Idaikaadar

Biography

Unlike Idaikaadanar of the Sangam period, who was a poet by profession, Idaikaadar was a siddhar.[2] Idaikaadar hailed from Idaikattur near Madurai.[1] He belongs to the Idaikkali country.[3] He is known for composing poems with excellent exemplifications. He has written in praise of the Chola King Kulamuttratthu Thunjiya Killi Valavan (Purananuru verse 42).[3] He has also authored the grammar text "Oosimuri".[3]

He is believed to have attained jeeva samadhi at Thiruvannamalai.[1] He hosted navagrahas during a famine. A small navagraha temple remains at the site today at Idaikattur.

Literary contributions

Verse 54 of the Tiruvalluva Maalai, an encomium written on Valluvar and the Kural literature, is attributed to Idaikaadar. The verse suggests, "Valluvar pierced a mustard and injected seven seas into it and compressed it into what we have today as Kural."[4] It can be noted that Avvaiyar I fortified the meaning of this verse by replacing the first word "mustard" with the word "atom."[5] He is one of the two contributors of the Tiruvalluva Maalai who have penned the verse in the Kural venba metre, the other one being Avvaiyar I.[1]

View on Valluvar and the Kural

Idaikkadar opines about Valluvar and the Kural text thus:[6]

The Cural contains much in a little compass. Such is the ingenuity of its author, that he has compressed within its narrow limits all the branches of knowledge, as if he had hollowed a mustard seed, and enclosed all the waters of the seven seas in it. [Emphasis in original]

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gollark: !time <@319753218592866315>
gollark: They are not really identical to non-transgender people of the same gender in some important ways.
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See also

Notes

  1. Vedanayagam, Rama (2017). Tiruvalluva Maalai: Moolamum Eliya Urai Vilakkamum (in Tamil) (1st ed.). Chennai: Manimekalai Prasuram. pp. 72–73.
  2. Kowmareeshwari, S., ed. (August 2012). Agananuru, Purananuru. Sanga Ilakkiyam (in Tamil). 3 (1st ed.). Chennai: Saradha Pathippagam. p. 384.
  3. Gopalan, P. V. (1957). புலவர் அகராதி [Dictionary of Poets] (in Tamil) (1 ed.). Chennai: M. Duraisami Mudaliyar and Company. p. 20.
  4. Thamilarasu, Ve (2014). Kuralamildham (in Tamil) (1st ed.). Chennai: Arutchudar Anbarkulu. pp. 42–43.
  5. Jagannadhan, Ki Va (1963). Tirukkural: Aaraaycchi Padhippu (in Tamil) (3rd ed.). Coimbatore: Ramakrishna Mission Vidhyalayam. p. 711.
  6. Robinson, 2001, p. 27.

References

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