History:Thiruvalluvar year

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Short description: Calendar system used in Tamil Nadu

The Thiruvalluvar Year is a Tamil calendar based on Valluvar's birthday.

Thiruvalluvar year, also known as the Valluvar year, is an officially recognized Tamil calendar system for use in Tamil Nadu. When comparing it with the widely used Gregorian calendar, Thiruvalluvar year will have an additional 31 years. For instance, the year 2024 in Gregorian calendar way is 2055 in the Thiruvalluvar year.

History

Thiruvalluvar day

The 600-year-old Mylapore Valluvar Temple. The birthday of Valluvar celebrated here was turned as the Thiruvalluvar Day.[1]

Valluvar was chosen as the Tamil language's greatest historical figure after Tamil scholars unanimously agreed to the proposal, chiefly owing to Valluvar's non-denominational work of the Tirukkural. As a result, a resolution to celebrate a day known as "Thiruvalluvar Day" for him by all Tamils was passed on 17 January 1935 by Kali Sivakannuswami Pillai and Padmashri V. Suppaya.[1] Owing to their efforts, Thiruvalluvar Day Association was formed and a decision to celebrate the day in Tamil Nadu and across the globe was made. The first Thiruvalluvar Day was celebrated on 17 and 18 May 1935 in Chennai Pachaiappan College in the presence of Maraimalai Adigal, T.P. Meenakshisundaram and Thiru. V. Kalyanasundaram.[2][3]

When Thiruvalluvar Day slowly went obsolete, Eelam Tamil scholar and politician K. P. Ratnam in 1954 took efforts to continue the celebration of the Thiruvalluvar Day in Tamil Nadu and foreign nations, chiefly Sri Lanka and Myanmar.[4]

Thiruvalluvar Day in Tamil January

Pongal, celebrated during the Tamil month of Tai had been considered 'Tamilar Thirunal' among the Tamil people. As Tamilar Thirunal was on Pongal day, Tamil scholar K. A. P. Viswanatham wanted the Thiruvalluvar Day to be celebrated on the same day. In 1954, he wrote to the Tiruchi radio station and K. A. Ratnam regarding this.[1][3] Since Vaikaasi anudam can vary from year to year, in 1966, the second day of June was made a government holiday to celebrate Thiruvalluvar Day every year.[5] However, it was transferred to the first date of the month in 1971.[6]

Thiruvalluvar year

Several anniversaries have been used to mark the years in Tamil. Notable among them is the Shaka era, Vikram Samvat and Kali Yuga. Kollam calendar was used in Kerala. But none of these were distinctive for the Tamils. In this situation, there was a need to propose a great calendar for Tamil.

Maraimalai Adigal had already confirmed the year 31 BCE as the birth of Valluvar.[2][7] Many Tamil scholars, including K. R. Rathinatham, who have celebrated Thiruvalluvar Thirunal in M. Karunanidhi's DMK government initiated this year as the Thiruvalluvar Year on Thiruvalluvar Thirunal, which was inaugurated by the then DMK government.[8][6] In 1971, Thiruvalluvar Year was released in the Tamil Gazette and came into existence in 1972. At the Madurai World Tamil Conference in 1981, the then Chief Minister, M. G. Ramachandran, issued a formal order for official use of the same in all government documents.[citation needed]`

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 "வைகாசி அனுடம் வள்ளுவர் திருநாள் தமிழினத்தை ஒன்றுபடுத்தும் நாள்" (in Tamil). Vedic Science Research Centre. 15 May 2014. http://vsrc.in/index.php/articles/2014-07-30-08-57-48/item/435-2014-07-23-19-11-29. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 M. M. Ninan (11 September 2018). The Acts of the Apostle Thomas. Lulu.com. pp. 148–. ISBN 978-0-359-08188-2. https://books.google.com/books?id=z3VvDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA148. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 "திரிபே வரலாறாக? – தமிழ்ப் புத்தாண்டு சர்ச்சை குறித்து.." (in Tamil). The Hindu (Tamil). 23 February 2012. http://www.tamilhindu.com/2012/02/thai-tamil-year-false-history-an-update/. 
  4. கொழும்புத் தமிழ்ச்சங்கம் பதினேழாவது ஆண்டறிக்கை. Colombo Tamil Sangam. 1959. pp. 2. http://www.noolaham.net/project/51/5082/5082.pdf. 
  5. "தமிழ் வானியலும் புத்தாண்டும் – ஒரு அலசல்". uvangal.com. http://www.uvangal.com/Home/getPostView/1281. 
  6. 6.0 6.1 "திருவள்ளுவர் திருநாள் அளித்த நாவலர் சோமசுந்தர பாரதியார் - நா.கணேச". kumarinadu.com. 5 May 2012. http://arch.kumarinadu.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=2665:2012-05-04-16-32-54&catid=1:2009-09-08-19-02-01&Itemid=71. 
  7. "Reader's Write". The Illustrated Weekly of India 89 (Part 1): 61. 1968. https://books.google.com/books?id=IWw6AQAAIAAJ. 
  8. "தைத்திருநாள் வாழ்த்துக்கள்". kokuvilhindu.net. 14 January 2007. http://www.kokuvilhindu.net/detail.php?MyNewsID=63. 

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