In ancient times
there was a large Island the Indian Ocean called Kumarinadu. Kamarinadu or Kumari-Kandam formerly existed as a large Island in the
India ocean which connected India with East Africa. The name "Kumari
Kandam" first appear in Kanda Puranam, a 15th century Tamil version of the
Skanda Purana, written by Kachiappa Sivacharyara (1350-1420). Some researchers
claim that Kumari Kandam is actually a derivative of the Sanskrit words
"Kumarika Khanda".
In 1903, V.G. Suryanarayana Sastri first used the term
"Kumarinatu" (or "Kumari Nadu", meaning "Kumari
territory") in his work Tamil Moliyin Varalaru (History of the Tamil
language). The term Kumari Kandam ("Kumari continent") was first used
to describe Lemuria in the 1930s.
This landmass is
mentioned in the Silappadikaram, which said that Kamarinadu was made up of
seven nadus or regions. The Dravdian scholars Adiyarkunallar and Nachinaar
wrote about the ancient principalities of Tamilaham, which existed on
Kamarinadu.
Kumarinadu was
ruled by the Pandyans/Pandians at Madurai
before it sunk beneath the sea. The greatest king of Kumarinadu was
Sengoon. According to Dravidian scholars tha Pandyans worshipped the goddess
Kumari Amman. This Aman, probably corresponds to the ancient god Amon of
the Kushites.
The Kalittokai 104, makes
it clear that after the Pandyans were forced to migrate off their Island home
into South India, “to compensate for the area lost to the great waves of the
sea, King Pandia without tiresome moved to the other countries and won them.
Removing the emblems of tiger (Cholas) and bow (Cheras) he, in their place
inscribed his reputed emblem fish (Pandia’s) and valiantly made his enemies bow
to him”.
The mention of
the fish emblem indicates the African origin of the Pandyans. The
Proto-Saharans claimed that their great ancestor was Ma and that they belonged
to the Ma (fish) clan. Fish tails were a common feature of the Egyptians,
Elamites, Sumerians and Dravidians.
The common
god of the fish cult was the man-fish (of Eridu) in Mesopotamia and Syria , and
the ithyphallic forms of Min, a proto-type of Amon (Amman) in Egypt, the
goddess Minaaksi of Madura, Amma of the Dogon, the goddess of the fish eyes,
the Malabar fish bearer of Maana ; and the sacred fishes of the Maapilla of the
West coast of the Dekkan. At ancient Adulis, the Greeks claimed that the fish
worshippers were called Icthyophagi or Poseidon.
In fact the
first kings of these people used the consonants MNS, in the term used for king:
Menes, King Aha of Egypt, Mannan of the Dravidians, and the Mansa of the Mande speaking people. The
descendants of Ma, include this name in their ethnonyms: Mande= “the children
of Ma”. And in Kannada, Tlugu and Tulu, the word Mandi= “people”.
The Pandyans
who probably spoke Malayalam, were worshippers of Posidon or Potidan of the
Greeks. Just as the Kalittokai, mentioned that the totem of Pandia was the
Fish, we find that Africans in areas ajoining the former lands associated with
Kumarinadu also worshipped the Fish. As a result in ancient times Nubia and
modern Ethiopia was called Poseidonia due to their worship of Poseidon the god
of the sea and the mountains.
The major god worshipped by the Pandyans and East Africans
is Murugan, the god of the mountains. This mountain god of the Dravidians:
Murugan, has the same name among 25 east African ethnic groups.
The Greek god
Posidon of the East Africans parallels the Dravidian god Siva. The god Siva is
sometimes referred to as the “Great Fish” and represented by Fish signs. In
addition, throughout Tamilnadu, tridents are associated with temples dedicated
to the worship of Siva. The trident was also associated with Siva.
The final Dravidian
speaking people to enter South India were the Tamil. The Tamil, who were early
Kings of Shang China, were forced out of China by the Zhou dynast and other
contemporary mongoloid groups, across Southeast Asia and Tibet into India.
These people defeated the Pandyans , Cholas and Cheras and became the dominant
group in South India.
In Summary ,
Dravidian literature makes it clear that the Dravidian people came to South
India from the North, South and East. These people took away the South from the
Naga (ancient Ethiopians), who along with the Dravidians worshipped the gods
Amon and Murugan. Moreover, it was the Ethiopians who probably introduced
Sanskrit writing to the Indians. It is due to this history of Dravidian
speaking people that explains the close, genetic unity between the language and
cultures of the people.
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ReplyDeleteNo
DeleteTHE TAMILS SHOULD BE PROUD TO SAY THAT THEY ARE FROM AFRICAN MOTHER STOCK, THE TAMILS ARE AFRICANS, WHERE THE RELIGION BEGINS THAT MEANS MAN LEARN TO LOOK UP AROUND AND THE LAND BELOW AND CAME TO THINK THERE IS SOMETHING TO EXPLORE THAT IS HOW HE BEGAN TO WORSHIP GOD, TODAY MAN ABLE TO WORSHIP GOD BY SAYING GOD SIVA, LORD BHUDDAH, LORD JESUS, PROPHET MOHAMMED, THAT MEANS THE RELIGION BEGINS FROM SOUTH AFRICA NOT FROM EAST AFRICA, TODAY THE LOST KUMARI KANDAM THE FIRST TAMIL CIVILIZATION ON EARTH BEGINS FROM ETHOPIANS, SO THE TAMILS ALL OVER THE WORLD HAS PURELY ETHOPIAN BLOOD.
ReplyDeleteYou NUT
DeleteOui encore une avancée de plus dans la véracité de l'histoire du monde
ReplyDeleteOui encore une avancée de plus dans la véracité de l'histoire du monde OH PLEASE
ReplyDelete