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Chekavar

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For the film, see Chekavar (film).

Chekavar (Also known as Chekon or Chevakar, Cekavar) were a martial caste in Malabar of Kerala. The Chekavar are a subcaste of the Hindu Thiyya community. Very few Thiyya families today trace their roots to this Chekavar lineage. Exceptionally talented Thiyyar practitioners of Kalaripayattu were given the title chekavan or chekon, and each local ruler had his own militia of chekons. Despite all this, the chekons were lined up for combats and duels, representing the dominant in disputes. In short, they were mercenaries who fought and died for the dominant, protecting their life and property.

Some of these heroes are remembered and worshipped even today through folk songs like Vadakkan Pattukal, like 19th century Kuroolli Chekon who fought against the British is remembered through folk songs while Sangam age hero,the Commander-in-chief of the Chera army,Akathooty Chekavar was imbibed into Theyyam forms and worshipped as a war deity today.

Etymology

Chekavar is derived from the Sanskrit words Sevakar, Sevakan or Sevaka, which means men in service or servants in royal service. Hermann Gundert's English-Malayalam Dictionary, defines the term as toddy tapper and warrior.

Origin

Hero stones found in Kerala depict Chekavar engaged in combat, often on behalf of a lord. On these hero stones, Chekavar are generally depicted by an image of an armed man along with a Shiva Linga. Hero stones were traditionally erected during the Sangam period to commemorate men who had fallen in battle or cattle raids.

History

The Thiyyas community was a warrior caste that immigrated from Sri Lanka. They had their own style of martial art, although it may have been infiuenced by the martial arts of the Chera Empire. Jacob Canter Visscher's Letters from Malabar says, 'They may be justly entitled born soldiers, as by virtue of their descent they must always bear arms.17 In spite of the fact that Thiyyas were also supreme practitioners of payatt and had an unavoidable presence in the militia of the ruler, they were allowed in the military services. In civil war or rebellion, the Chekavars were bound to take up arms for the Bovereign; and some princes employed them as soldiers, if they had not a sufficient force of Nairs. Hendrik van Rheede, governor of Dutch Malabar between 1669 and 1676, wrote about Chekavar in Hortus Malabaricus as " Chekavas are bound to war and arms.The Chekavars usually serve to teach nayros(nair) in the fencing kalari school".Hortus Malabaricus, Hendrik van Rheede,governor of Dutch Malabar

According to Indudara Menon, "The songs of the Vatakkan pattu (northern ballads) are about a clan of martial Chekavars who were Thiyyas and masters of the martial arts". The word Chekavar deriverd from Sanskrit and Malayalam languages. According to David Levinson, "The Chekavar families played an important role in the practice of Kalaripayattu in the Malabar District".

According to historian A. Sreedhara Menon:

Northern songs are represented in Malabar where the Unniyarcha and Aromal Chekavars of the Puthuram Veettil house are an important Thiyyar family known for their martial arts. Golden Age of Martial Arts In the background of the social life and institutions described above, we may review the lives and achievements of some of the heroes and heroines celebrated in the folk songs. Their age was indeed a golden age in the history of the martial arts and institutions of Kerala, for these personages were actuated in their military combats and actions by the loftiest spirit of idealism and sense of chivalry which serve as an inspiration to the youth even in the present day. The area of their activities comprised the medieval principalities of Kolathunad, Kadathanad and Kottayam.


Later, during the British rule, British formed a separate regiment called the Thiyyar Regiment in the British Indian Army, with thousands of thiyyar soldiers, and officers raised among them , seeing their chivalric fighting skills which can be attributed to their Chekavar lineages..

See also

References

  1. P., Girija, K (2021). Mapping the History of Ayurveda : Culture, Hegemony and the Rhetoric of Diversity. ISBN 978-1-000-48139-6.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ Edward Balfour (1862) (1977). The encyclopedia Asiatics, Comprising india Subcontinent. p. 274.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  3. ^ Nisha, P. R. (12 June 2020). Jumbos and Jumping Devils: A Social History of Indian Circus. ISBN 9780190992071.
  4. ^ Menon, A. Sreedhara (4 March 2011). Kerala History and its Makers. D C Books. pp. 82–86. ISBN 978-81-264-3782-5. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
  5. Ullekh.N.p (2018). Kannur:inside India's Bloodiest. Penguin Random House India Private Limited, 2018. p. 201. ISBN 9789353051051.
  6. Vishnumangalm Kumar, "Kuroolli Chekon: Charithram Thamaskaricha Kadathanadan Simham" (Keralasabdam, 2007-9-2),Page 30-33, ISBN 96220924
  7. "Theyyaprapancham".
  8. Mathew, George (1989). Communal Road to a Secular Kerala. Concept Pub.Co, 1989. p. 30. ISBN 81-7022-282-6.
  9. Smith, Bardwell L. (1976). Religion and Social Conflict in South Asia. BRILL. p. 27. ISBN 90-04-04510-4.
  10. Gundert, Herman (2000) . Malayalam-English Dictionary (3rd ed.). Sahythia Pravarthaka Sahakarana Sangham, Kerala.
  11. Orr, Leslie C. (2007). "Domesticity and Difference/Women and Men: Religious Life in Medieval Tamil Nadu". In Pintchman, Tracy (ed.). Women's Lives, Women's Rituals in the Hindu Tradition. Oxford University Press. p. 113. ISBN 978-0-19-517706-0. Retrieved 13 December 2008.
  12. Dick Luuijendijk (2008). Kalarippayatt. lulu. p. 48. ISBN 9781409226260.
  13. Jenniffer G.Wollok (2011). Rethinking Chivalry and Courtly Love. ABC publishing. p. 250. ISBN 9780275984885.
  14. Folk-Lore (1975). Folk-Lore. p. 96.
  15. Heniger, J. (22 November 2017). Hendrik Adriaan van Reed Tot Drakestein 1636-1691 and Hortus, Malabaricus. ISBN 9781351441070.
  16. Indudhara Menon (2018). Hereditary Physicians of Kerala: Traditional Medicine and Ayurveda in Modern India. Taylor & Francis, 2018. ISBN 9780429663123.
  17. David Levinson, Karen Christensen (1996). Encyclopedia of World sport:from Ancient times to the present vol.3. ABC. p. 615. ISBN 9780874368192.
  18. David Waterhouse (1998). Dance of India. p. 167. ISBN 9781895214154.
  19. Ayyappa Paniker, K. (1997). Medieval Indian Literature: Surveys and selections. ISBN 9788126003655.
  20. L.K.A.Iyer, The Mysore Tribes and caste. Vol.III, A Mittal Publish. Page.279, Google Books
  21. Nagendra k.r.singh Global Encyclopedia of the South India Dalit's Ethnography (2006) page.230, Google Books


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