The battle of Kandalur salai (c. 988 CE), also spelled Kanthaloor salai, was a naval engagement of the
Cholas under
Rajaraja I (985—1014 CE) against the "salai" at Kandalur in
TrivandrumKerala.[1][3] The exact location of Kandalur—somewhere south
Kerala—is a subject of scholarly debate.[1][3][4] The above (988 CE) event is sometimes assumed to be identical with the "conquest of
Vizhinjam by a general of
Rajaraja [I]", before the burning of
Lanka, given in the
Tiruvalangadu Grant/Plates.[1]
The phrase "Kandalur salai kalamarutta" is again used as a title with distinction of three other Chola emperors also (
Rajendra,
Rajadhiraja and
Kulottunga).[5]
Assessment of the title
"Salais" were considered prized possessions as they are claimed to have been sacked by many kings of South India.[1] The character of the salais were re-examined in the 1970 paper 'Kantalur Salai-New Light on Brahmin Expansion in South India' by historian M. G. S. Narayanan.[6]
It is now clear that the salai (or ghatika or kalakam or kalam) was a peculiar institution... A multipurpose training centre for
celibate arms-bearing
Brahmins (Chathar/Chathirar) in material and spiritual fields (including military training to equip them to serve the chieftain or the king and vedic and sastraic studies)...
— M. G. S. Narayanan (1970)
Older assessments
Different views were expressed by early scholars regarding the character of "salai" (such as naval base - military training centre - cantonment - ammunition depot).[4]
Dr. Hultzsch - (1) "built a jewell-like hall at Kandalur" or (2) "cut the vessel [kalam] in the hall at Kandalur" (3) "destroyed ships [kalam] at Kandalur [harbour]"[5]
Gopinatha Rao - "destroyed/discontinued/transferred the Brahmin feeding [kalam] at Kandalur Feeding House or Hall [salai] "[5]
Desikavinayakam Pillai - "regulation of the Brahmin feeding at Kandalur Feeding House [salai]"[5]
Elamkulam P. N. Kunjan Pillai - "discontinued/destroyed the feeding [kalam] of the armed Brahmins [Chathar] at Kandalur".[5]
Location of Kandalur salai
The exact location of Kandalur is a subject of scholarly debate. It is possible the original Kandalur salai was located near the
Ay headquarters
Vizhinjam and the deity was later shifted to
Trivandrum (after the
Chola raids of the 10th-11th centuries).[1]
Original location:— a village around 20 km east of Vizhinjam with a
Shiva temple called Kandalur Salai.[1]
Shifted location:— within the city of
Trivandrum (Valiya Salai Temple)[1]
Raid by Rajaraja I (c. 988 CE)
As per historian K. A. Nilakanta Sastri, the capture was the first military achievement of Emperor
Rajaraja's reign. The success was summed up in the famous phrase "Kandalur salai kalamarutta", which precedes Rajaraja's name in several of his inscriptions from the 4th regnal year (988 CE) onwards.[1][7]
The Kandalur salai belonged to the
Ay chief, a vassal of the
Pandya king at
Madurai, in the mid-860s (865 CE).[5]
It is possible that at the time of the raid, the salai may have been under control of the
Chera Perumal king of Kerala, Bhaskara Ravi.[1] If that was the case, the campaign can be viewed as part of Rajaraja's early battles against the Cheras, Pandyas and the rulers of
Sri Lanka.[3]
However, some historians argue that Kandalur salai, which only later Chola inscriptions (1048 CE) claim to have belonged to the Chera Perumals, may have been held by the
Pandyas when it was attacked by Rajaraja I.[8][9]
A hero stone inscription was unearthed from a village near
Tiruvannamalai in November, 2009. It supports the view that a military engagement indeed took place at Kandalur.[10] It has a eulogy that talks about Rajaraja "beheading the Malai Alargal of Kandalur Salai".[10]
"...confined the undaunted king of
Venatu [back] to Che[ra]natu [from the
Ay country].... and put on a fresh garland of
Vanchi after capturing Kantalur Salai while the strong Villavan [the Chera king] hid himself in terror inside the jungle..."
1048 CE – Velur and Tiruppangili inscriptions – Kandalur salai is mentioned as 'Cheralan Velaikkelu Kantalur Chalai'.[9]
Kalingattupparani (III-21) mentions
Kulottunga Chola's victory of over the Bow Emblem and the Chola capture of Kantalur Salai.
c. 1102 — c.1118 CE – Jatavarman Parakrama
Pandya mentions the capture of Kantalur Salai (for his Chola overlord
Vikrama Chola).
^
abcNoburu Karashmia (ed.), A Concise History of South India: Issues and Interpretations. New Delhi: Oxford University Press, 2014. 122-24.
^
abNarayanan, M. G. S. Perumāḷs of Kerala. Thrissur (Kerala): CosmoBooks, 2013. 135.
^
abcdefghNarayanan, M.G.S. 'Kantalur Salai-New Light on Aryan Expansion in South India.' Proceedings of the Indian History Congress, vol. 32, 1970, pp. 125–136.
^Narayanan, M. G. S., 'Kantalur Salai-New Light on Aryan Expansion in South India,' Proceedings of Indian History Congress, 1970.
https://www.jstor.org/stable/44141058
^K. A. N. Sastri, History of South India. Oxford, 1955. p. 164-9.
^K. A. N. Sastri, History of South India. Oxford, 1955.
^
abVenkayya, V., South Indian Inscriptions, (Madras), Vol II, Intn, p. 2.