Mattakallappu Manmiyam

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Mattakallappu_Manmiyam an entity of type: Thing

Mattakkalappu Maanmiyam (Tamil: மட்டக்களப்பு மான்மியம்; The Glory of Batticaloa) is a Tamil language historical book concerning the history of Batticaloa. It was compiled by F. X. Nadarajah from the collections of palm-leaf manuscripts, copper plate inscriptions and inscriptions and it was published in August 1962. The authors of the original manuscripts and other forms of documentation are unknown. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Mattakallappu Manmiyam
rdf:langString Mattakkalappu Maanmiyam
rdf:langString மட்டக்களப்பு மான்மியம்
rdf:langString Mattakkalappu Maanmiyam
xsd:string Batticaloa District Cultural Board
xsd:integer 40056543
xsd:integer 1097925612
rdf:langString F. X. Nadarajah
rdf:langString Mattakallappu Manmiyam cover page
rdf:langString History
rdf:langString XII + 128 + 9
xsd:integer 1962
rdf:langString Batticaloa District Cultural Board
rdf:langString மட்டக்களப்பு மான்மியம்
rdf:langString Mattakkalappu Maanmiyam (Tamil: மட்டக்களப்பு மான்மியம்; The Glory of Batticaloa) is a Tamil language historical book concerning the history of Batticaloa. It was compiled by F. X. Nadarajah from the collections of palm-leaf manuscripts, copper plate inscriptions and inscriptions and it was published in August 1962. The authors of the original manuscripts and other forms of documentation are unknown. The book records the history from ancient Batticaloa to the Dutch colonial era. It gives information about such matters as the kings who ruled the Batticaloa, the caste system, and the temple system. Historians say that the book has perplexity and mythical story as it written by various authors in various durations. However, it is considered a rare and important book for understanding the history of Batticaloa. According to anthropologist Dennis B. McGilvray, the book records the only known ethnohistorical document that presents the lineage of the early rulers of the Batticaloa region. He notes that this 18th-century palm leaf record, called the Mattakkallappu Purva Carittiram, is "a bewildering list of royal names, events and social groups which has yet to be systematically corroborated and placed in the larger Sri Lankan historical context."
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 3886

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