/1990/084pdf/084195.pdf
  44. ^ Madhukar, Jayanthi (3 December 2016). "Malayala panorama". The Hindu. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 14 December 2017.
  45. ^ Muthiah, S. (24 April 2017). "The ancient ports of India". The Hindu. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 14 December 2017.
  46. ^ a b McLaughlin, Raoul (11 September 2014). The Roman Empire and the Indian Ocean: The Ancient World Economy and the Kingdoms of Africa, Arabia and India. Pen and Sword. ISBN 9781473840959.
  47. ^ a b "Navigation News - Frontline". FRONTLINE. 1 April 2010. Retrieved 23 April 2018.
  48. ^ Romans in Muziris
  49. ^ Srivathsan, A. "In search of Muziris". The Hindu [Madras]. 2 May 2010. Web.
  50. ^ "Search for India's ancient city". BBC News. 11 June 2006. Retrieved 19 May 2010.
  51. ^ Govind, M. Harish (23 March 2004). . The Hindu. Archived from the original on 9 August 2010. Retrieved 6 April 2022.
  52. ^ . The Hindu. Chennai, India. 28 March 2004. Archived from the original on 27 May 2004.
  53. ^ . The Hindu. Chennai, India. 1 April 2007. Archived from the original on 6 March 2008.
  54. ^ a b Rajagopal, Shyama; Surendranath, Nidhi (30 August 2013). "Archaeology Dept. lumbering under shortage of manpower". The Hindu. Chennai, India.
  55. ^ Srivathsan, A. (22 May 2013). "Pattanam antiquity authenticated by radiocarbon dating". The Hindu. Chennai, India.
  56. ^ S. ANANDAN Was Pattanam an urban trade centre? 28 May 2014 The Hindu [9]
  57. ^ a b "KCHR Pattanam Seventh Season Handbook" (PDF). keralahistory.ac.in. Retrieved 23 April 2018.
  58. ^ Kerala historians at loggerheads over archaeological findings at Pattanam KOCHI, 28 May 2014 The Hindu [10]
  59. ^ Oxford University to join Pattanam excavations THIRUVANANTHAPURAM, 25 December 2013 The Hindu [11]
  60. ^ . The Hindu. Chennai, India. 1 April 2007. Archived from the original on 6 March 2008.
  61. ^ KCHR reports 2007. P.J. Cherian et al.
  62. ^ Chambers, W. 1875. Chambers's Etymological Dictionary of the English Language. London. p. 513.
  63. ^ Subramanian, T. S. (14 March 2011). "Tamil-Brahmi script found at Pattanam in Kerala". The Hindu. Chennai, India.
  64. ^ "Ancient DNA research confirms West Eurasian genetic imprints in Pattanam". English.Mathrubhumi. 29 April 2023. Retrieved 5 August 2023.
  65. ^ ANI (29 April 2023). "One or two DNA samples will not give us entire idea: ASI on DNA research showing Eurasian imprints in Kerala". ThePrint. Retrieved 5 August 2023.
  66. ^ "Introduction". www.keralatourism.org Kerala Tourism
  67. ^ "Exhibition on Kottappuram Fort excavations" THIRUVANANTHAPURAM, 16 December 2010 'The Hindu' [12]

External links edit

  • Kerala State Department of Archaeology (Official website)
  • Muziris, Ancient Gateway on the Kerala Coast Brought to Life, The Citizen, 28 August 2020

muziris, spider, genus, spider, muchiri, malayalam, mutːʃiɾi, commonly, anglicized, ancient, greek, Μουζιρίς, malayalam, muciri, muciripattanam, പട, ടണ, possibly, identical, with, medieval, muyirikode, ancient, harbour, urban, centre, malabar, coast, found, me. For the spider genus see Muziris spider Muchiri Malayalam മ ച ച ര IPA mutːʃiɾi commonly anglicized as Muziris Ancient Greek Moyziris 2 Old Malayalam Muciri മ ച ച ര or Muciripattanam മ ച ച ര പ പട ടണ 3 possibly identical with the medieval Muyirikode മ യ ര ക ക ട 4 was an ancient harbour 5 and an urban centre on the Malabar Coast 3 Muziris found mention in the Periplus of the Erythraean Sea the bardic Tamil poems and a number of classical sources 6 7 8 9 It was the major ancient port city of Cheras Core of the city situated in the present day Kodungallur North Paravoor area The exact location of Muziris has been a matter of dispute among historians and archaeologists However excavations since 2004 at Pattanam near North Paravur have led some experts to suggesting the hypothesis that the city was located just there 1 8 3 It was an important trading port for Christian and Muslim merchants arriving from other countries MuzirisMuciriMuziris as shown in the 4th century Tabula PeutingerianaShown within IndiaAlternative nameMuyirikkodeLocationPattanam Kerala India 1 RegionChera EmpireTypeSettlementMuziris was a key to the interactions between South India and Persia the Middle East North Africa and the Greek and Roman Mediterranean region 10 11 Pliny the Elder in his Natural History hailed Muziris as the first emporium of India 3 The important known commodities exported from Muziris were spices such as black pepper and malabathron semi precious stones such as beryl pearls diamonds sapphires ivory Chinese silk Gangetic spikenard and tortoise shells The Roman navigators brought gold coins peridots thin clothing figured linens multicoloured textiles sulfide of antimony copper tin lead coral raw glass wine realgar and orpiment 12 13 The locations of unearthed coin hoards from Pattanam suggest an inland trade link from Muziris via the Palghat Gap and along the Kaveri Valley to the east coast of India Though the Roman trade declined from the 5th century AD the former Muziris attracted the attention of other nationalities particularly the Persians the Chinese and the Arabs presumably until the devastating floods of Periyar in 1341 7 3 Names routes and locations of the Periplus of the Erythraean Sea 1st century CE Earlier Muziris was identified with the region around Mangalore in southwestern Karnataka 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 Later hypothesis was that it was situated around present day Kodungallur a town in Thrissur district 24 Kodungallur in central Kerala figures prominently in the ancient history of southern India from the second Chola period as a hub of the Chera rulers 25 But later a series of excavations were conducted at the village of Pattanam near North Paravoor by Kerala Council for Historical Research an autonomous institution outsourced by the Kerala State Department of Archaeology in 2006 07 and it was announced that the lost port of Muziris was found and started the new hypothesis 8 26 27 This identification of Pattanam as the ancient Muziris also sparked controversy among historians 28 As per texts Kerala is known to have traded spices since the Sangam era it is based on this trade that some historians have implied that only foreign countries needed spices pepper Some historians and archaeologists criticized this view starting a debate among historians of South India 29 30 31 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Early descriptions 2 1 Sangam literature 2 2 Navigation of the Red Sea 2 3 Pliny the Elder 2 4 Claudius Ptolemy 2 5 Muziris papyrus 2 6 Cilappatikaram 2 7 Peutinger s Map 3 Great floods of Periyar 4 Archaeological excavations 4 1 Discoveries from Pattanam 5 Muziris Heritage Project 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksEtymology editThe derivation of the name Muziris is said to be from the native name of the port Muciri Tamil ம ச ற Malayalam മ ച റ In the region the Periyar river perhaps branched into two like a cleft lip thus speculatively leading to the name Muciri It is frequently referred to as Muciri in Sangam poems Muracippattanam in the Sanskrit epic Ramayana and as Muyirikkottu in the Jewish copper plate of an 11th century Chera ruler Early descriptions edit nbsp The Silk Road a group of ancient trade routes that linking east and west carried goods and ideas between the two great civilizations of Rome and China The land routes are shown in red the maritime routes in blue Sangam literature edit A tantalizing description of Muziris is in Akanaṉuṟu an anthology of early Tamil bardic poems poem number 149 7 11 in Eṭṭuttokai 32 the city where the beautiful vessels the masterpieces of the Yavanas Ionians stir white foam on the Culli Periyar a river of the Chera arriving with gold and departing with pepper when that Muciri brimming with prosperity was besieged by the din of war The Purananuru described Muziris as a bustling port city where interior goods were exchanged for imported gold 33 34 It seems that the Chera chiefs regarded their contacts with the Roman traders as a form of gift exchange rather than straightforward commercial dealings 35 With its streets its houses its covered fishing boats where they sell fish where they pile up rice with the shifting and mingling crowd of a boisterous river bank where the sacks of pepper are heaped up with its gold deliveries carried by the ocean going ships and brought to the river bank by local boats the city of the gold collared Kuttuvan Chera chief the city that bestows wealth to its visitors indiscriminately and the merchants of the mountains and the merchants of the sea the city where liquor abounds yes this Muciri were the rumbling ocean roars is given to me like a marvel a treasure Akananuru describes Pandya attacks on the Chera port of Muciri This episode is impossible to date but the attack seems to have succeeded in diverting Roman trade from Muziris 35 It is suffering like that experienced by the warriors who were mortally wounded and slain by the war elephants The suffering that was seen when the Pandya prince came to besiege the port of Muciri on his flag bearing chariot with decorated horses Riding on his great and superior war elephant the Pandya prince has conquered in battle He has seized the sacred images after winning the battle for rich Muciri Navigation of the Red Sea edit The author of the Greek travel book Periplus of the Erythraean Sea 1st century AD gives an elaborate description of the Chera Kingdom 36 37 then come Naura and Tyndis the first markets of Lymrike and then Muziris and Nelkynda which are now of leading importance Tyndis is of the Kingdom of Cerobothra it is a village in plain sight by the sea Muziris in the same Kingdom abounds in ships sent there with cargoes from Arabia and by the Greeks it is located on a river distant from Tyndis by the river and sea 500 stadia and up the river from the shore 20 stadia There is exported pepper which is produced in only one region near these markets a district called Cottonara The Periplus reveals how Muziris became the main trade port for the Chera chiefdom The author explains that this large settlement owed its prosperity to foreign commerce including shipping arriving from northern India and the Roman empire Black pepper from the hills was brought to the port by the local producers and stacked high in warehouses to await the arrival of Roman merchants As the shallows at Muziris prevented deep hulled vessels from sailing upriver to the port Roman freighters were forced to shelter at the edge of the lagoon while their cargoes were transferred upstream on smaller craft 35 The Periplus records that special consignments of grain were sent to places like Muziris and scholars suggest that these deliveries were intended for resident Romans who needed something to supplement the local diet of rice 35 Pliny the Elder edit Pliny the Elder gives a description of voyages to India in the 1st century AD He refers to many Indian ports in his The Natural History 38 However by the time of Pliny Muziris was no longer a favoured location in Roman trade dealing with South India 39 To those who are bound for India Ocelis on the Red Sea is the best place for embarkation If the wind called Hippalus south west Monsoon happens to be blowing it is possible to arrive in forty days at the nearest market in India Muziris by name This however is not a very desirable place for disembarkation on account of the pirates which frequent its vicinity where they occupy a place called Nutrias nor in fact is it very rich in articles of merchandise Besides the road stead for shipping is a considerable distance from the shore and the cargoes have to be conveyed in boats either for loading or discharging At the moment that I am writing these pages the name of the King of this place is Celebothras Claudius Ptolemy edit Ptolemy placed the Muziris emporium north of the mouth of the Pseudostomus river in his Geographia 40 Pseudostomus literally false mouth in Greek is generally identified with the modern day Periyar River Muziris papyrus edit This Greek papyrus of the 2nd century AD documents a contract involving an Alexandrian merchant importer and a financier that concerns cargoes especially of pepper and spices from Muziris 41 The fragmentary papyrus records details about a cargo consignment valued at around nine million sesterces brought back from Muziris on board a Roman merchant ship called the Hermapollon The discovery opened a strong base to ancient international and trade laws in particular and has been studied at length by economists lawyers and historians 42 43 Cilappatikaram edit The great Tamil epic Cilappatikaram The Story of the Anklet written by Ilango Adigal a Jain poet prince from Kodungallur Muziris during the 2nd century A D described Muziris as a place where Greek traders would arrive in their ships to barter their gold to buy pepper and since barter trade is time consuming they lived in homes living a lifestyle that he termed as exotic and a source of local wonder 44 45 46 Concerning Muziris and the Roman spice trade with Malabar the Cilappatikaram describes the prevailing situation as follows 46 When the broadrayed sun ascends from the south and white clouds start to form in the early cool season it is time to cross the dark billowing ocean The rulers of Tyndis dispatch vessels loaded with eaglewood silk sandalwood spices and all sorts of camphor Peutinger s Map edit Peutinger Map is an odd sized medieval copy of an ancient Roman road map with information which could date back to 2nd century AD in which both Muziris and Tondis are well marked with a large lake indicated behind Muziris and besides which is an icon marked Templ um Augusti widely taken to mean a Temple of Augustus 47 A large number of Roman subjects must have spent months in this region awaiting favourable conditions for return sailings to the Empire This could explain why the Map records the existence of an Augustan temple 35 It is also possible that there was a Roman colony in Muziris 48 Great floods of Periyar editMuziris disappeared from every known map of antiquity and without a trace presumably because of a cataclysmic event in 1341 a cyclone and floods in the Periyar that altered the geography of the region The historians Rajan Gurukkal and Dick Whittakker say in a study titled In Search of Muziris that the event which opened up the present harbour at Kochi and the Vembanad backwater system to the sea and formed a new deposit of land now known as the Vypeen Island near Kochi doubtless changed access to the Periyar river but geologically it was only the most spectacular of the physical changes and land formation that have been going on there from time immemorial According to them for example a geophysical survey of the region has shown that 200 300 years ago the shoreline lay about three kilometres east of the present coast and that some 2 000 years earlier it lay even further east about 6 5 km inland If Muziris had been situated somewhere here in Roman times the coast at that time would have run some 4 5 km east of its present line The regular silting up of the river mouth finally forced it to cease activity as a port 25 Archaeological excavations editA series of excavations conducted at Kodungallur starting from 1945 yielded nothing that went back to before the 13th century Another excavation was carried out in 1969 by the Archaeological Survey of India at Cheraman Parambu 2 km north of Kodungallur Only antiquities of the 13th and 16th century were recovered 49 In 1983 a large hoard of Roman coins was found at a site around six miles from Pattanam A series of pioneering excavations from 2007 carried out by the Kerala Council for Historical Research KCHR an autonomous institution at Pattanam uncovered a large number of artifacts 50 51 52 53 54 So far seven seasons of excavations 2007 14 have been completed by KCHR at Pattanam 55 The identification of Pattanam as Muziris is a divisive subject among some historians of South India When KCHR announced the possible finding of Muziris based on Pattanam finds it invited criticism from historians and archaeologists Historians such as R Nagaswamy KN Panikkar and MGS Narayanan disagreed with the identification and called for further analysis 30 47 54 Whether Pattanam was Muziris is not of immediate concern to us the chief of the Kerala Council for Historical Research recently stated to the media 56 Yet even the last field report on the excavations 2013 explicitly marks Pattanam as Muziris 57 While historian and academic Rajan Gurukkal has spoken in favour of the salvage of historic relics at Pattanam by KCHR given the site s disturbance due to continual human habitation and activity he thinks it ancient Muziris was no more than a colony of merchants from the Mediterranean The abundance of material from the Mediterranean suggests that traders arrived here using favorable monsoon winds and returned using the next after short sojourns he says Feeder vessels transported them between their ships and the wharf but it would be incorrect to say that it was a sophisticated port in an urban setting The place did not have any evolved administration nor any sophistication I believe it Pattanam was Muziris Had it been elsewhere Pattanam wharf and colony would ve found a mention in available records he says 58 Discoveries from Pattanam edit Archaeological research has shown that Pattanam was a port frequented by Romans and it has a long history of habitation dating back to 10th century BC Its trade links with Rome peaked between 1st century BC and 4th century AD 59 A large quantity of artifacts represents the maritime contacts of the site with the Mediterranean Red Sea and Indian Ocean rims Major finds include ceramics lapidary related objects metal objects coins architectural ruins geological zoological and botanical remains 57 Mediterranean 100 BCE to CE 400 Amphora terra sigillata shards Roman glass fragments and gaming counters West Asian South Arabian amp Mesopotamian 300 BCE to CE 1000 Turquoise glazed pottery torpedo jar fragments and frankincense crumbs Chinese CE 1600 to CE 1900 Blue on white porcelain shards Regional Local 1000 BCE to CE 2000 Black and red ware shards Indian rouletted ware gemstones glass beads semi precious stone beads inlays intaglio cameo blanks coins spices pottery and terracotta objects Urban life 100 BCE to CE 400 burnt bricks rooftiles ring wells storage jars toilet features lamps coins stylus personal adornment items and scripts on pottery Industrial character 100 BCE to CE 400 Metallurgy reflected in iron copper gold and lead objects crucibles slag furnace installations lapidary remains of semi precious stones and spindle whorls indicating weaving Maritime features 100 BCE to CE 400 Wharf warehouse canoe bollards The major discoveries from Pattanam include thousands of beads made of semi precious stone shards of Roman amphora Chera era coins made of copper alloys and lead fragments of Roman glass pillar bowls terra sigillata remains of a long wooden boat and associated bollards made of teak and a wharf made of fired brick 12 60 The most remarkable find at Pattanam excavations in 2007 was a brick structural wharf complex with nine bollards to harbour boats and in the midst of this a highly decayed canoe all perfectly mummified in mud The canoe 6 meters long was made of Artocarpus hirsutus a tree common on the Malabar Coast out of which boats are made 61 The bollards some of which are still in satisfactory condition were made of teak 62 Three Tamil Brahmi scripts were also found in the Pattanam excavations The last Tamil Brahmi script dated to c 2nd century AD probably reading a ma na meaning a Jaina in Tamil was found on a pot rim at Pattanam If the rendering and the meaning is not mistaken it establishes that Jainism was prevalent on the Malabar Coast at least from the 2nd century This is the first time that excavators have found evidence relating to a religious system in ancient Kerala 63 DNA analyses of skeleton samples discovered from Pattanam confirmed the presence of people with West Eurasian genetic imprints in Muziris in the past This is considered to be an indication of the huge international importance the ancient port city once held in the past 64 However the ASI was more sceptical suggesting that more research is required to confirm the Eurasian presence in the site 65 Muziris Heritage Project editThe Muziris Heritage Project is a tourism venture by Tourism Department of Kerala to reinstate the historical and cultural significance of Muziris The idea of the project came after the extensive excavations and discoveries at Pattanam by the Kerala Council for Historical Research 66 The project also covers various other historically significant sites and monuments in central Kerala The nearby site of Kottappuram a 16th century fort was also excavated from May 2010 onwards as part of the Muziris Heritage Project 67 See also edit nbsp India portalKottayil Kovilakam Kochi Muziris Biennale an international exhibition of contemporary art held in Kochi Kerala References edit a b Muthiah S 24 April 2017 The ancient ports of India The Hindu ISSN 0971 751X Retrieved 7 May 2022 Periplus of the Erythraean Sea 53 and 54 a b c d e Lost cities 3 Muziris did black pepper cause the demise of India s ancient port Cities The Guardian theguardian com Retrieved 7 May 2022 A Sreedhara Menon 1967 Muchiri A Survey of Kerala History Retrieved 20 April 2016 Gurukkal Rajan 29 June 2013 A Misnomer in Political Economy Classical Indo Roman Trade Economic amp Political Weekly 48 26 27 Retrieved 24 April 2020 Artefacts from the lost Port of Muziris The Hindu 3 December 2014 a b Muziris at last R Krishnakumar www frontline in Frontline 10 23 April 2010 a b c Pattanam richest Indo Roman site on Indian Ocean rim The Hindu 3 May 2009 George Menachery Werner Chakkalakkal 10 January 2001 Cranganore Past and Present Kodungallur The Cradle of Christianity in India Retrieved 11 May 2016 Cyclopaedia of India and of Eastern and Southern Asia Ed by Edward Balfour 1871 Second Edition Volume 2 p 584 Search for India s ancient city bbc co uk BBC World News 11 June 2006 Web 1 a b Steven E Sidebotham Berenike and the Ancient Maritime Spice Route pp 191 University of California Press 2011 George Gheverghese Joseph 2009 A Passage to Infinity New Delhi SAGE Publications Pvt Ltd pp 13 ISBN 978 81 321 0168 0 J Sturrock 1894 Madras District Manuals South Canara Volume I Madras Government Press Harold A Stuart 1895 Madras District Manuals South Canara Volume II Madras Government Press Government of Madras 1905 Madras District Gazetteers Statistical Appendix for South Canara District Madras Government Press Government of Madras 1915 Madras District Gazetteers South Canara Volume II Madras Government Press William Logan 1887 Malabar Manual Volume I Madras Government Press William Logan 1887 Malabar Manual Volume II Madras Government Press Charles Alexander Innes 1908 Madras District Gazetteers Malabar Volume I Madras Government Press Charles Alexander Innes 1915 Madras District Gazetteers Malabar Volume II Madras Government Press C Achutha Menon 1911 The Cochin State Manual Cochin Government Press Sreedhara Menon A January 2007 Kerala Charitram 2007 ed Kottayam DC Books ISBN 978 81 264 1588 5 Retrieved 19 July 2020 Romila Thapar There is no mention of Trade via Sea Route or of any ports during Sangam era It were the Vikings who created first of ships which could cross sea let alone ocean The Scanidinavians used their ships to cross the sea and reach nearby countryside in Europe and all that happened in early 12th century The Penguin History of Early India From the Origins to AD 1300 pp 46 Penguin Books India 2003 a b Krishnakumar P Muziris at last www frontline in Frontline 10 23 April 2010 Web 2 Basheer K P M Pattanam finds throw more light on trade The Hindu Madras 12 June 2011 Web 3 Smitha Ajayan Traces of controversies Deccan Chronicle 20 Feb 2013 Web 4 Expert nails false propaganda on Muziris newindianexpress com Historian cautions on Pattanam excavations The Hindu Madras 6 February 2012 Web 5 a b Archaeologist calls for excavations at Kodungalloor The Hindu Madras 5 August 2011 Web 6 KCHR asked to hand over Pattanam excavation ibnlive in com CNN IBN 16 November 2011 Web 7 Kulke Hermann Dietmar Rothermund 2004 A History of India Routledge ISBN 0 415 32919 1 Peter Francis Asia s Maritime Bead Trade 300 B C to the Present pp 120 University of Hawaii Press 01 Jan 2002 Menachery George Azhikode Kodungallur 1987 Kodungallur City of St Thomas a b c d e Raoul McLaughlin Rome and the Distant East Trade Routes to the Ancient Lands of Arabia India and China pp 48 50 Continuum 2010 The Voyage around the Erythraean Sea depts washington edu Retrieved 23 April 2018 Martin K a Anandan S Martin K a Anandan S 21 January 2012 Re enact Muziris voyages KHA tells Navy The Hindu Retrieved 23 April 2018 via www thehindu com Philemon Holland s Pliny penelope uchicago edu Retrieved 23 April 2018 Pliny the Elder Natural History vi 26 104 Peter Francis Asia s Maritime Bead Trade 300 B C to the Present pp 119 University of Hawaii Press 01 Jan 2002 Romila Thapar The Penguin History of Early India From the Origins to AD 1300 Penguin Books India 2003 Raoul McLaughlin Rome and the Distant East Trade Routes to the Ancient Lands of Arabia India and China pp 40 Continuum 2010 For the full text in Greek and its translation see http www uni koeln de phil fak ifa zpe downloads 1990 084pdf 084195 pdf Madhukar Jayanthi 3 December 2016 Malayala panorama The Hindu ISSN 0971 751X Retrieved 14 December 2017 Muthiah S 24 April 2017 The ancient ports of India The Hindu ISSN 0971 751X Retrieved 14 December 2017 a b McLaughlin Raoul 11 September 2014 The Roman Empire and the Indian Ocean The Ancient World Economy and the Kingdoms of Africa Arabia and India Pen and Sword ISBN 9781473840959 a b Navigation News Frontline FRONTLINE 1 April 2010 Retrieved 23 April 2018 Romans in Muziris Srivathsan A In search of Muziris The Hindu Madras 2 May 2010 Web 8 Search for India s ancient city BBC News 11 June 2006 Retrieved 19 May 2010 Govind M Harish 23 March 2004 Archaeologists stumble upon Muziris The Hindu Archived from the original on 9 August 2010 Retrieved 6 April 2022 Hunting for Muziris The Hindu Chennai India 28 March 2004 Archived from the original on 27 May 2004 Excavations highlight Malabar maritime heritage The Hindu Chennai India 1 April 2007 Archived from the original on 6 March 2008 a b Rajagopal Shyama Surendranath Nidhi 30 August 2013 Archaeology Dept lumbering under shortage of manpower The Hindu Chennai India Srivathsan A 22 May 2013 Pattanam antiquity authenticated by radiocarbon dating The Hindu Chennai India S ANANDAN Was Pattanam an urban trade centre 28 May 2014 The Hindu 9 a b KCHR Pattanam Seventh Season Handbook PDF keralahistory ac in Retrieved 23 April 2018 Kerala historians at loggerheads over archaeological findings at Pattanam KOCHI 28 May 2014 The Hindu 10 Oxford University to join Pattanam excavations THIRUVANANTHAPURAM 25 December 2013 The Hindu 11 Excavations highlight Malabar maritime heritage The Hindu Chennai India 1 April 2007 Archived from the original on 6 March 2008 KCHR reports 2007 P J Cherian et al Chambers W 1875 Chambers s Etymological Dictionary of the English Language London p 513 Subramanian T S 14 March 2011 Tamil Brahmi script found at Pattanam in Kerala The Hindu Chennai India Ancient DNA research confirms West Eurasian genetic imprints in Pattanam English Mathrubhumi 29 April 2023 Retrieved 5 August 2023 ANI 29 April 2023 One or two DNA samples will not give us entire idea ASI on DNA research showing Eurasian imprints in Kerala ThePrint Retrieved 5 August 2023 Introduction www keralatourism org Kerala Tourism Exhibition on Kottappuram Fort excavations THIRUVANANTHAPURAM 16 December 2010 The Hindu 12 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Muziris Kerala State Department of Archaeology Official website Muziris Ancient Gateway on the Kerala Coast Brought to Life The Citizen 28 August 2020 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Muziris amp oldid 1191224700, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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