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  2. Kannagi and Kōvalaṉ leave the city and travel to Madurai, the capital of the Pandya kingdom. Kōvalaṉ is penniless and destitute. He confesses his deceit to Kannagi. She forgives him and tells him the hurt his adultery caused her.

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › KannagiKannagi - Wikipedia

    Kannagi (Tamil: கண்ணகி), sometimes spelled Kannaki, [1] is a legendary Tamil woman who forms the central character of the Tamil epic Cilappatikāram. [2]

  4. Cilappatikaram starts with the marriage of Kannaki, the “noble daughter of a prince among merchants” to Kovalan, an equally virtuous man. The ideals of virtue around this time, for a woman, had much to do with her “chastity”.

    • Silappadikaram
    • Silappadikaram - Characters
    • Silappadikaram - Structure
    • Silappadikaram - Significance
    • Ilanko Atikal
    • Conclusion
    • Mcqs
    Kannaki and other characters in the narrative are referenced or alluded to in Sangam literature such as the Naiai and subsequent works such as the Kovalam Katai.
    It is credited to a prince-turned-monk named Ilanko Atikal and was most likely written in the 5th or 6th centuries CE.
    The Silapathikaramtells the story of the young merchant Kovalan's marriage to the virtuous Kannaki (Kannagi), his love for the courtesan Matavi, and his subsequent ruin and exile in Madurai.
    Where he is unjustly executed after attempting to sell his wife's anklet to a wicked goldsmith who had stolen the queen's anklet and charged Kovalan with theft.
    Kannagiis the epic's heroine and key character; she is a humble, gentle, patient, and loving housewife who is completely devoted to her adulterous husband.
    Kovalan- Kannaki's spouse, the son of a wealthy benevolent kind merchant in Poompuhar, the maritime capital city of the early Chola monarchy; Kovalan inherits his money, is attractive, and the wome...
    Madhavi- A youthful, gorgeous courtesan dancer introduced in Canto 3 and described as descended from the line of Urvasi - the celestial dancer in Indra's court.
    Madhavi's female acquaintance Vasavadaththai's messenger to Kovalan
    The Silappatikaram is split into three kantams, which are subdivided further into katais.
    The three kantams are called after the three important early Tamil kingdoms' capitals.
    Puharkkandamis based in Pugaar, the Chola capital (Kaveripoompattinam, where river Kaveri meets the Bay of Bengal).
    Kannagi and Kovalan begin their married life in this book, when Kovalan leaves his wife for the prostitute Madhavi.
    It combines motifs, myths, and theological beliefs from the Jain, Buddhist, and Hindu religioustraditions.
    Like many traditional epics, it is a Tamil narrative of love and rejection, pleasure and grief, good and evil.
    However, unlike previous epics about kings and armies caught up in universal problems and existential conflicts, the Silappathikaramis an epic about an ordinary couple caught up in universal questi...
    The Silappathikaramnarrative has long been a part of Tamil folklore.
    Ilango Atikal was a poet, a Jain monk, and a Chera prince. He is widely regarded as the author of Silappatikaram, one of Tamil literature's Five Great Epics.
    He is considered to be one of Cheranadu's best poets. In the epic poem's patikam (prologue), he identifies himself as the brother of the great Chera monarch Senguttuvan.
    Ilango is regarded as the younger son of Chera monarch Nedum Cheralatan and Chola dynastyson Sonai/Nalchonai.
    Senguttuvan, the renowned warrior-king, is said to be his elder brother.

    The Silappadikaram's patriotic motivation in Tamil is a selective reading and appropriation of the ancient epic. It cherry-picks and brackets some of the epic's rhetorical and ideological themes while neglecting the rest of the epic's features that make it a complete masterpiece.

    Question: Consider the following statements: 1. Ilango Atikal was a poet, a Jain monk, and a Chera prince. 2. In the epic poem's patikam (prologue), he identifies himself as the brother of the great Chera monarch Senguttuvan. Which of the above statements is/are correct. (a) 1 only (b) 2 only (c) Both 1 and 2 (d) Neither 1 nor 2 Question: Manimekal...

  5. Silappathikaram, the earliest epic poem in Tamil, written in the 5th–6th century ad by Prince Ilanko Adikal (Ilango Adigal). Its plot is derived from a well-known story. The Silappathikaram tells of the young merchant Kovalan’s marriage to the virtuous Kannaki (Kannagi), his love for the courtesan.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  6. At last the patron goddess of the city interceded with Kannagi, and she agreed to withdraw her curse, and the fire abated. Weak with loss of blood from her self-amputated breast, Kannagi struggled to a hill outside the city, where after a few days she died, and was reunited with Kovalan in Heaven.

  7. Oct 8, 2022 · In the third section of the epic, gods and goddesses meet Kannagi and she goes to heaven with god Indra. The royal family of the Chera kingdom learns about her, resolves to build a temple with Kannagi as the featured goddess.