Tamil
literature (Tamil: தமிழ் இலக்கியம்) refers to the literature in
the Tamil language. Tamil literature has a rich and
long literary tradition spanning more than two thousand years. The oldest
extant works show signs of maturity indicating an even longer period of
evolution. Contributors to the Tamil literature are mainly from Tamil people from
South India, including the land now comprising Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Sri Lankan Tamils from Sri Lanka,
and from Tamil diaspora. The history of Tamil literature
follows the history of Tamil Nadu, closely following
the social, political and cultural trends of various periods. The early Sangam literature,
starting from the period of 2nd century BCE, contain anthologies of various
poets dealing with many aspects of life, including love, war, social values and
religion.
This
was followed by the early epics and moral literature, authored by Hindu, Jain and Buddhist authors,
lasting up to the 5th century CE. From the 6th to 12th century CE, the Tamil
devotional poems written by Nayanmars (sages
of Shaivism)
and Azhvars (sages
of Vaishnavism),
heralded the great Bhakti
movement which later engulfed the entire Indian subcontinent.
It is during this era that some of the grandest of Tamil literary classics like Kambaramayanam and Periya
Puranam were authored and many poets were patronized by the
imperial Chola and Pandya empires.
The later medieval period saw many assorted minor literary works and also
contributions by a few Muslim and
European authors. By having the most ancient non-Sanskritized Indian
literature, Tamil literature is unique and thus has become the subject of study
by scholars who wish to delineate the non-Aryan and pre-Aryan strands in Indian
culture.
One of the ancient literary treatises Tolkaapiyam
written during Sangam era (400 BCE to 300 CE) has laid down the grammar of
Tamil, the mother of all Dravidian languages, that is compared to Sanskrit of
the north, Latin and Greek of the European civilisation.
While Thirukkural penned by Tamil savant Thiruvalluvar
(1 or 2 Century CE) has in pithy sentences given an encyclopaedic formula for
ethical living to ancient Tamils, there are a number of classical literature
like Silapathikaaram and Manimegalai that have expatiated on the rich
traditions of this ethnic community.
In the modern world, Tamil language is considered one
of the classical languages of the world, but unlike Sanskrit, Greek or Latin,
this lingua franca is thriving with ever expanding usage and addition of words,
phrases from other languages. Some even believe that this dravidian language is
older than sanskrit
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