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Ponnani

Ponnani (Malayalam pronunciation: ​[pon̺ːɐːn̺i]) is a municipality in Ponnani Taluk, Malappuram District, in the state of Kerala, India. It serves as the administrative center of the Taluk and Block Panchayat of the same name. It is situated at the estuary of Bharatappuzha (River Ponnani), on its southern bank, and is bounded by the Arabian Sea on the west and a series of brackish lagoons in the south.

Ponnani
Chamravattom Regulator-cum-Bridge connects Ponnani with Tirur. Bharathappuzha river (Ponnani River) and Tirur River join with each other and empties together into Arabian Sea at Purathur (Southernmost tip of Tirur Taluk), which lies opposite of Ponnani Port.
Nickname(s): 
The City of Gold coins,[1] The Little Mecca of Malabar[2]
Ponnani
Location in Kerala, India
Ponnani
Ponnani (India)
Ponnani
Ponnani (Asia)
Ponnani
Ponnani (Earth)
Coordinates: 10°46′N 75°54′E / 10.77°N 75.9°E / 10.77; 75.9Coordinates: 10°46′N 75°54′E / 10.77°N 75.9°E / 10.77; 75.9
Country India
StateKerala
DistrictMalappuram
Area
 • Total24.82 km2 (9.58 sq mi)
Population
 (2011)[4]
 • Total90,491
 • Density3,600/km2 (9,400/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+5:30 (IST)
Postal Index Number
679 577
Telephone code0494
Vehicle registrationKL-54
Websitewww.ponnanimunicipality.lsgkerala.gov.in

It is the seventh-most populated municipality in the state, the second-most populated municipality in the district, and the most densely populated municipality in Malappuram district, having about 3,646 residents per square kilometre as of the year 2011.[5] As of the 2011 Census, the municipality forms a part of Malappuram metropolitan area. National Highway 66, from to Panvel to Kanyakumari, passes through Ponnani Municipality. [6] The Palakkad-Ponnani State Highway which connects National Highway 66 with National Highway 544 is another important road. The River Tirur‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍ joins River Ponnani at its mouth at Patinjarekkara Beach from the north bank, opposite to Ponnani. The Colonial-era Cannoly Canal ("the Ponnani Canal") bisects Ponnani town.[7] Ponnani is located 68 km south to Kozhikode city, 48 km southwest to Malappuram city, 91 km northwest to Palakkad city, and 50 km northwest to Thrissur city. Ponnani is located right in the middle of the Kerala coast.

In the Middle Ages, under the ambitious Hindu chiefs of Kozhikode (the Samutiris/Zamorins), Ponnani developed as one of the most important centers of Muslim trade - both overseas and domestic - on the Arabian Sea. The port also served as the military headquarters of the Kozhikode rulers. With the arrival of the Portuguese explorers in the late - 15th century, the city witnessed several battles between the Admirals of Kozhikode and the Portuguese for the monopoly in the Spice Trade. Whenever a formal war was broke out between the Portuguese and the Kozhikode rulers, the Portuguese attacked and plundered, as the opportunity offered, the port of Ponnani. The relentless battles lead to the eventual decline of the settlement, with the exodus of Middle Eastern merchants, and the rulers who protected it. Presently, Ponnani is one of the major fishing centers in Kerala.[8][9][10][11]

The original headquarters of the Perumbadappu Swaroopam, who later became the Kingdom of Cochin, was at Chithrakoodam in Vanneri, Perumpadappu, which is located 10 km south to Puthuponnani, in Ponnani taluk. When Perumpadappu came under the kingdom of the Zamorin of Calicut, the rulers of Perumpadappu fled to Kodungallur, and later they moved to Kochi, where they established the Kingdom of Cochin.

The city of Ponnani also provided ideological support for the battles against the Estado da Índia. It was the home of the revered Makhdum family. Prominent members of this Yemeni family of Islamic theologians included Zain-ud-Din Makhdum I (1467 - 1521) and his grandson Zain-ud-Din Makhdum II (1530 - 1581). Makhdum II is known for his formidable historical chronicle Tuhfat al-Mujahidin ("Glory to the Victory of Mujahidun", c. 1583), first printed and published in Lisbon. A copy of this edition has been preserved in the library of Al-Azhar University, Cairo.[8][9][10][11]

The Ponnani Jum'ah Masjid, also known as Valiya Jum'ah Palli/Makhdum Mosque, was built in the 16th century AD. Ponnani, once known as the "Little Mecca of Malabar" and the "Jami'at al-Azhar of Malabar", was a prominent center of Islamic learning. It is known that students from as far as Sumatra, Java and Sri Lanka traveled to Ponnani for their spiritual education.[8][12][7] The town was described in many sources as "the Land of 23½ Mosques". It currently has around 50 mosques, spread around the town.[13]

During the months of February and March, large number of migratory birds flock at Ponnani (both Ponnani and Patinjarekkara Beaches). Arabi Malayalam script, a script used to write Malayalam, was originated at Ponnani. The script was also known as "the Ponnani Script".[12] Bharathappuzha, also known as the Ponnani River, has contributed much to the Malayalam literature.

Names

 
A view of Arabian Sea at Ponnani
 
Ponnani municipal office
 
Ponnani mini civil station in 2010
 
Puthuponnani Munambam Beach

Ponnani is described by different authors, all the way from Europe to Arabia to China, in different names. Some of the names are given below.

  • Ponani/Paniyani: British/East India Company
  • Ponam: the Chinese Sailors[14]
  • Funan: the Arab merchants[14]
  • Pananee/Pananie/Pananx: the Portuguese and Spanish Writers and Sailors[15]
  • Panane/Panany: the Dutch East India Company[16]
  • Pagnany/Pagniany: the French Sailors[17]

Etymology

It is believed the word Ponnani comes from Pon Nanayam (Gold Coin) after the circulation of Arab gold coins introduced here by the Arabs and the Persians.[1] The name of the place traces back to the maritime trade tradition of the port city.[1] Bharathappuzha River (River Ponnani), which is also the second-longest river in Kerala flows into Arabian Sea at Ponnani port.[1] The Palakkad Gap on the bank of River Bharathappuzha was the principal trade route between Malabar Coast and Coromandel Coast in ancient times.[18] Anyway the name Ponnani is connected with the maritime trade that occurred here for centuries.[1]

History

 
Ponnani harbour in 2012
 
Biyyam backwater lake

Pre-historical and Early Historical (2nd century BC – 3rd century AD) nature of this settlement is shrouded in mystery. It is one of the oldest ports in South India and can be identified with the port of Tyndis, which was a satellite feeding port to Muziris, according to the Periplus of the Erythraean Sea.[19] Tyndis was a major center of trade, next only to Muziris, between the Cheras and the Roman Empire.[20] The River Bharathappuzha (River Ponnani) had importance since Sangam period (1st-4th century CE), due to the presence of Palakkad Gap which connected the Malabar coast with Coromandel coast through inland.[18] Ponnani's location at estuary of the Bharatappuzha amidst the fertile plains suitable for rice cultivation might have attracted early settlers. It is known that the river mouth - situated opposite to the plains of Coimbatore across the Ghat mountains - was accessed by the rulers of central Tamil Nadu through the Palghat Gap. It is generally assumed that the archaic Tamil chiefs came into contact with Greco-Roman navigators at the mouth of the Bharatappuzha.[21]

Even in the latter times, Ponnani served as the major rice supplier to the Portuguese outposts in India. Throughout the Colonial rule, the Ponnani rice cargoes were shipped across the West Coast. Tobacco was the other major commodity exported from Ponnani to Goa.[22]

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

Pliny the Elder (1st century CE) states that the port of Tyndis was located at the northwestern border of Keprobotos (Chera dynasty).[23] The North Malabar region, which lies north of the port at Tyndis, was ruled by the kingdom of Ezhimala during Sangam period.[24] According to the Periplus of the Erythraean Sea, a region known as Limyrike began at Naura and Tyndis. However the Ptolemy mentions only Tyndis as the Limyrike's starting point. The region probably ended at Kanyakumari; it thus roughly corresponds to the present-day Malabar Coast. The value of Rome's annual trade with the region was estimated at around 50,000,000 sesterces.[25] Pliny the Elder mentioned that Limyrike was prone by pirates.[26] The Cosmas Indicopleustes mentioned that the Limyrike was a source of peppers.[27][28]

An inscription which dates back to 932 CE, found from Triprangode, mentions Goda Ravi of Chera dynasty and Thavanur.[29] Several inscriptions written in Old Malayalam those date back to the 10th century CE, have found from Sukapuram near Ponnani, which was one of the 64 old Nambudiri villages of Kerala.

Pre-Portuguese Era: the Centre of Muslim trade

Ponnani used to be under the control of the Brahmins of "Tirumanasseri Natu", with protection from the Vellattiri (Valluvanatu/Angatippuram) chief, in medieval times. Later the Tirumanasseri Namputiri handed over the port Ponnani to the Samutiri of Kozhikode. An arrangement was reached between the Brahmin and the Samutiri, as a result of which, the former was obliged to protect the interests of the latter against the neighboring chiefs of Valluvanatu (South Malabar) and Perumpatappu (Cochin).[14]

As Kozhikode's political authority extended to South Malabar and Cochin, the Samutiri came to reside more and more at Ponnani (Trikkavil Palace, south of the present-day temple). The port town gradually became the second home of the Kozhikotu chiefs. By the 15th century, we know that Ponnani served as the military capital of the Samutiris of Kozhikode. The city also hosted the largest arsenal of the Kozhikotu rulers. The port at Ponnani was defended by fortifications on either bank of the river.[14]

  • At the time of the arrival of Vasco da Gama and his Portuguese fleet at Kozhikode, the Samutiri of Kozhikode was residing at Ponnani.[30]
  • When the Samutiri Kovilakam at Kozhikode was besieged by the Mysore Sultan Haidar 'Ali (18th century AD), the Samutiri sent his family members to safe heavens at Ponnani.[31]
  • It is believed that Malik ibn Dinar, the first Islamic missionary to Kerala, visited Ponnani and established a mosque.[12]

Portuguese era

 
The path Vasco da Gama took to reach Kozhikode (black line) in 1498, which was also the discovery of a sea route from Europe to India, and eventually paved way for the European colonisation of Indian subcontinent. At that time, the Zamorin of Calicut was residing at Thrikkavil Kovilakam in Ponnani.
 
Portuguese conquistador and explorer Francisco de Almeida, Viceroy of Portuguese India, raided Ponnani in November 1507.

In the 16th century, Ponnani witnessed several battles between Kozhikode naval chiefs, known as the Kunhali Marakkars, and the Portuguese colonizers.[12] Whenever a formal war was broke out between the Portuguese and the Kozhikode rulers, the Portuguese attacked and plundered, as the opportunity offered, the port of Ponnani.[14]

As per some historians, the ancestral home of the Kunhali Marakkar family was at Ponnani. In course of time they spread to Tanur and other settlements of the west coast. It seems that the Kunhalis shifted their base to Putupattanam when Fransico de Almedia attacked Ponnani (1507).[32][9] There is another view about the origin of Kunhali Marakkars. As per this tradition, they were descended from a Muslim merchant by name Muhammmad who traded in Cochin. Muhammad and his brother were forced to leave Cochin and settle at Ponnani in the wake of the Portuguese occupation of the place which had resulted in the destruction of his ships and warehouses. The Marakkars later moved his base to Kozhikode and when Ponnani was sacked by de Menezes (1525), he offered help to the Samutiri in his fight against the Portuguese.[9] Kutti Pokkar, a Captain in the fleet of Pattu Marakkar (Kunhali Marakkar the Third), was a native of Ponnani.[9]

Ponnani is usually considered as the military capital of the Samutiris of Kozhikode. For an assault on Cochin in 1500 AD, the Samutiri seems to have assembled a huge army of 50,000 Nairs at Ponnani.[33] It is widely written that the Muslims were ready to defend their bastion of Ponnani with their life ("to die as martyrs").[34]

It is known that large number of men and vessels from Ponnani took part in a battle against the Portuguese off the coast of Kannur on 16 March 1506. In addition to the native Muslims, the Kozhikode Fleet of around two hundred large vessels carried large number of "red-coated" Turkish soldiers. Lorenzo Almeida was able to defeat this combined forces, and near 3,000 Muslims were killed the battle. The Portuguese loss was very trifling.[34]

Almeida's attack

Towards the end of year 1507, Viceroy Francisco de Almeida was informed that a column of 13 Muslim ships had taken cargo - mainly spices - from Ponnani and were about to leave for the Red Sea. The Viceroy immediately decided corner the fleet. The decision was perhaps made with a view to retrieve the Portuguese prestige lost on account of the some incidents at Angediva and Dabul. Almeida himself commandeered the fleet of 12 vessels consisting of four naus, six caravels and two gales. The fleet had about 6,000 European soldiers, led by a collection of noblemen such as Pero Barreti, Diogo Pires, Lourenco de Almeida, and Nuno da Cunha, son of Tristao da Cunha and a handful of Cochin Nairs.[35]

Ponnani at the time was defended by a strong battery of artillery (forty guns), and a number of well-armed ships under Kutti Ali. Kutti Ali of Ponnani was a powerful captain of the Samutiri Fleet having with him more than 7,000 armed men. The harbor was protected by fortifications on either side of the entrances. The Portuguese writers later recorded that "the men were rather frightened by the prayers and shouts of the enemy" as approached the port. Tristao da Cunha defeated the Muslim forces (24 November 1507) in the subsequent engagement. Eighteen Portuguese were killed in the assault. Lorenzo was wounded by the Muslims and the fight was stubborn.[32] Muslim ships were burnt, and the Portuguese seized their arms and ammunitions. The commodities that were made ready for despatch to Red Sea were also taken over by the Portuguese. The Ponnani town was looted, burnt and destroyed.[34][35][32]

The defenses of the Ponnani Port were repaired and strengthened after this event.[14][33] It seems that Kunhali Marakkar I, assisted by Kutti Ali and Pacchi Marakkar, subsequently constructed a naval base at Ponnani. Kutti Ali sent harassing raids from Ponnani to Cochin and reinforcement fleets to Kozhikode.[33]

Meneses' attack

 
Viceroy Henrique de Meneses conquered Ponnani in 1525.

Portuguese Viceroy Henrique de Meneses appeared off the coast of Ponnani on 25 February 1525 with a fleet of 50 ships, including 19 grabs supplied by the chief of Purakkad. After an unsuccessful mission in Cochin, the Samutiri army was camping at Ponnani. Meneses sent initially some soldiers to the shore for water and provisions. But they were set upon and driven back.[14][33]

Next morning (26 February), the Portuguese landed in forces, and a fierce engagement took place the newly developed base at Ponnani. Thirty-eight ships belonging to Chinna Kutti Ali were burnt; a large number of Mappilas were killed, the coconut trees on either bank of the River Ponnani were cut by the Cochin Nairs, and houses, shops and mosques were all destroyed. The Ponnani town was partially burnt in the assault.[14][33] The cutting of the coconut trees in a region was considered as a method of punishment to the inhabitants. In 1528, a strong Portuguese fleet cornered Kutti Ali off the coast of Bankur and he was taken prisoner.

Treaty of Ponnani

The Portuguese Viceroy Garcia de Noronha signed a peace treaty with the Samutiri of Kozhikode on board the ship St. Mattheus at Ponnani on 1 January 1540. As per the agreement, called the Treaty of Ponnani, the Samutiri granted the Portuguese the virtual monopoly, of trade in pepper and ginger at Kozhikode, accepted the Portuguese Passes (the infamous "cartazes") for the navigation of Arab vessels and gave assurances of non-intervention in the wars of the Portuguese with other native powers [such as Cochin].[35][9]

Terms of the Treaty (1540)

  • The Portuguese were to buy all the Kozhikode pepper at the Cochin rate and ginger at 92 fanams per bahar, and allow the Samutiri of Kozhikode to send 3.5 bahar of pepper to Portugal on his own account for every 100 bahars bought by the Portuguese.[32]
  • The Portuguese agreed to sell part of their merchandise at Kozhikode, so that the Samutiri of Kozhikode might have his customary dues on imports, and to provide the Samutiri of Kozhikode with quicksilver, vermilion and coal.[36]
  • The Treaty bound the Portuguese also to neutrality even if the Samutiri of Kozhikode attacked their allies. In return the Samutiri of Kozhikode agreed to accept the Portuguese Passports for the Moorish vessels.[14]

In 1552, the Samutiri of Kozhikode received assistance in heavy guns landed at Ponnani, brought by certain Yoosuf, a Turk, who had sailed against the monsoon winds. In 1566 and again in 1568, Kutti Pokkar of Ponnani and his men captured two Portuguese ships. Around a thousand soldiers from one of these ships were killed either by the sword or drowning. Kutti Pokkar was later in killed off the coast of Mangalore, while returning from a successful raid on the Portuguese fort there.[34]

A Portuguese fleet of 40 vessels under the command of Diogo de Meneses is known to have pillaged Ponnani, sometime before 1570 AD.[33][37] It is also known that Gil Eanes Mascarenhas opened fire from his ships to Ponnani port and killed large number of natives in 1582. Mascarenhas was later captured, and executed by the forces of Kunhali Marakkar.[38]

Muslims from Ponnani is known to have actively participated in the Siege of Fort Chaliyam in 1571.[34] The Samutiri of Kozhikode sent against the Fort Chaliyam certain of his ministers in command over the Muslims of Ponnani, who were assisted by bodies of people from Chaliyam.[14]

Portuguese Fort

The Portuguese had earlier (around 1528, under da Cunha) tried to construct a fort on the north bank of the Vaikkal river mouth at Ponnani. This piece of land belonged to the chief of Bettem. The ships coming from Cochin with materials for construction - like stones and mortars - reached near Vaikkal. But all the vessels except one "mast vessel" were destroyed by being dashed to the shore in a storm. Some Portuguese men were drowned and some were captured. The cannons recovered came under the possession of the Samutiri of Kozhikode.[33]

 
Ponnani Harbour

As per an agreement (1584) between the Samutiri and the Portuguese, the Kozhikode allowed the Portuguese to have a factory, instead of a fort, at Ponnani, obtaining in return the right of navigation for the Muslims to the ports of Gujarat, Persia and Arabia.[14] Dom Jeronimo Mascaranhas, who was instrumental in signing the contract with the ruler of Kozhikode, was appointed the Captain of the Factory at Ponnani.[35] The decision was deeply resented by the Kunhali Marakkar III.[33]

Sooner rather than later, Duarte de Menezes entrusted Ruy Goncalves de Carmara command of an expedition determined to erect a fort proper at Ponnani. Goncalves proceeded to Ponnani, from where he dispatched a message to the Samutiri of Kozhikode, informing him of the object of his visit, and requesting that he would meet him with the view of selecting a suitable site. The Kozhikode chief kept Goncalves waiting for some time on the plea that his Brahmins were unable to fix upon an auspicious date whereupon Goncalves sent the Brahmins some presents, and they then speedily named a favorable hour for the purpose.[39] The construction of a Portuguese fort at Ponnani began in 1585.[15] Gonsalves, being in a hurry to depart, erected only a fort of wood. Rui Gomes de Gram, the first Captain of the Fort, is known to have strengthened the defenses on the Ponnani. He pulled down the wooded structures and erected one of stone of considerable strength.[39][35] Gasper Fagundes, who was in the Ponnani Fort in 1586, was asked by the Portuguese Governor to offer his services to the Samutiri of the Kozhikode against the Kunhali Marakkar.[35] By an agreement (1597) between the Samutiri of Kozhikode and the Portuguese, the former agreed to give site to the latter to erect a church at Ponnani.[40]

Dutch Factory

 
Ponnani harbour in the mid-1930s

By a treaty signed between the Dutch Admiral Steven Van der Hagen and the Samutiri of Kozhikode (11 November 1604), the Dutch were permitted to open a factory at Ponnani in return for their help against the Portuguese.[14] The factory served as a military outpost of the Dutch East India Company. A Dutch Resident was in charge of the settlement. The aim of the residency was to keep "peace" with the Samutiri of Kozhikode and to watch the activities of the other European powers and the native enemies of the Dutch Company. Stein van Gollenesse wanted to cover the residency building with tiles. But the Samutiri never consented to the proposal, fearing that it would increase the Dutch influence. The chief directed Gollenesse's successor to re-thatch it every year with new coconut leaves.[41] In 1607, the Dutch had inaugurated negotiations with the Samutiri of Kozhikode at Ponnani.[16]

English ships captained by James Keeling, sailing from Surat, is known to have visited Ponnani around 1615 AD.[11]

On 12 February, a friendly reception was given by the Samutiri of Kozhikode to French Viceroy de la Haye and M. Caron (French Company) at Ponnani. M. Coche, a young Parisian clerk in the French Company's service, took up his residence at Ponnani as a token of gratitude.[17]

A meeting between Father Carre and M. Coche took place off Ponnani on 10 November 1674. According to this narrative, young Coche was "almost metamorphosed into an Indian" by his stay at Ponnani. Carre also met Aubert, a French merchant in the English Company's service. The ship carrying Father Abbe was detained at Ponnani over a dispute over delivery of goods - mainly pepper. Carre took the opportunity to travel by land, with the escort of four Nairs, to Tellicherry Factory.[17]

On 8 March 1747, it was the Dutch Resident at Ponnani who reported to the Malabar Council the plan of the Samutiri of Kozhikode to occupy by surprise the Fort Chetwai under the pretext of going to Cochin. The alertness of the Ponnani deterred the Samutiri from making the attack. In 1755, the Samutiri's plan to attack the land of Payencherry Nair, a Dutch ally, was also exposed by the Ponnani Residency.[41]

A meeting between Commandeur van Rheede and the Samutiri of Kozhikode, over the cession of Chetwai, took place at Ponnani in 1678 AD.[32]

Under the Sultans of Mysore

 
Hariharamangalam Mana

Haidar 'Ali, Sultan of Mysore conquered northern Kerala in 1766 and established an outpost at Ponnani. His successor Fateh Ali Tipu (Tippu Sultan) developed the port at Ponnani for trade, and for strategic reasons.[42] Tipu considered Ponnani as a major exporting centre in Malabar.[43]

Ponnani Canal

Ponnani Canal was constructed for the transportation of goods from Ponnani to Tirur railway station. Here is a description about the Ponnani Canal by Basel Mission employees at Codacal.[44]

...nowadays a steamship travels between Ponani and Tirur through the Canal, where the most convenient railway station for Ponnani is to be found. The ticket costs only 4 annas, although the distance is 10 km...

Response to British Colonial Rule

 
Fishing boats at Ponnani. Presently Ponnani Port is reduced to the status of a major fishing centre[12]

Ponnani was a major hub of Indian nationalist movement in Malabar District during the British Raj. Ponnani region was the working platform of K. Kelappan, popularly known as Kerala Gandhi,Vakeel Raman Menon,known as Ponnani Gandhi, A. V. Kuttimalu Amma, and Mohammed Abdur Rahiman, and several other freedom fighters.[45] Other independence activists from Ponnani taluk included Lakshmi Sehgal, V. T. Bhattathiripad, and Ammu Swaminathan. The ashes of Mahatma Gandhi, Jawaharlal Nehru, and Lal Bahadur Shastri, were deposited in Kerala at Tirunavaya, on the bank of the river Bharathappuzha.[46][45]

Ali Musaliyar (1854 - 1921), one of principle leaders of the 1921 Mappila Rebellion, had studied at the Ponnani madrasa. Sayyid S. Makti Tangal (d. 1912), an influential Mappila theological reformer, was a native of Ponnani.[11]

K. V. Raman Menon (1900–1974), known as Ponnani Gandhi, was a reputed Indian National Congress leader of the time who had actively participated in the freedom movement against the British in Malabar District.[47] He was a social reformer and was a leading lawyer of the Court of Ponnani.[48]

Presently, Ponnani is one of the major fishing centers in Malappuram.[12]

The Makhdums of Ponnani

 
The Ponnani Canal at Ponnani (in the 1930s)
 
The Ponnani Mosque, a view from the north
 
Institute of Career and Research,near Eswaramangalam,Ponnani

It is known that the Makhdum family sailed from Yemen to South India to propagate Islam. The family initially settled in Tamil Nadu (the Ma'bar region), before moving to Cochin (15th century) and later to Ponnani.[8]

Ponnani Cuisine

Ponnani has a wide variety of indigenous dishes. The centuries of maritime trade has given the Ponnani a cosmopolitan cuisine. The cuisine is a blend of traditional Kerala, Persian, Yemenese and Arab food culture.[49] One of the main elements of this cuisine is Pathiri, a pancake made of rice flour. Variants of Pathiri include Neypathiri (made with ghee), Poricha Pathiri (fried rather than baked), Meen Pathiri (stuffed with fish), and Irachi Pathiri (stuffed with beef). Spices like Black pepper, Cardamom, and Clove are widely used in the cuisine of Ponnani. Muttappathiri is another popular breakfast snacks. The main item used in the festivals is the Malabar style of Biryani. Sadhya is also seen in marriage and festival occasions. Snacks such as Arikadukka, Chattipathiri, Muttamala, Pazham Nirachathu, and Unnakkaya have their own style in Ponnani. Besides these, other common food items of Kerala are also seen in the cuisine of Ponnani.[50] The Malabar version of Biryani, popularly known as Kuzhi Mandi in Malayalam is another popular item, which has an influence from Yemen.[49]

Demographics

As of 2011 India census, Ponnani Municipality had a population of 90,491. Males constitute 47% of the population and females 53%. Ponnani has an average literacy rate of 90.00%."Literacy Rate of India - Population Census 2011". www.census2011.co.in. Retrieved 13 July 2017. Male literacy is 93.36%, and female literacy is 87.07%. At Ponnani, 13.17% of the population is under 7 years of age."Ponnani City Population Census 2011 - Kerala". www.census2011.co.in. Retrieved 13 July 2017. The matrelineal system of succession (Marumakkathayam) was prevalent among the Nair and Muslim families of Ponnani.

Around 68.31% of the population are Muslims and 31.02% are Hindus. Schedule Caste (SC) constitutes 5.75% while Schedule Tribe (ST) were 0.22% of total population in Ponnani (M)."Ponnani City Population Census 2011 - Kerala". www.census2011.co.in. Retrieved 13 July 2017.

Places of Interest

  • Ponnani Jum'ah Masjid
  • Mausoleum of Jarattingal Tangal
  • Mausoleum of Makhdum Tangal
  • Trikkavu Temple
  • Kanda Kurumba Kavu
  • House of the Makhdums
  • Ponnani Beach
  • Patinjarekkara Beach
  • Ponnani Azhimukam
  • Ponnani Karma Road
  • Chamravattam Bridge
  • Biyyam Kayal
  • Biyyam Hanging Bridge
  • Biyyam Park
  • Ponnani Harbour

Civic administration

The town is administered by Ponnani Municipality, headed by a chairperson. For administrative purposes, the town is divided into 51 wards,[51] from which the members of the municipal council are elected for a term of five years.

 
Ponnani Municipality

Ponnani Municipality Election 2020[52]

S.No. Party Name Party symbol Number of Councillors
01 LDF   38
02 UDF   10
03 BJP   03
04 Independents   00

Law and Order

The municipality comes under the jurisdiction of the Ponnani police station, which was formed in 1932.[53] The station has the jurisdiction over the municipality of Ponnani and the Gram panchayats of Veliyankode, Kalady, and Edappal.[53]

The jurisdictional courts of Ponnani Police Station are Judicial First Class Magistrate Court at Ponnani, Subdivisional Magistrate Court at Tirur, and Sessions Court at Manjeri.[53]

The border police stations are headquartered at Changaramkulam, Kuttippuram, Perumbadappu, Tirur, and Thrithala.[53] Ponnani Police Station comes under the Tirur Subdivision of Malappuram District Police, which is one of the six subdivisions of the district police.

Ponnani is also headquarters of the Coastal Police Station of Malappuram District. The Coastal Station has jurisdiction over the whole coastal area of district starting from Kadalundi Nagaram beach bordering Kozhikode district in north to Palappetty beach bordering Thrissur district in south, having a coastal length of 72 km.[54]

Wards of Ponnani

The Ponnani Municipality is composed of the following 51 wards:[55]

Ward no. Name Ward no. Name
1 Azheekkal 2 Pallikkadavu
3 Chana 4 Velleeri
5 Kuttikkad 6 Ezhuvathiruthy
7 Welfare 8 Thevarkshetram
9 Kottathara 10 Chamravattam
11 Eswaramangalam 12 Neithallur
13 Kotta 14 Erikkamanna
15 Puzhambram 16 Biyyam
17 Andithode 18 Boat Jetty
19 Pulikkakadavu 20 Junction
21 Theyyangad 22 Karukathiruthi
23 Attupuram 24 Fisheries School
25 Kadavanad South 26 Kadavanad North
27 Ayyappankavu 28 Pallapram West
29 Uroob Nagar 30 Pullonath Athani
31 Chanthapadi 32 Thrikkavu East
33 Thrikkavu 34 Vandipetta
35 M.I.A 36 Puthankulam
37 Thekkepuram 38 Parankivalappu
39 Municipal Office 40 Cherupalli
41 Puthuponnani South 42 Puthuponnani North
43 Mailanchikadu 44 Nayady Colony
45 Murinjazhi 46 MES College
47 Mukkadi 48 Aliyarpalli
49 Govt. Hospital 50 Marakadavu
51 Meentheruvu

Ponnani Block

Ponnani Block Panchayat is the local body responsible for the block-level administration of the following Gram panchayats:[56]

Geography

Transportation

 
KSRTC Bus Station Ponnani

References

  1. ^ a b c d e M. K. Devassy (1965). 1961 Census Handbook- Palghat District (PDF). Directorate of Census Operations, Kerala and The Union Territory of Laccadive, Minicoy, and Amindivi Islands.
  2. ^ "Ponnani, the Mecca of Malabar". nativeplanet.com. 24 October 2017. Retrieved 19 April 2020.
  3. ^ "Malappuram census handbook" (PDF). censusindia.gov.in.
  4. ^ "Census of India Search details". censusindia.gov.in. Retrieved 10 May 2015.
  5. ^ "Census 2011, Malappuram" (PDF). censusindia.gov.in.
  6. ^ Kerala Tourism
  7. ^ a b Manorama Online Travel
  8. ^ a b c d Ali Akbar ISLAM IN PERSPECTIVE Makhdum II – a great Islamic scholar lost in history (30 November 2012) Arab News [1]
  9. ^ a b c d e f A. Sreedhara Menon. Kerala History and its Makers. D C Books (2011)
  10. ^ a b A G Noorani. Islam in Kerala. Books [2]
  11. ^ a b c d Roland E. Miller. Mappila Muslim Culture SUNY Press, 2015
  12. ^ a b c d e f Kerala Tourism
  13. ^ M. E. S. College, Ponnani Official Website
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l K. V. Krishna Iyer Zamorins of Calicut: From the Earliest Times to AD 1806. Calicut: Norman Printing Bureau, 1938
  15. ^ a b Mansel Longworth Dames (ed) The Book of Duarte Barbosa Taylor & Francis, 2017
  16. ^ a b Donald Frederick Lach, Edwin J. Van Kley. Asia in the Making of Europe University of Chicago Press, 1998
  17. ^ a b c Sir Charles Fawcett. The Travels of the Abbé Carré Routledge, 2017
  18. ^ a b Subramanian, T. S (28 January 2007). "Roman connection in Tamil Nadu". The Hindu. from the original on 19 September 2013. Retrieved 28 October 2011.
  19. ^ "Official website of Ponnani Municipality".
  20. ^ Coastal Histories: Society and Ecology in Pre-modern India, Yogesh Sharma, Primus Books 2010
  21. ^ Rajan Gurukkal. Classical Indo-Roman Trade: A Misnomer in Political Economy. [3]
  22. ^ Celsa Pinto. Trade and Finance in Portuguese India: A Study of the Portuguese Country Trade, 1770-1840. Concept Publishing Company, 1994
  23. ^ Gurukkal, R., & Whittaker, D. (2001). In search of Muziris. Journal of Roman Archaeology, 14, 334-350.
  24. ^ A. Shreedhara Menon, A Survey of Kerala History
  25. ^ According to Pliny the Elder, goods from India were sold in the Empire at 100 times their original purchase price. See
  26. ^ Bostock, John (1855). "26 (Voyages to India)". Pliny the Elder, The Natural History. London: Taylor and Francis.
  27. ^ Indicopleustes, Cosmas (1897). Christian Topography. 11. United Kingdom: The Tertullian Project. pp. 358–373.
  28. ^ Das, Santosh Kumar (2006). The Economic History of Ancient India. Genesis Publishing Pvt Ltd. p. 301.
  29. ^ Narayanan, M. G. S. Perumals of Kerala: Brahmin Oligarchy and Ritual Monarchy Perumāḷs of Kerala. Thrissur (Kerala): CosmoBooks, 2013. 438-42.
  30. ^ E. G. Ravenstein, ed., A Journal of the First Voyage of Vasco da Gama, Delhi, 1995, p. 50
  31. ^ Panikkar. K.M. A History of Kerala (1498-1801) Coimbatore (1960) p. 64
  32. ^ a b c d e K. V. Krishna Iyer Zamorins of Calicut: From the Earliest Times to AD 1806. Calicut: Norman Printing Bureau, 1938
  33. ^ a b c d e f g h K. K. N. Kurup India's Naval Traditions Northern Book Centre, 1997
  34. ^ a b c d e William Logan. Malabar Manual, Volume 1 Asian Educational Services, 1887
  35. ^ a b c d e f K. S. Mathew, Shipbuilding, Navigation and the Portuguese in Pre-modern India Routledge, 2017
  36. ^ K. V. Krishna Iyer Zamorins of Calicut: From the Earliest Times to AD 1806. Calicut: Norman Printing Bureau, 1938
  37. ^ K. M. Mathew. History of the Portuguese Navigation in India. Mittal Publications, 1988 - Goa, Daman and Diu (India)
  38. ^ Teotonio R. De Souza. Essays in Goan History Concept Publishing Company, 1989
  39. ^ a b Frederick Charles Danvers. The Portuguese in India: Being a History of the Rise and Decline of Their Eastern Empire, Volume 1 Asian Educational Services, 1988
  40. ^ Teotonio R. de Souza. Essays in Goan History Concept Publishing Company, 1989
  41. ^ a b M. O. Koshy. The Dutch Power in Kerala, 1729-1758 Mittal Publications, 1989
  42. ^ . Dgllnoida.gov.in. Archived from the original on 2 March 2012. Retrieved 1 March 2012.
  43. ^ Gopal. M.H, Tipu Sultan's Mysore - an Economic Study, Bombay (1971) p. 20.
  44. ^ Website of Ines Zupanov
  45. ^ a b Leelakrishnan, Alamkode (17 June 2019). "അമ്പതിന്റെ നിറവില്‍ മലപ്പുറം; മലപ്പുറത്തിന്റെ മാനവിക മഹാപൈതൃകം". Mathrubhumi. Retrieved 21 February 2021.
  46. ^ A Survey of Kerala History, A. Shreedhara Menon, D C Books, Kottayam, 2007 Edition
  47. ^ . The Hindu. 15 December 2008. Archived from the original on 19 December 2008. Retrieved 1 March 2012.
  48. ^ Leelavathy, M. (1998). Edassery Govindan Nair By M. Leelavathy. ISBN 9788126004966. Retrieved 1 March 2012.
  49. ^ a b Sabhnani, Dhara Vora (14 June 2019). "Straight from the Malabar Coast". The Hindu. Retrieved 26 January 2021.
  50. ^ "Cuisine of Malappuram". malappuramtourism.org. Retrieved 18 April 2020.
  51. ^ "Ponnani municipality". lsgkerala. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
  52. ^ "Ponnani Municipality election 2020". lbtrend. Retrieved 9 December 2020.
  53. ^ a b c d "Ponnani PS". Kerala police. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
  54. ^ "Ponnani Coastal PS". Kerala police. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
  55. ^ "Wards of Ponnani". sec.kerala.gov.in.
  56. ^ "Ponnani Block". lsgkerala.gov.in.

Further reading

  • S. Muhammad Hussain Nainar (1942), Tuhfat-al-Mujahidin: An Historical Work in The Arabic Language, University of Madras, retrieved 3 December 2020 (English translation of the original Arabic version written by Zainudheen Makhdoom in sixteenth century CE)
  • K. V. Krishna Iyer (1938), Zamorins of Calicut: From the earliest times to AD 1806, Norman Printing Bureau, Kozhikode

External links

  • Official website

ponnani, this, article, about, city, kerala, other, uses, disambiguation, malayalam, pronunciation, ːɐːn, municipality, taluk, malappuram, district, state, kerala, india, serves, administrative, center, taluk, block, panchayat, same, name, situated, estuary, b. This article is about the city in Kerala For other uses see Ponnani disambiguation Ponnani Malayalam pronunciation pon ːɐːn i is a municipality in Ponnani Taluk Malappuram District in the state of Kerala India It serves as the administrative center of the Taluk and Block Panchayat of the same name It is situated at the estuary of Bharatappuzha River Ponnani on its southern bank and is bounded by the Arabian Sea on the west and a series of brackish lagoons in the south PonnaniMunicipalityChamravattom Regulator cum Bridge connects Ponnani with Tirur Bharathappuzha river Ponnani River and Tirur River join with each other and empties together into Arabian Sea at Purathur Southernmost tip of Tirur Taluk which lies opposite of Ponnani Port Nickname s The City of Gold coins 1 The Little Mecca of Malabar 2 PonnaniLocation in Kerala IndiaShow map of KeralaPonnaniPonnani India Show map of IndiaPonnaniPonnani Asia Show map of AsiaPonnaniPonnani Earth Show map of EarthCoordinates 10 46 N 75 54 E 10 77 N 75 9 E 10 77 75 9 Coordinates 10 46 N 75 54 E 10 77 N 75 9 E 10 77 75 9Country IndiaStateKeralaDistrictMalappuramArea 3 Total24 82 km2 9 58 sq mi Population 2011 4 Total90 491 Density3 600 km2 9 400 sq mi Time zoneUTC 5 30 IST Postal Index Number679 577Telephone code0494Vehicle registrationKL 54Websitewww wbr ponnanimunicipality wbr lsgkerala wbr gov wbr inIt is the seventh most populated municipality in the state the second most populated municipality in the district and the most densely populated municipality in Malappuram district having about 3 646 residents per square kilometre as of the year 2011 5 As of the 2011 Census the municipality forms a part of Malappuram metropolitan area National Highway 66 from to Panvel to Kanyakumari passes through Ponnani Municipality 6 The Palakkad Ponnani State Highway which connects National Highway 66 with National Highway 544 is another important road The River Tirur joins River Ponnani at its mouth at Patinjarekkara Beach from the north bank opposite to Ponnani The Colonial era Cannoly Canal the Ponnani Canal bisects Ponnani town 7 Ponnani is located 68 km south to Kozhikode city 48 km southwest to Malappuram city 91 km northwest to Palakkad city and 50 km northwest to Thrissur city Ponnani is located right in the middle of the Kerala coast In the Middle Ages under the ambitious Hindu chiefs of Kozhikode the Samutiris Zamorins Ponnani developed as one of the most important centers of Muslim trade both overseas and domestic on the Arabian Sea The port also served as the military headquarters of the Kozhikode rulers With the arrival of the Portuguese explorers in the late 15th century the city witnessed several battles between the Admirals of Kozhikode and the Portuguese for the monopoly in the Spice Trade Whenever a formal war was broke out between the Portuguese and the Kozhikode rulers the Portuguese attacked and plundered as the opportunity offered the port of Ponnani The relentless battles lead to the eventual decline of the settlement with the exodus of Middle Eastern merchants and the rulers who protected it Presently Ponnani is one of the major fishing centers in Kerala 8 9 10 11 The original headquarters of the Perumbadappu Swaroopam who later became the Kingdom of Cochin was at Chithrakoodam in Vanneri Perumpadappu which is located 10 km south to Puthuponnani in Ponnani taluk When Perumpadappu came under the kingdom of the Zamorin of Calicut the rulers of Perumpadappu fled to Kodungallur and later they moved to Kochi where they established the Kingdom of Cochin The city of Ponnani also provided ideological support for the battles against the Estado da India It was the home of the revered Makhdum family Prominent members of this Yemeni family of Islamic theologians included Zain ud Din Makhdum I 1467 1521 and his grandson Zain ud Din Makhdum II 1530 1581 Makhdum II is known for his formidable historical chronicle Tuhfat al Mujahidin Glory to the Victory of Mujahidun c 1583 first printed and published in Lisbon A copy of this edition has been preserved in the library of Al Azhar University Cairo 8 9 10 11 The Ponnani Jum ah Masjid also known as Valiya Jum ah Palli Makhdum Mosque was built in the 16th century AD Ponnani once known as the Little Mecca of Malabar and the Jami at al Azhar of Malabar was a prominent center of Islamic learning It is known that students from as far as Sumatra Java and Sri Lanka traveled to Ponnani for their spiritual education 8 12 7 The town was described in many sources as the Land of 23 Mosques It currently has around 50 mosques spread around the town 13 During the months of February and March large number of migratory birds flock at Ponnani both Ponnani and Patinjarekkara Beaches Arabi Malayalam script a script used to write Malayalam was originated at Ponnani The script was also known as the Ponnani Script 12 Bharathappuzha also known as the Ponnani River has contributed much to the Malayalam literature Contents 1 Names 2 Etymology 3 History 3 1 Pre Portuguese Era the Centre of Muslim trade 3 2 Portuguese era 3 2 1 Almeida s attack 3 2 2 Meneses attack 3 2 3 Treaty of Ponnani 3 2 4 Portuguese Fort 3 3 Dutch Factory 3 4 Under the Sultans of Mysore 3 5 Ponnani Canal 3 6 Response to British Colonial Rule 4 The Makhdums of Ponnani 5 Ponnani Cuisine 6 Demographics 7 Places of Interest 8 Civic administration 8 1 Ponnani Municipality Election 2020 52 8 2 Law and Order 9 Wards of Ponnani 10 Ponnani Block 11 Geography 11 1 Transportation 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksNames A view of Arabian Sea at Ponnani Ponnani municipal office Ponnani mini civil station in 2010 Puthuponnani Munambam Beach Ponnani is described by different authors all the way from Europe to Arabia to China in different names Some of the names are given below Ponani Paniyani British East India Company Ponam the Chinese Sailors 14 Funan the Arab merchants 14 Pananee Pananie Pananx the Portuguese and Spanish Writers and Sailors 15 Panane Panany the Dutch East India Company 16 Pagnany Pagniany the French Sailors 17 EtymologyIt is believed the word Ponnani comes from Pon Nanayam Gold Coin after the circulation of Arab gold coins introduced here by the Arabs and the Persians 1 The name of the place traces back to the maritime trade tradition of the port city 1 Bharathappuzha River River Ponnani which is also the second longest river in Kerala flows into Arabian Sea at Ponnani port 1 The Palakkad Gap on the bank of River Bharathappuzha was the principal trade route between Malabar Coast and Coromandel Coast in ancient times 18 Anyway the name Ponnani is connected with the maritime trade that occurred here for centuries 1 History Ponnani harbour in 2012 Ponnani Lighthouse Biyyam backwater lake Pre historical and Early Historical 2nd century BC 3rd century AD nature of this settlement is shrouded in mystery It is one of the oldest ports in South India and can be identified with the port of Tyndis which was a satellite feeding port to Muziris according to the Periplus of the Erythraean Sea 19 Tyndis was a major center of trade next only to Muziris between the Cheras and the Roman Empire 20 The River Bharathappuzha River Ponnani had importance since Sangam period 1st 4th century CE due to the presence of Palakkad Gap which connected the Malabar coast with Coromandel coast through inland 18 Ponnani s location at estuary of the Bharatappuzha amidst the fertile plains suitable for rice cultivation might have attracted early settlers It is known that the river mouth situated opposite to the plains of Coimbatore across the Ghat mountains was accessed by the rulers of central Tamil Nadu through the Palghat Gap It is generally assumed that the archaic Tamil chiefs came into contact with Greco Roman navigators at the mouth of the Bharatappuzha 21 Ponnani Kole Wetlands at Edappal Even in the latter times Ponnani served as the major rice supplier to the Portuguese outposts in India Throughout the Colonial rule the Ponnani rice cargoes were shipped across the West Coast Tobacco was the other major commodity exported from Ponnani to Goa 22 Names routes and locations of the Periplus of the Erythraean Sea 1st century CE Pliny the Elder 1st century CE states that the port of Tyndis was located at the northwestern border of Keprobotos Chera dynasty 23 The North Malabar region which lies north of the port at Tyndis was ruled by the kingdom of Ezhimala during Sangam period 24 According to the Periplus of the Erythraean Sea a region known as Limyrike began at Naura and Tyndis However the Ptolemy mentions only Tyndis as the Limyrike s starting point The region probably ended at Kanyakumari it thus roughly corresponds to the present day Malabar Coast The value of Rome s annual trade with the region was estimated at around 50 000 000 sesterces 25 Pliny the Elder mentioned that Limyrike was prone by pirates 26 The Cosmas Indicopleustes mentioned that the Limyrike was a source of peppers 27 28 An inscription which dates back to 932 CE found from Triprangode mentions Goda Ravi of Chera dynasty and Thavanur 29 Several inscriptions written in Old Malayalam those date back to the 10th century CE have found from Sukapuram near Ponnani which was one of the 64 old Nambudiri villages of Kerala Pre Portuguese Era the Centre of Muslim trade Ponnani used to be under the control of the Brahmins of Tirumanasseri Natu with protection from the Vellattiri Valluvanatu Angatippuram chief in medieval times Later the Tirumanasseri Namputiri handed over the port Ponnani to the Samutiri of Kozhikode An arrangement was reached between the Brahmin and the Samutiri as a result of which the former was obliged to protect the interests of the latter against the neighboring chiefs of Valluvanatu South Malabar and Perumpatappu Cochin 14 As Kozhikode s political authority extended to South Malabar and Cochin the Samutiri came to reside more and more at Ponnani Trikkavil Palace south of the present day temple The port town gradually became the second home of the Kozhikotu chiefs By the 15th century we know that Ponnani served as the military capital of the Samutiris of Kozhikode The city also hosted the largest arsenal of the Kozhikotu rulers The port at Ponnani was defended by fortifications on either bank of the river 14 At the time of the arrival of Vasco da Gama and his Portuguese fleet at Kozhikode the Samutiri of Kozhikode was residing at Ponnani 30 When the Samutiri Kovilakam at Kozhikode was besieged by the Mysore Sultan Haidar Ali 18th century AD the Samutiri sent his family members to safe heavens at Ponnani 31 It is believed that Malik ibn Dinar the first Islamic missionary to Kerala visited Ponnani and established a mosque 12 Portuguese era The path Vasco da Gama took to reach Kozhikode black line in 1498 which was also the discovery of a sea route from Europe to India and eventually paved way for the European colonisation of Indian subcontinent At that time the Zamorin of Calicut was residing at Thrikkavil Kovilakam in Ponnani Portuguese conquistador and explorer Francisco de Almeida Viceroy of Portuguese India raided Ponnani in November 1507 In the 16th century Ponnani witnessed several battles between Kozhikode naval chiefs known as the Kunhali Marakkars and the Portuguese colonizers 12 Whenever a formal war was broke out between the Portuguese and the Kozhikode rulers the Portuguese attacked and plundered as the opportunity offered the port of Ponnani 14 As per some historians the ancestral home of the Kunhali Marakkar family was at Ponnani In course of time they spread to Tanur and other settlements of the west coast It seems that the Kunhalis shifted their base to Putupattanam when Fransico de Almedia attacked Ponnani 1507 32 9 There is another view about the origin of Kunhali Marakkars As per this tradition they were descended from a Muslim merchant by name Muhammmad who traded in Cochin Muhammad and his brother were forced to leave Cochin and settle at Ponnani in the wake of the Portuguese occupation of the place which had resulted in the destruction of his ships and warehouses The Marakkars later moved his base to Kozhikode and when Ponnani was sacked by de Menezes 1525 he offered help to the Samutiri in his fight against the Portuguese 9 Kutti Pokkar a Captain in the fleet of Pattu Marakkar Kunhali Marakkar the Third was a native of Ponnani 9 Ponnani is usually considered as the military capital of the Samutiris of Kozhikode For an assault on Cochin in 1500 AD the Samutiri seems to have assembled a huge army of 50 000 Nairs at Ponnani 33 It is widely written that the Muslims were ready to defend their bastion of Ponnani with their life to die as martyrs 34 It is known that large number of men and vessels from Ponnani took part in a battle against the Portuguese off the coast of Kannur on 16 March 1506 In addition to the native Muslims the Kozhikode Fleet of around two hundred large vessels carried large number of red coated Turkish soldiers Lorenzo Almeida was able to defeat this combined forces and near 3 000 Muslims were killed the battle The Portuguese loss was very trifling 34 Almeida s attack Towards the end of year 1507 Viceroy Francisco de Almeida was informed that a column of 13 Muslim ships had taken cargo mainly spices from Ponnani and were about to leave for the Red Sea The Viceroy immediately decided corner the fleet The decision was perhaps made with a view to retrieve the Portuguese prestige lost on account of the some incidents at Angediva and Dabul Almeida himself commandeered the fleet of 12 vessels consisting of four naus six caravels and two gales The fleet had about 6 000 European soldiers led by a collection of noblemen such as Pero Barreti Diogo Pires Lourenco de Almeida and Nuno da Cunha son of Tristao da Cunha and a handful of Cochin Nairs 35 Ponnani at the time was defended by a strong battery of artillery forty guns and a number of well armed ships under Kutti Ali Kutti Ali of Ponnani was a powerful captain of the Samutiri Fleet having with him more than 7 000 armed men The harbor was protected by fortifications on either side of the entrances The Portuguese writers later recorded that the men were rather frightened by the prayers and shouts of the enemy as approached the port Tristao da Cunha defeated the Muslim forces 24 November 1507 in the subsequent engagement Eighteen Portuguese were killed in the assault Lorenzo was wounded by the Muslims and the fight was stubborn 32 Muslim ships were burnt and the Portuguese seized their arms and ammunitions The commodities that were made ready for despatch to Red Sea were also taken over by the Portuguese The Ponnani town was looted burnt and destroyed 34 35 32 The defenses of the Ponnani Port were repaired and strengthened after this event 14 33 It seems that Kunhali Marakkar I assisted by Kutti Ali and Pacchi Marakkar subsequently constructed a naval base at Ponnani Kutti Ali sent harassing raids from Ponnani to Cochin and reinforcement fleets to Kozhikode 33 Meneses attack Viceroy Henrique de Meneses conquered Ponnani in 1525 Portuguese Viceroy Henrique de Meneses appeared off the coast of Ponnani on 25 February 1525 with a fleet of 50 ships including 19 grabs supplied by the chief of Purakkad After an unsuccessful mission in Cochin the Samutiri army was camping at Ponnani Meneses sent initially some soldiers to the shore for water and provisions But they were set upon and driven back 14 33 Next morning 26 February the Portuguese landed in forces and a fierce engagement took place the newly developed base at Ponnani Thirty eight ships belonging to Chinna Kutti Ali were burnt a large number of Mappilas were killed the coconut trees on either bank of the River Ponnani were cut by the Cochin Nairs and houses shops and mosques were all destroyed The Ponnani town was partially burnt in the assault 14 33 The cutting of the coconut trees in a region was considered as a method of punishment to the inhabitants In 1528 a strong Portuguese fleet cornered Kutti Ali off the coast of Bankur and he was taken prisoner Treaty of Ponnani The Portuguese Viceroy Garcia de Noronha signed a peace treaty with the Samutiri of Kozhikode on board the ship St Mattheus at Ponnani on 1 January 1540 As per the agreement called the Treaty of Ponnani the Samutiri granted the Portuguese the virtual monopoly of trade in pepper and ginger at Kozhikode accepted the Portuguese Passes the infamous cartazes for the navigation of Arab vessels and gave assurances of non intervention in the wars of the Portuguese with other native powers such as Cochin 35 9 Terms of the Treaty 1540 The Portuguese were to buy all the Kozhikode pepper at the Cochin rate and ginger at 92 fanams per bahar and allow the Samutiri of Kozhikode to send 3 5 bahar of pepper to Portugal on his own account for every 100 bahars bought by the Portuguese 32 The Portuguese agreed to sell part of their merchandise at Kozhikode so that the Samutiri of Kozhikode might have his customary dues on imports and to provide the Samutiri of Kozhikode with quicksilver vermilion and coal 36 The Treaty bound the Portuguese also to neutrality even if the Samutiri of Kozhikode attacked their allies In return the Samutiri of Kozhikode agreed to accept the Portuguese Passports for the Moorish vessels 14 In 1552 the Samutiri of Kozhikode received assistance in heavy guns landed at Ponnani brought by certain Yoosuf a Turk who had sailed against the monsoon winds In 1566 and again in 1568 Kutti Pokkar of Ponnani and his men captured two Portuguese ships Around a thousand soldiers from one of these ships were killed either by the sword or drowning Kutti Pokkar was later in killed off the coast of Mangalore while returning from a successful raid on the Portuguese fort there 34 A Portuguese fleet of 40 vessels under the command of Diogo de Meneses is known to have pillaged Ponnani sometime before 1570 AD 33 37 It is also known that Gil Eanes Mascarenhas opened fire from his ships to Ponnani port and killed large number of natives in 1582 Mascarenhas was later captured and executed by the forces of Kunhali Marakkar 38 Muslims from Ponnani is known to have actively participated in the Siege of Fort Chaliyam in 1571 34 The Samutiri of Kozhikode sent against the Fort Chaliyam certain of his ministers in command over the Muslims of Ponnani who were assisted by bodies of people from Chaliyam 14 Portuguese Fort The Portuguese had earlier around 1528 under da Cunha tried to construct a fort on the north bank of the Vaikkal river mouth at Ponnani This piece of land belonged to the chief of Bettem The ships coming from Cochin with materials for construction like stones and mortars reached near Vaikkal But all the vessels except one mast vessel were destroyed by being dashed to the shore in a storm Some Portuguese men were drowned and some were captured The cannons recovered came under the possession of the Samutiri of Kozhikode 33 Ponnani Harbour As per an agreement 1584 between the Samutiri and the Portuguese the Kozhikode allowed the Portuguese to have a factory instead of a fort at Ponnani obtaining in return the right of navigation for the Muslims to the ports of Gujarat Persia and Arabia 14 Dom Jeronimo Mascaranhas who was instrumental in signing the contract with the ruler of Kozhikode was appointed the Captain of the Factory at Ponnani 35 The decision was deeply resented by the Kunhali Marakkar III 33 Sooner rather than later Duarte de Menezes entrusted Ruy Goncalves de Carmara command of an expedition determined to erect a fort proper at Ponnani Goncalves proceeded to Ponnani from where he dispatched a message to the Samutiri of Kozhikode informing him of the object of his visit and requesting that he would meet him with the view of selecting a suitable site The Kozhikode chief kept Goncalves waiting for some time on the plea that his Brahmins were unable to fix upon an auspicious date whereupon Goncalves sent the Brahmins some presents and they then speedily named a favorable hour for the purpose 39 The construction of a Portuguese fort at Ponnani began in 1585 15 Gonsalves being in a hurry to depart erected only a fort of wood Rui Gomes de Gram the first Captain of the Fort is known to have strengthened the defenses on the Ponnani He pulled down the wooded structures and erected one of stone of considerable strength 39 35 Gasper Fagundes who was in the Ponnani Fort in 1586 was asked by the Portuguese Governor to offer his services to the Samutiri of the Kozhikode against the Kunhali Marakkar 35 By an agreement 1597 between the Samutiri of Kozhikode and the Portuguese the former agreed to give site to the latter to erect a church at Ponnani 40 Dutch Factory Ponnani harbour in the mid 1930s By a treaty signed between the Dutch Admiral Steven Van der Hagen and the Samutiri of Kozhikode 11 November 1604 the Dutch were permitted to open a factory at Ponnani in return for their help against the Portuguese 14 The factory served as a military outpost of the Dutch East India Company A Dutch Resident was in charge of the settlement The aim of the residency was to keep peace with the Samutiri of Kozhikode and to watch the activities of the other European powers and the native enemies of the Dutch Company Stein van Gollenesse wanted to cover the residency building with tiles But the Samutiri never consented to the proposal fearing that it would increase the Dutch influence The chief directed Gollenesse s successor to re thatch it every year with new coconut leaves 41 In 1607 the Dutch had inaugurated negotiations with the Samutiri of Kozhikode at Ponnani 16 English ships captained by James Keeling sailing from Surat is known to have visited Ponnani around 1615 AD 11 On 12 February a friendly reception was given by the Samutiri of Kozhikode to French Viceroy de la Haye and M Caron French Company at Ponnani M Coche a young Parisian clerk in the French Company s service took up his residence at Ponnani as a token of gratitude 17 A meeting between Father Carre and M Coche took place off Ponnani on 10 November 1674 According to this narrative young Coche was almost metamorphosed into an Indian by his stay at Ponnani Carre also met Aubert a French merchant in the English Company s service The ship carrying Father Abbe was detained at Ponnani over a dispute over delivery of goods mainly pepper Carre took the opportunity to travel by land with the escort of four Nairs to Tellicherry Factory 17 On 8 March 1747 it was the Dutch Resident at Ponnani who reported to the Malabar Council the plan of the Samutiri of Kozhikode to occupy by surprise the Fort Chetwai under the pretext of going to Cochin The alertness of the Ponnani deterred the Samutiri from making the attack In 1755 the Samutiri s plan to attack the land of Payencherry Nair a Dutch ally was also exposed by the Ponnani Residency 41 A meeting between Commandeur van Rheede and the Samutiri of Kozhikode over the cession of Chetwai took place at Ponnani in 1678 AD 32 Under the Sultans of Mysore Hariharamangalam Mana Haidar Ali Sultan of Mysore conquered northern Kerala in 1766 and established an outpost at Ponnani His successor Fateh Ali Tipu Tippu Sultan developed the port at Ponnani for trade and for strategic reasons 42 Tipu considered Ponnani as a major exporting centre in Malabar 43 Ponnani Canal Ponnani Canal was constructed for the transportation of goods from Ponnani to Tirur railway station Here is a description about the Ponnani Canal by Basel Mission employees at Codacal 44 nowadays a steamship travels between Ponani and Tirur through the Canal where the most convenient railway station for Ponnani is to be found The ticket costs only 4 annas although the distance is 10 km Response to British Colonial Rule Fishing boats at Ponnani Presently Ponnani Port is reduced to the status of a major fishing centre 12 Ponnani was a major hub of Indian nationalist movement in Malabar District during the British Raj Ponnani region was the working platform of K Kelappan popularly known as Kerala Gandhi Vakeel Raman Menon known as Ponnani Gandhi A V Kuttimalu Amma and Mohammed Abdur Rahiman and several other freedom fighters 45 Other independence activists from Ponnani taluk included Lakshmi Sehgal V T Bhattathiripad and Ammu Swaminathan The ashes of Mahatma Gandhi Jawaharlal Nehru and Lal Bahadur Shastri were deposited in Kerala at Tirunavaya on the bank of the river Bharathappuzha 46 45 Ali Musaliyar 1854 1921 one of principle leaders of the 1921 Mappila Rebellion had studied at the Ponnani madrasa Sayyid S Makti Tangal d 1912 an influential Mappila theological reformer was a native of Ponnani 11 K V Raman Menon 1900 1974 known as Ponnani Gandhi was a reputed Indian National Congress leader of the time who had actively participated in the freedom movement against the British in Malabar District 47 He was a social reformer and was a leading lawyer of the Court of Ponnani 48 Presently Ponnani is one of the major fishing centers in Malappuram 12 The Makhdums of Ponnani The Ponnani Canal at Ponnani in the 1930s The Ponnani Mosque a view from the north Institute of Career and Research near Eswaramangalam Ponnani It is known that the Makhdum family sailed from Yemen to South India to propagate Islam The family initially settled in Tamil Nadu the Ma bar region before moving to Cochin 15th century and later to Ponnani 8 Ponnani CuisineSee also Thalassery cuisine Ponnani has a wide variety of indigenous dishes The centuries of maritime trade has given the Ponnani a cosmopolitan cuisine The cuisine is a blend of traditional Kerala Persian Yemenese and Arab food culture 49 One of the main elements of this cuisine is Pathiri a pancake made of rice flour Variants of Pathiri include Neypathiri made with ghee Poricha Pathiri fried rather than baked Meen Pathiri stuffed with fish and Irachi Pathiri stuffed with beef Spices like Black pepper Cardamom and Clove are widely used in the cuisine of Ponnani Muttappathiri is another popular breakfast snacks The main item used in the festivals is the Malabar style of Biryani Sadhya is also seen in marriage and festival occasions Snacks such as Arikadukka Chattipathiri Muttamala Pazham Nirachathu and Unnakkaya have their own style in Ponnani Besides these other common food items of Kerala are also seen in the cuisine of Ponnani 50 The Malabar version of Biryani popularly known as Kuzhi Mandi in Malayalam is another popular item which has an influence from Yemen 49 Demographics MES College Ponnani As of 2011 update India census Ponnani Municipality had a population of 90 491 Males constitute 47 of the population and females 53 Ponnani has an average literacy rate of 90 00 Literacy Rate of India Population Census 2011 www census2011 co in Retrieved 13 July 2017 Male literacy is 93 36 and female literacy is 87 07 At Ponnani 13 17 of the population is under 7 years of age Ponnani City Population Census 2011 Kerala www census2011 co in Retrieved 13 July 2017 The matrelineal system of succession Marumakkathayam was prevalent among the Nair and Muslim families of Ponnani Around 68 31 of the population are Muslims and 31 02 are Hindus Schedule Caste SC constitutes 5 75 while Schedule Tribe ST were 0 22 of total population in Ponnani M Ponnani City Population Census 2011 Kerala www census2011 co in Retrieved 13 July 2017 Places of InterestPonnani Jum ah Masjid Mausoleum of Jarattingal Tangal Mausoleum of Makhdum Tangal Trikkavu Temple Kanda Kurumba Kavu House of the Makhdums Ponnani Beach Patinjarekkara Beach Ponnani Azhimukam Ponnani Karma Road Chamravattam Bridge Biyyam Kayal Biyyam Hanging Bridge Biyyam Park Ponnani HarbourCivic administrationThe town is administered by Ponnani Municipality headed by a chairperson For administrative purposes the town is divided into 51 wards 51 from which the members of the municipal council are elected for a term of five years Ponnani Municipality Ponnani Municipality Election 2020 52 S No Party Name Party symbol Number of Councillors01 LDF 3802 UDF 1003 BJP 0304 Independents 00Law and Order The municipality comes under the jurisdiction of the Ponnani police station which was formed in 1932 53 The station has the jurisdiction over the municipality of Ponnani and the Gram panchayats of Veliyankode Kalady and Edappal 53 The jurisdictional courts of Ponnani Police Station are Judicial First Class Magistrate Court at Ponnani Subdivisional Magistrate Court at Tirur and Sessions Court at Manjeri 53 The border police stations are headquartered at Changaramkulam Kuttippuram Perumbadappu Tirur and Thrithala 53 Ponnani Police Station comes under the Tirur Subdivision of Malappuram District Police which is one of the six subdivisions of the district police Ponnani is also headquarters of the Coastal Police Station of Malappuram District The Coastal Station has jurisdiction over the whole coastal area of district starting from Kadalundi Nagaram beach bordering Kozhikode district in north to Palappetty beach bordering Thrissur district in south having a coastal length of 72 km 54 Wards of PonnaniThe Ponnani Municipality is composed of the following 51 wards 55 Ward no Name Ward no Name1 Azheekkal 2 Pallikkadavu3 Chana 4 Velleeri5 Kuttikkad 6 Ezhuvathiruthy7 Welfare 8 Thevarkshetram9 Kottathara 10 Chamravattam11 Eswaramangalam 12 Neithallur13 Kotta 14 Erikkamanna15 Puzhambram 16 Biyyam17 Andithode 18 Boat Jetty19 Pulikkakadavu 20 Junction21 Theyyangad 22 Karukathiruthi23 Attupuram 24 Fisheries School25 Kadavanad South 26 Kadavanad North27 Ayyappankavu 28 Pallapram West29 Uroob Nagar 30 Pullonath Athani31 Chanthapadi 32 Thrikkavu East33 Thrikkavu 34 Vandipetta35 M I A 36 Puthankulam37 Thekkepuram 38 Parankivalappu39 Municipal Office 40 Cherupalli41 Puthuponnani South 42 Puthuponnani North43 Mailanchikadu 44 Nayady Colony45 Murinjazhi 46 MES College47 Mukkadi 48 Aliyarpalli49 Govt Hospital 50 Marakadavu51 MeentheruvuPonnani BlockPonnani Block Panchayat is the local body responsible for the block level administration of the following Gram panchayats 56 Thavanur Kalady Vattamkulam EdappalGeographyTransportation KSRTC Bus Station Ponnani Nearest Airports Karipur CCJ Nearest Major Railway Station Kuttippuram and Tirur Major bus station KSRTC Bus Station PonnaniReferences a b c d e M K Devassy 1965 1961 Census Handbook Palghat District PDF Directorate of Census Operations Kerala and The Union Territory of Laccadive Minicoy and Amindivi Islands Ponnani the Mecca of Malabar nativeplanet com 24 October 2017 Retrieved 19 April 2020 Malappuram census handbook PDF censusindia gov in Census of India Search details censusindia gov in Retrieved 10 May 2015 Census 2011 Malappuram PDF censusindia gov in Kerala Tourism a b Manorama Online Travel a b c d Ali Akbar ISLAM IN PERSPECTIVE Makhdum II a great Islamic scholar lost in history 30 November 2012 Arab News 1 a b c d e f A Sreedhara Menon Kerala History and its Makers D C Books 2011 a b A G Noorani Islam in Kerala Books 2 a b c d Roland E Miller Mappila Muslim Culture SUNY Press 2015 a b c d e f Kerala Tourism M E S College Ponnani Official Website a b c d e f g h i j k l K V Krishna Iyer Zamorins of Calicut From the Earliest Times to AD 1806 Calicut Norman Printing Bureau 1938 a b Mansel Longworth Dames ed The Book of Duarte Barbosa Taylor amp Francis 2017 a b Donald Frederick Lach Edwin J Van Kley Asia in the Making of Europe University of Chicago Press 1998 a b c Sir Charles Fawcett The Travels of the Abbe Carre Routledge 2017 a b Subramanian T S 28 January 2007 Roman connection in Tamil Nadu The Hindu Archived from the original on 19 September 2013 Retrieved 28 October 2011 Official website of Ponnani Municipality Coastal Histories Society and Ecology in Pre modern India Yogesh Sharma Primus Books 2010 Rajan Gurukkal Classical Indo Roman Trade A Misnomer in Political Economy 3 Celsa Pinto Trade and Finance in Portuguese India A Study of the Portuguese Country Trade 1770 1840 Concept Publishing Company 1994 Gurukkal R amp Whittaker D 2001 In search of Muziris Journal of Roman Archaeology 14 334 350 A Shreedhara Menon A Survey of Kerala History According to Pliny the Elder goods from India were sold in the Empire at 100 times their original purchase price See 4 Bostock John 1855 26 Voyages to India Pliny the Elder The Natural History London Taylor and Francis Indicopleustes Cosmas 1897 Christian Topography 11 United Kingdom The Tertullian Project pp 358 373 Das Santosh Kumar 2006 The Economic History of Ancient India Genesis Publishing Pvt Ltd p 301 Narayanan M G S Perumals of Kerala Brahmin Oligarchy and Ritual Monarchy Perumaḷs of Kerala Thrissur Kerala CosmoBooks 2013 438 42 E G Ravenstein ed A Journal of the First Voyage of Vasco da Gama Delhi 1995 p 50 Panikkar K M A History of Kerala 1498 1801 Coimbatore 1960 p 64 a b c d e K V Krishna Iyer Zamorins of Calicut From the Earliest Times to AD 1806 Calicut Norman Printing Bureau 1938 a b c d e f g h K K N Kurup India s Naval Traditions Northern Book Centre 1997 a b c d e William Logan Malabar Manual Volume 1 Asian Educational Services 1887 a b c d e f K S Mathew Shipbuilding Navigation and the Portuguese in Pre modern India Routledge 2017 K V Krishna Iyer Zamorins of Calicut From the Earliest Times to AD 1806 Calicut Norman Printing Bureau 1938 K M Mathew History of the Portuguese Navigation in India Mittal Publications 1988 Goa Daman and Diu India Teotonio R De Souza Essays in Goan History Concept Publishing Company 1989 a b Frederick Charles Danvers The Portuguese in India Being a History of the Rise and Decline of Their Eastern Empire Volume 1 Asian Educational Services 1988 Teotonio R de Souza Essays in Goan History Concept Publishing Company 1989 a b M O Koshy The Dutch Power in Kerala 1729 1758 Mittal Publications 1989 Govt Info on landmarks and History of Ponnani Dgllnoida gov in Archived from the original on 2 March 2012 Retrieved 1 March 2012 Gopal M H Tipu Sultan s Mysore an Economic Study Bombay 1971 p 20 Website of Ines Zupanov a b Leelakrishnan Alamkode 17 June 2019 അമ പത ന റ ന റവ ല മലപ പ റ മലപ പ റത ത ന റ മ നവ ക മഹ പ ത ക Mathrubhumi Retrieved 21 February 2021 A Survey of Kerala History A Shreedhara Menon D C Books Kottayam 2007 Edition Article from The Hindu newspaper The Hindu 15 December 2008 Archived from the original on 19 December 2008 Retrieved 1 March 2012 Leelavathy M 1998 Edassery Govindan Nair By M Leelavathy ISBN 9788126004966 Retrieved 1 March 2012 a b Sabhnani Dhara Vora 14 June 2019 Straight from the Malabar Coast The Hindu Retrieved 26 January 2021 Cuisine of Malappuram malappuramtourism org Retrieved 18 April 2020 Ponnani municipality lsgkerala Retrieved 24 March 2021 Ponnani Municipality election 2020 lbtrend Retrieved 9 December 2020 a b c d Ponnani PS Kerala police Retrieved 24 March 2021 Ponnani Coastal PS Kerala police Retrieved 24 March 2021 Wards of Ponnani sec kerala gov in Ponnani Block lsgkerala gov in Further readingS Muhammad Hussain Nainar 1942 Tuhfat al Mujahidin An Historical Work in The Arabic Language University of Madras retrieved 3 December 2020 English translation of the original Arabic version written by Zainudheen Makhdoom in sixteenth century CE K V Krishna Iyer 1938 Zamorins of Calicut From the earliest times to AD 1806 Norman Printing Bureau KozhikodeExternal linksOfficial website Remaining Date for Ponnani Municipality Election 2020 Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ponnani Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Ponnani Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ponnani amp oldid 1150058597, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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