Pandya dynasty


The Pandya dynasty, also referred to as the Pandyas of Madurai, was an [Tamil Dynasties|ancient Tamil dynasty of South India], and among the four great kingdoms of Tamilakam, the other three being the Pallavas, the Cholas and the Cheras. Existing since at least the 4th to 3rd centuries BCE, the dynasty passed through two periods of imperial dominance, the 6th to 10th centuries CE, and under the 'Later Pandyas'. In the second half of the 13th century under Jatavarman Sundara Pandyan I and Maravarman Kulasekara Pandyan I, the Pandyas ruled extensive territories including regions of present-day South India and northern Sri Lanka through vassal states subject to Madurai. The Pandya dynasty is considered to be one of the longest ruling dynasties in the world, in power continuously from roughly 400 BCE to 1618 CE, although its territorial and administrative extent varied significantly.
The rulers of the three Tamil dynasties were referred to as the "three crowned rulers of the Tamil Region" in the southern part of India. The origin and the timeline of the Pandya dynasty are difficult to establish. The early Pandya chieftains ruled their country from the ancient period, which included the inland city of Madurai and the southern port of Korkai. The Pandyas are celebrated in the earliest available Tamil poetry. Graeco-Roman accounts, the edicts of Maurya emperor Ashoka, coins with legends in Tamil-Brahmi script, and Tamil-Brahmi inscriptions suggest the continuity of the Pandya dynasty from the 3rd century BCE to the early centuries CE. The early historic Pandyas faded into obscurity upon the rise of the Kalabhra dynasty in south India.
From the 6th century to the 9th century CE, the Chalukyas of Badami or Rashtrakutas of the Deccan, the Pallavas of Kanchi, and Pandyas of Madurai dominated the politics of south India. The Pandyas often ruled or invaded the fertile estuary of Kaveri, the ancient Chera country and Venadu, the Pallava country, and Sri Lanka. The Pandyas fell into decline with the rise of the Cholas of Thanjavur in the 9th century and were in constant conflict with the latter. The Pandyas allied themselves with the Sinhalese and the Cheras against the Chola Empire until it found an opportunity to revive its frontiers during the late 13th century.
The Pandyas entered their golden age under Maravarman I and Jatavarman Sundara Pandya I. Some early efforts by Maravarman I to expand into the Chola country were effectively checked by the Hoysalas. Jatavarman I successfully expanded the kingdom into the Telugu country, south Kerala, and conquered northern Sri Lanka. The city of Kanchi became a secondary capital of the Pandyas. The Hoysalas, in general, were confined to the Mysore Plateau and even king Somesvara was killed in a battle with Pandyas. Maravarman Kulasekhara I defeated an alliance of the Hoysalas and the Cholas and invaded Sri Lanka. The venerable Tooth Relic of the Buddha was carried away by the Pandyas. During this period, the rule of the kingdom was shared among several royals, one of them enjoying primacy over the rest. An internal crisis in the Pandya kingdom coincided with the Khalji invasion of the Pandya kingdom|invasion] of south India in 1310–11. The ensuing political crisis saw more sultanate raids and plunder, the loss of south Kerala, and north Sri Lanka and the establishment of the Madurai Sultanate. The Pandyas of Ucchangi in the Tungabhadra valley were related to the Pandyas of Madurai.
According to tradition, the legendary Sangams were held in Madurai under the patronage of the Pandyas, and some of the Pandyan rulers claimed to be poets themselves. Pandya Nadu was home to several renowned temples, including the Meenakshi Temple in Madurai. It is known that the early Pandya rulers originally followed Jainism, while at some point they converted to Hinduism. The revival of the Pandya power by Kadungon coincided with the prominence of the Shaivite Nayanars and the Vaishnavite Alvars.

Etymology and origin legends

The etymology of Pandya is still a matter of considerable speculation among scholars. One theory is that the word pandya is derived from the ancient Tamil word "pandu" meaning "old". The theory suggests that in early historic Tamil lexicon the word pandya means old country in contrast with Chola meaning new country, Chera meaning hill country and Pallava meaning branch in Sanskrit. Another theory is that the word Pandya is derived from the Sanskrit word Pandu to mean white or pale, in reference to king Pandu and the Pandavas. Apart from these derivations mentioned, several other theories do appear in historical studies.
Tamil legends narrate an origin myth for the three crowned kings, described by K. A. Nilakanta Sastri as a legend similar to that of Romulus and Remus. According to the myth, the three brothers Cheran, Cholan and Pandyan ruled in common at the southern city of Korkai. While Pandya remained at home, his two brothers Cheran and Cholan after a separation founded their own kingdoms in north and west. The epic poem Silappatikaram mentions that the emblem of the Pandyas was that of a fish.
Indian traditions such as the Great Epics and the Puranas often associate southern India with Sage Agastya. Agastya appears prominently in medieval Tamil literature also.
Folklores attribute Alli Rani as one of the early historic rulers of the Pandyas. She is attributed as an "amazonian queen" whose servants were men and administrative officials and army were women. She is thought of ruling the whole western and northern coast of Sri Lanka from her capital Kudiramalai, where remains of what is thought of as her fort are found. She is sometimes seen as an incarnation of the Pandya associated gods, Meenakshi and Kannagi.

Chandravamsha

The medieval Pandya kings claimed to belong to the Chandravamsha or the Lunar Race. They claimed Pururavas and Nahusha as their ancestors. Pururavas is listed as one of their ancestors in the Velvikudi Inscription of Nedunjadaiyan Varaguna-varman I.

Archaeological sources

Pandyas are also mentioned in the inscriptions of Maurya emperor Asoka. In his inscriptions, Asoka refers to the peoples of south India – the Cholas, the Cheras, Pandyas and Satiyaputras. These polities, possibly not part of the Maurya empire, were on friendly terms with Asoka:
The earliest Pandya to be found in epigraph is Nedunjeliyan, figuring in the Tamil-Brahmi Mangulam inscription assigned to 3rd and 2nd centuries BCE. The record documents a gift of rock-cut beds, to a Jain ascetic. It is assumed that the people found in the Mangulam inscription, Nedunjeliyan, Kadalan, and Izhanchadikan predate rulers such as Talaiyanganam Nedunjelyan and Palyaga-salai Mudukudimi Peruvaludi.
Kharavela, the Kalinga king who ruled during c. 1st century BCE, in his Hathigumpha inscription, claims to have destroyed an old confederacy of Tamil countries which had lasted 132 years, and to have acquired a large number of pearls from the Pandyas.
Silver punch-marked coins with the fish symbol of the Pandyas dating from around the same time have also been found.
Archaeological excavations at Korkai and other coastal sites in the Pandya region have yielded Roman coins, pottery, and port remains, which support literary references to long-distance trade, including pearls.

Early Tamil literature

The early historic Pandyas are celebrated in the earliest available Tamil poetry. The poems refers to about twelve Pandya rulers. According to tradition, the legendary Sangams ("the Academies") were held in Madurai under the patronage of the Pandyas. Several Tamil literary works, such as Iraiyanar Agapporul, mention the legend of three separate Sangams and ascribe their patronage to the Pandyas.
Pandya rulers from early historic south India
  • Mudattirumaran
  • Koon Pandya
  • Nedunjeliyan I
  • Puda-Pandya
  • Palyagasalai Mudukudumi Peruvaludi
  • Nedunjeliyan II
  • Nan Maran
  • Nedunj Cheliyan III
  • Maran Valudi
  • Kadalan Valuthi
  • Musiri Mutriya Cheliyan
  • Ukkirap Peruvaludi
  • Bootha Pāndiyan
  • Arivudainampi
Pandya rulers – such as Nedunjeliyan, the Victor of Talaiyalanganam, and Mudukudimi Peruvaludi, the Patron of several sacrificial fires – find mention in several poems.
Besides several short poems found in the Akananuru and the Purananuru collections, there are two major works – Mathuraikkanci and Netunalvatai – which give a glimpse into the society and commercial activities in the Pandya country during the early historic period. The Purananuru and Agananuru collections contain poems sung in praise of various Pandya rulers and also poems that were claimed to be composed by the rulers themselves.
Besides the poems, king Peruvaludi is also mentioned in later copper-plate grant. In the work Mathuraikkanci, the author Mankudi Maruthanar, refers to his patron, Talaihalanganum Nedunjeliyan, as the Lord of Korkai and the Warlord of the Southern Parathavar People. It contains a full-length description of Madurai and the Pandya country under the rule of Nedunjeliyan. In the famous battle of Talaiyalanganam, the Pandya is said to have defeated his enemies. He is also praised for his victory of Mizhalai and Mutturu, two "vel" centres along the ocean. The Netunalvatai by Nakkirar contains a description of king Nedunjeliyan's palace.

Foreign sources

The Buddhist text Mahavamsa mentions a Pandya king in the context of Prince Vijaya's arrival in Sri Lanka with his 700 followers.
  • According to the Mahavamsa, emissaries laden with precious gifts were sent from Sri Lanka to the city of Madhura in southern India. Their mission was to secure a bride for Prince Vijaya. The Pandya King of Madurai agreed to the proposal. He not only sent his own daughter to marry Prince Vijaya but also requested other families to offer their daughters to marry the prince's ministers and retainers. So, along with the Princess and hundreds of maidens, craftsmen and a thousand families from the eighteen guilds were also sent to Sri Lanka.
  • Greek and Latin sources refer to the ancient Tamil country, same as the Tamilakam, as "Lymyrike" or "Damirice" and its ruling families.
  • Pandyas are also mentioned by Greek author Megasthenes where he writes about the south Indian kingdom being ruled by women. He described the Pandya country in Indika as "occupying the portion of India which lies southward and extends to the sea". According to his account, the kingdom had 365 villages, each of which was expected to meet the needs of the royal household for one day in the year. He described the Pandya queen at the time, Pandaia as the daughter of Herakles.
  • Pliny the Elder refers to the Pandya ruler of Madurai in general terms.
  • The author of the Periplus of the Erythraean Sea describes the riches of a "Pandian kingdom"
  • The country of the Pandyas was described as Pandya Mediterranea and Modura Regia Pandionis by Ptolemy.
  • Strabo states that an Indian king called Pandion sent Augustus Caesar "presents and gifts of honour". The 1st-century Greek historian Nicolaus of Damascus met, at Antioch, the ambassador sent by a king from India "named Pandion or, according to others, Porus" to Caesar Augustus .
  • The Roman emperor Julian received an embassy from a Pandya about 361 CE.
  • Chinese historian Yu Huan in his 3rd-century CE text, the Weilüe, mentions the Panyue kingdom:
  • Scholar John E. Hill identified Panyue as the Pandya kingdom. However, others have identified it with an ancient state located in modern Burma or Assam.
  • The Chinese traveler Xuanzang mentions a kingdom further south from Kanchipuram, a kingdom named Malakutta, identified with Madurai described by his Buddhist friends at Kanchipuram.
  • In the later part of the 13th century Venetian traveller Marco Polo visited the Pandya kingdom and left a vivid description of the land and its people.

History

Early historic Pandyas

Mauryan emperor Asoka seems to have been on friendly terms with the people of south India and Sri Lanka. There are no indications that Asoka tried to conquer the extreme south India.
The three chiefly lines of early historic south India – the Cheras, Pandyas and Cholas – were known as the mu-vendar. They were traditionally based at their original headquarters in the interior Tamil Nadu. The powerful chiefdoms of the three ventar dominated the political and economic life of early historic south India. The frequent conflicts between the Chera, the Chola and the Pandya are well documented in ancient Tamil poetry. The Cheras, Cholas and Pandyas also controlled the ports of Muziris (Muchiri), Korkai and Kaveri respectively. The gradual shift from chiefdoms to kingdoms seems to have occurred in the following period.The famous inscription of king Kharavela at Hathigumpha mentions the defeat of a confederacy of the "Tramira" countries which had been a threat to Kalinga. It also remembers the precious pearls brought to the capital as booty from the "Pandya" realm. The Pandya chiefdom was famous for its pearl fisheries and silk industry. Korkai and Alagankulam are believed to have been the exchange centres of the Pandyas. Korkai, a port at the mouth of the river Tambraparni, was linked to the famous pearl fisheries and Alagankulam was also developed as a port.
Several coins attributed to the early historic Pandyas are found in the region. Inscriptions, datable to c. 2nd century BCE, recording royal grants – both from royals and wealthy commoners – were also discovered from the Pandya country.
The Pandyas seem to be the most prominent of the three "ventar" rulers. There are even references to a Pandya queen from 3rd century BCE representing a confederacy of the Tamil countries. Madurai, in south Tamil Nadu, was the most important cultural centre in south India as the core of the Tamil speakers. Megalithic relics such as menhirs, dolmens, urn burials, stone circles and rock-cut chambers/passages can be found in south India. Burial goods include iron objects, ivory ornaments, Black-and-Red Ware and even some Roman Imperial coins. The so-called "velir" hill chieftains are assumed to be associated with these megalithic burials.
Greek and Latin accounts, coins with legends in Tamil-Brahmi script, and Tamil-Brahmi inscriptions suggest the continuity of the Pandya dynasty from the 3rd century BCE to early centuries CE. The early Pandyas, along with the Cheras and the Cholas, were eventually displaced by the Kalabhra dynasty.

Medieval Pandyas

Pandya revival (7th–10th centuries CE)

The Pandya kingdom was revived by king Kadungon c. 560–590 CE towards the end of the 6th-century CE. In the Velvikudi inscription, a later copper-plate, Kadungon appears as the "destroyer" of the "anti-Brahmanical" Kalabhra kings. Simhavishnu – the Pallava king and Pandya Kadungon had united the Tamil regions, removed Kalabhras and others. Simhavishnu consolidated his kingdom from south of the Krishna river and up to the Kaveri river by c. 575 CE. To the south of Kaveri, the Pandyas came to power. Cholas became subordinates of Pallavas and they were already ruling Telugu region of Rayalaseema. The Kalabhra rule which had dominated the political scene of the Tamil country for few centuries was defeated and ended by the Chalukyas, Pandyas, and Pallavas. This is attested by the numerous inscriptions dated from the 6th century and thereafter, as well as the Chinese language memoirs of the Buddhist pilgrim Xuanzang who visited the Tamil region about 640 CE along with other parts of the Indian subcontinent. Xuanzang describes a peaceful cosmopolitan region where some 100 monasteries with 10,000 monks were studying Mahayana Buddhism, Kanchipuram was hosting learned debates with hundreds of heretic Deva temples but no Buddhist institutions. Xuangzang makes no mention of the Kalabhras. Historian Noboru Karashima states that Kadunkon was a contemporary of Pallava Simhavishnu, who drove out the Kalabhras in the Tamil region and dated Kadunkon's reign to 560 - 590 CE. With the decline of the Kalabhra dynasty, the Pandyas grew steadily in power and territory. With the Cholas in obscurity in Uraiyur, the Tamil country was divided between the Pallavas of Kanchi and the Pandyas of Madurai.
From the 6th century to the 9th century CE, the Chalukyas of Badami, the Pallavas of Kanchi, and the Pandyas of Madurai dominated the politics of south India. The Badami Chalukyas were eventually replaced by the Rashtrakutas in the Deccan. The Pandyas took on the growing Pallava ambitions in south India, and from time to time they also joined in alliances with the kingdoms of the Deccan Plateau. In the middle of the 9th century, the Pandyas had managed to advance as far as Kumbakonam.
Kandunkon was succeeded by his son Maravarman Avanisulamani. His son, Sendan, c. 620-650 CE the third king of the Pandyas of Madurai, is known for expanding his kingdom to the Chera country. Arikesari Maravarman, c. 640-670 CE the fourth Pandya ruler, is known for his battles against the Pallavas of Kanchi. Pallava king Narasimhavarman I, the famous conqueror of Badami, claimed to have defeated the Pandyas. Chalukya King Paramesvaravarman I "Vikramaditya" is known to have fought battles with the Pallavas, the Gangas, and probably with the Pandyas too, on the Kaveri basin.
Kirtivarman II, the last Chalukya king, managed to lose to his southern countries as a result of his battles with the Pandyas. Pandya kings Maravarman Rajasimha I and Nedunjadaiyan/Varagunavarman I threatened Pallava king Nandivarman II Pallavamalla who had managed to defeat the Gangas in. Varagunavarman I invaded the Pallava country and conquered the Kongu country and Venadu. King Srimara Srivallabha sailed to Sri Lanka, subjugated and overpowered King Sena I, and sacked his capital Anuradhapura. However, Srimara Srivallabha was soon overpowered by Pallava king Nripatunga. Sena II, the king of Sri Lanka, invaded the Pandya country, sacked Madurai and chose Varagunavarman II as the new king soon after. It is proposed that the start of the Kollam Era, the Kerala calendar, in 825 CE marked the liberation of Venadu from Pandya control.
During the rule of Dantivarman, the Pallava territory was reduced by the encroachment from the Pandyas from the south. Pallava king Nandivarman III was able to defeat the Pandyas and Telugu-Cholas with the help of the Gangas and the emerging Cholas.
Pandya rulerReignRef.
Kadungonc. 560–590 CE
Maravarman Avanisulamanic. 590–620 CE
Seliyan Sendan (Jayantavarman)c. 620–650 CE
Arikesari Maravarman (Parankusan)c. 640–670 CE
Ko Chadaiyan Ranadhirac. 670–710 CE
Maravarman Rajasimha Ic. 710–765 CE
Jatila Parantaka Nedunjadaiyan
c. 765–815 CE
Maravarman Srimara Srivallabhac. 815–862 CE
Varaguna-varman IIc. 862–880 CE
Parantaka Viranarayanac. 880–900/905 CE
Maravarman Rajasimha IIc. 900–920 CE

Under Chola influence (10th–13th centuries)

While the Pandyas and the Rashtrakutas were busy engaging the Pallavas, with the Gangas and the Simhalas also in the mix, the Cholas emerged from the Kaveri delta and took on the chieftains of Thanjavur. The Chola king Vijayalaya conquered Thanjavur by defeating the Mutharaiyar chieftain around. The Pandya control north of the Kaveri river was severely weakened by this move. Pandya ruler Varaguna-varman II responded by marching into the Chola country and facing a formidable alliance of Pallava prince Aparajita, the Chola king Aditya I and the Ganga king Prithvipati I. The Pandya king suffered a crushing defeat in a battle fought near Kumbakonam.
By, Chola king Aditya I was the master of the old Pallava, Ganga and Kongu countries. It is a possibility that Aditya I conquered the Kongu country from the Pandya king Parantaka Viranarayana. Parantaka I, successor to Aditya, invaded the Pandya territories in 910 CE and captured Madurai from king Maravarman Rajasimha II. Rajasimha II received help from the Sri Lankan king Kassapa V, still got defeated by Parantaka I in the battle of Vellur, and fled to Sri Lanka. Rajasimha then found refuge in the Chera country, leaving even his royal insignia in Sri Lanka, the home of his mother.
The Cholas were defeated by a Rashtrakuta-lead confederacy in the battle of Takkolam in 949 CE. By mid-950s, the Chola kingdom had shrunk to the size of a small principality. It is a possibility that Pandya ruler Vira Pandya defeated Chola king Gandaraditya and claimed independence. Chola ruler Sundara Parantaka II responded by defeating Vira Pandya I in two battles. The Pandyas were assisted by the Sri Lanka forces of King Mahinda IV.
Chola emperor Rajaraja I is known to have attacked the Pandyas. He fought against an alliance of the Pandya, Chera and Sri Lankan kings, and defeated the Cheras and "deprived" the Pandyas of their ancient capital Madurai. Emperor Rajendra I continued to occupy the Pandya kingdom, and even appointed a series of Chola viceroys with the title "Chola Pandya" to rule from Madurai. The very beginning of Chola emperor Kulottunga's rule was marked by the loss of Sri Lanka and a rebellion in the Pandya country.
The second half of the 12th century witnessed a major internal crisis in the Pandya country. The neighbouring kingdoms of Sri Lanka, under Parakramabahu I, Venadu Chera/Kerala, under the Kulasekharas, and the Cholas, under Rajadhiraja II and Kulottunga III, joined in and took sides with any of the two princes or their kins.
Pandya kings :
  • Sundara Pandya I
  • Vira Pandya I
  • Vira Pandya II
  • Amarabhujanga Tivrakopa
  • Srivallabha Manakulachala
  • Maravarman Srivallabha
  • Parakrama I
  • Kulasekara III
  • Vira Pandya III
  • Jatavarman Srivallabha
  • Jatavarman Kulasekara I

Imperial Pandyas (13th–14th centuries)

The Pandya empire included extensive territories, at times including large portions of south India and Sri Lanka. The rule of the empire was shared among several royals, one of them enjoying primacy over the rest. The Pandya king at Madurai thus controlled these vast regions through the collateral family branches subject to Madurai.
Pandya rulerReign
Maravarman Sundara I1216–1238 CE
Sadayavarman Kulasekaran II1238–1240 CE
Maravarman Sundara II1238–1251 CE
Jatavarman Sundara I1251–1268 CE
Maravarman Kulasekara I1268–1310 CE
Sundara Pandya IV1309–1327 CE
Vira Pandya IV1309–1345 CE

Maravarman Sundara I

The foundation for the Pandya supremacy in south India was laid by Maravarman Sundara I early in the 13th century. He succeeded his older brother Jatavarman Kulasekhara in 1216. He invaded the Chola country, sacked Uraiyur and Thanjavur, and drove the Chola king Kulothunga III into exile. The Chola king subsequently made a formal submission to Maravarman Sundara I and acknowledged his overlordship. Attempts by the next Chola king Rajaraja III for self-rule, with the help of the Hoysalas king Narasimha II, resulted in a battle between the Pandya and Hoysala forces at Mahendramangalam on the Kaveri Valley. Maravarman Sundara I was defeated and Rajaraja III was restored in the Chola country. Sometime later Chola prince Rajendra III attacked the Pandyas and defeated two Pandya royals including Maravarman Sundara II. Hoysala king Somesvara then came to the aid of the Pandyas, defeated Rajendra III and then made peace with the Cholas.

Jatavarman Sundara I

Jatavarman Sundara I ascended the Pandya throne in 1251 CE. He led his army to the Chola country, to Sri Lanka and to south Kerala. He was also successful in confining the Hoysala control to the Mysore Plateau. Kanchi functioned as the second major city in the kingdom. In his conquests, Jatavarman Sundara I assisted joined number of Pandya royals such as Jatavarman Vira Pandya.
Jatavarman Sundara I subdued Rajendra II around 1258–1260 CE and made him pay tribute. The rule of the Cholas ended with Rajendra III. The Pandya attacked the Hoysalas in the Kaveri and captured the fort of Kannanur Koppam. Hoysala king Somesvara was forced to fall back into the Mysore Plateau. The Hoysala king, pressed by enemies from north and south, "assigned" the southern half of his kingdom to his younger son Ramanatha. Somesvara was eventually killed by the Pandya in 1262 CE. Ramanatha managed to recover Kannanur and hold against the Pandya power. Jatavarman Sundara I also came into conflict with the Kadava ruler Kopperunjinga II. It seems that Bana and Kongu countries came under the Pandya rule during the wars against the Hoysalas and the Kadavas. Jatavarman Sundara I also fought the Kakatiya ruler Ganapati. Sri Lanka was invaded by Jatavarman Sundara I in 1258 and on his behalf by his younger brother Jatavarman Vira II between 1262 and 1264 CE. The island was again invaded and defeated by Jatavarman Vira II in 1270 CE.

Maravarman Kulasekara I

Sundara Pandya I was succeeded by Maravarman Kulasekara I. Around 1279 the combined force of Hoysala king Ramanatha and Rajendra III was defeated by Maravarman Kulasekara I. Maravarman Kulasekara I, now virtually unchallenged, ruled over the Chola country and southern Tamil speaking portions of Hoysala kingdom. He also invaded Sri Lanka, ruled by Bhuvanaikabahu I, who "carried away to the Pandya country the venerable Tooth Relic", and the wealth of the island. Sri Lanka remained under Pandya control until c. 1308–1309 CE.

Decline of Pandyas

After the death of Maravarman Kulasekhara I, his sons Vira Pandya IV and Sundara Pandya IV fought a war of succession for control of the empire. It seems that Maravarman Kulasekhara wanted Vira Pandya to succeed him. Unfortunately, the Pandya civil war coincided with the Khalji raids in south India. Taking advantage of the political situation, the neighbouring Hoysala king Ballala III invaded the Pandya territory. However, Ballala had to retreat to his capital, when Alauddin Khalji's general Malik Kafur invaded his kingdom at the same time. After subjugating Ballala III, the Khalji forces marched to the Pandya territory in March 1311. The Pandya brothers fled their headquarters, and the Khaljis pursued them unsuccessfully. By late April 1311, the Khaljis gave up their plans to pursue the Pandya princes, and returned to Delhi with the plunder. By 1312 the Pandya control over south Kerala was also lost.
After the departure of the Khaljis, Vira and Sundara Pandya resumed their conflict. Sundara Pandya was defeated and sought help from the Khaljis. With their help, he regained control of the South Arcot region by 1314. Subsequently, there were two more expeditions from the sultanate in 1314 led by Khusro Khan and in 1323 by Jauna Khan under the Punjab-born sultan Ghiyath al-Din Tughluq.
The family quarrels and the sultanate invasions shattered the Pandya empire beyond revival and coinage discoveries made imply that the Pandyas were left with the old South Arcot region. In 1323, the Jaffna kingdom declared its independence from the crumbling Pandya influence.

Tenkasi Pandyas (14th–16th centuries)

The Pandya kings from Sadaavarman Parakrama Pandya to his successors who ruled with Tenkasi as their capital. With the invasion of the Sultanates, Vijayanagaras, and Nayakars from the fourteenth century onwards, the Pandyas lost their traditional capital of Madurai and shifted to cities like Tenkasi and Tirunelveli. Tenkasi was the last capital of the Pandyas. All the Pandyas from Sadaavarman Parakrama Pandya and his next generations were crowned in the Adheenam Mutt in Kasi Viswanathar temple. During the same period, some Pandyas ruled with Tirunelveli as their capital. Kayatharu, Vadakkuvalliyur, and Ukkirankottai are some of their major cities. Inscriptions on them are found in Tenkasi's Kasi Viswanathar temple, Brahmadesam, Tirunelveli, Cheranmadevi, Ambasamudram, Kalakkad and Pudukkottai. The last Pandyan king known was Kollankonda, who was of the Tenkasi Pandya line.
Although the Vijayanagara Empire and the Nayaks ruled Madurai after the 14th century, they were occasionally opposed by the Pandyas. Sometimes, these Pandyas ruled Madurai. Prominent among them were Sadaavarman Vikrama Pandya and his son, Arikesari Parakrama Pandya. They had built 32 forts around Madurai. Later, when Vishwanatha Nayakkar became the Madurai Mandalasuvaran, he feared a Pandya resurgence in Madurai. To prevent this, he divided Madurai into 72 districts including 16 districts of those closest to the Pandyas. He assigned separate battalions to these Polygars, allowing them to repel the Pandyas. This secured Madurai from the Pandyas forever, allowing the Nayaks to gain supremacy.
KingPeriod
Sadaavarman Parakrama Pandya1422–1463 AD
Kulasekara Pandiyan III1429–1473 AD
Aksharan Perumal Parakrama Pandya1473–1506 AD
Kulasekara Pandya1479–1499 AD
Sadaverman Sewallapa Pandya1534–1543 AD
Parakrama Kulasekaran1543–1552 AD
Nelveli Maran1552–1564 AD
Sadaavarman Adeevirama Pandya1564–1604 AD
Varathuranga Pandya1588–1612 AD
Varagunarama Pandya1613–1618 AD
Kollankondan

Legacy

While the previous sultanate raids were content with plunder, the Tughluqs under Ulugh Khan annexed the former Pandya dominions to the sultanate as the province of Ma'bar. Most of south India came under the sultanate rule and was divided into five provinces – Devagiri, Tiling, Kampili, Dorasamudra and Ma'bar. Jalal ud-Din Hasan Khan was appointed governor of the newly created southernmost Ma'bar province. In, Jalal ud-Din Hasan Khan declared his independence and created Madurai sultanate. The Pandyas shifted their capital to Tenkasi and continued to rule a small area until the end of the 16th century as Tenkasi Pandyas.
Bukka Raya I of Vijayanagara empire conquered the city of Madurai in, imprisoned the sultan, released and restored Arcot's prince Sambuva Raya to the throne. Bukka Raya I appointed his son Veera Kumara Kampana as the viceroy of the Tamil region. Meanwhile, the Madurai sultanate was replaced by the Nayak governors of Vijayanagara in 1378. In 1529 the Nayak governors declared independence and established Madurai Nayak dynasty.

Economy

Early history

The Pandya country, located at the extreme southwestern tip of South Asia, served as an important meeting point throughout the history of India. The location was economically and geopolitically significant as a key point connecting the shipping between Southeast Asia and the Middle East. Graeco-Roman merchants frequented the ancient Tamil country, present day south India and Sri Lanka, securing contacts with the Tamil chiefdoms of the Pandya, Chola and Chera families. The western sailors also established several trading settlements on the harbours of the ancient Tamil region. The trade with South Asia by the Greco-Roman world flourished since the time of the Ptolemaic dynasty a few decades before the start of the Common Era and remained long after the fall of the Western Roman Empire. The contacts between south India and the Middle East continued even after the Byzantium's loss of the ports of Egypt and the Red Sea in the 7th century CE.
The early historic Pandya country was famous for its supply of pearls. The ancient port of Korkai, in present-day Thoothukudi, was the centre of the pearl trade. Written records from Graeco-Roman and Egyptian voyagers give details about the pearl fisheries off the Gulf of Mannar. Greek historian Megasthenes reported about the pearl fisheries, indicating that the Pandyas derived great wealth from the pearl trade. Convicts were according to the Periplus of the Erythraean Sea used as pearl divers in Korkai. The Periplus even mentions that "pearls inferior to the Indian sort are exported in great quantity from the marts of Apologas and Omana". The pearls from the Pandya country were also in demand in the kingdoms of north India. Literary references of the pearl fishing mention how the fishermen, who dive into the sea, avoid attacks from sharks, bring up the right-whorled chank and blow on the sounding shell.

Pandya coinage

The early coins of Tamilakam bore the symbols of the Three Crowned Kings, the tiger, the fish and the bow, representing the symbols of the Cholas, Pandyas and Cheras. Coins of Pandyas bear the legend of different Pandya ruler in different times. The Pandyas had issued silver punch-marked and die-struck copper coins in the early period. A few gold coins were attributed to the Pandya rulers of this period. These coins bore the image of fish, singly or in pairs, which were their emblem.
Some of the coins had the names Sundara, Sundara Pandya or merely the letter 'Su' were etched. Some of the coins bore a boar with the legend of 'Vira-Pandya. It had been said that those coins were issued by the Pandyas and the feudatories of the Cholas but could not be attributed to any particular king. The coins of Pandyas were square. Those coins were etched with an elephant on one side and the other side remained blank. The inscription on the silver and gold coins during the Pandyas were in Tamil-Brahmi and the copper coins bore the Tamil legends. The coins of the Pandyas, which bore the fish symbols, were termed as 'Kodandaraman' and 'Kanchi' Valangum Perumal'. Apart from these, 'Ellamthalaiyanam' was seen on coins which had the standing king on one side and the fish on the other. 'Samarakolahalam' and 'Bhuvanekaviram' were found on the coins having a Garuda, 'Konerirayan' on coins having a bull and 'Kaliyugaraman' on coins that depict a pair of feet.

Religion

Early Pandya rulers are traditionally associated with patronage of Jainism. In literary and inscriptional records, several Pandya kings are described as having supported Jain monks and institutions. According to tradition, a Pandya ruler known as Koon Pandya was later converted to Shaivism. Based on such accounts, historians believe that the early Pandyas were originally adherents of Jainism and only later converted to Saivism and lending royal support to the Bhakti movement.
The Pandya period was characterised by several elite forms of Hinduism, a popular bhakti religion and an even more widespread local form of Hinduism. The distinctions between the three were not differentiated. The worship of the gods Vishnu and Shiva was generally supported by the elite and Shiva was generally later supported by the elite. The bhakti movement emphasized the mutual intense emotional attachment between the god and the devotee.
The Pandya country was home to several renowned temples including the Meenakshi Temple in Madurai. As some of the largest employers and landowners of the Pandya country, the temples played an important part in the Tamil economy and society. They generally also served as banks, schools, dispensaries, and poorhouses. The large walled temple complexes of the Pandya country also contained several administrative offices and bazaars.

Architecture

The early temple architecture phase in Tamil Nadu opens with the rock-cut cave temples.
The Tamil country is home to the 'South Indian' or 'Dravidian' style of medieval temple architecture.
  • Typical temple consists of a hall and a square sanctum
  • The foundation block, or socle, is known as the adhisthana.
  • Walls of the sanctum are generally divided by pilasters.
  • Superstructure: 'kutina' type
  • The parapet is composed of miniature shrines connected by wall elements.
  • On top, a necking that supports a solid dome, or cupola —the sikhara.
  • Gopura: the great entrance buildings
The major Pandya contributions to Dravidian architecture come after the Pallava and the Chola periods.
  • Gopuras are extremely large and elaborately decorated.
  • Successively built walls and gopuras.
Finest Pandyan architectures:

In popular culture

The Pandyas are a secondary subject of the Tamil films Aayirathil Oruvan, Ponniyin Selvan: I, Ponniyin Selvan: II, and Yaathisai.