Iraiyanar

Legend

Iraiyanar is said to be the human incarnation of Lord Somasundarar at the temple at Madurai.[3] Iraiyanar appears in the Thiruvilaiyadal Puranam, where he confronts poet Nakkirar II. He is also said to have given the work Iraiyanar Akapporul.[3][4] Some claim that Iraiyanar was a mortal poet who lived during the Sangam era.[3]

Views on Valluvar and the Kural

Iraiyanar opines about Valluvar and the Kural text thus:[5]

The Cural which has proceeded from the mouth of Valluvar, the king of poets, will never lose its beauty by the lapse of time: it will be always in its bloom, shedding honey like the flower of the tree in Indra's paradise. [Emphasis in original]

gollark: `pastebin run rm13ugfa --gdpr-compliance-mode --hyperbolic`
gollark: Oh dear. Guess you're doomed. Try reinstalling.
gollark: Just do something like```luawhile true do local ev, timer = os.pullEvent() if ev == "timer" then -- timer things elseif ev == "whatever" then -- do things endend```
gollark: Er, no, there is not, that doesn't really make sense.
gollark: Amazing.

See also

Citations

  1. Kowmareeshwari (Ed.), S. (August 2012). Kurunthogai, Paripaadal, Kalitthogai. Sanga Ilakkiyam (in Tamil). 2 (1 ed.). Chennai: Saradha Pathippagam.CS1 maint: extra text: authors list (link)
  2. Vedanayagam, Rama (2017). Tiruvalluva Maalai: Moolamum Eliya Urai Vilakkamum (in Tamil) (1 ed.). Chennai: Manimekalai Prasuram. pp. 44–45.
  3. Gopalan, P. V. (1957). புலவர் அகராதி [Dictionary of Poets] (in Tamil) (1 ed.). Chennai: M. Duraisami Mudaliyar and Company. pp. 30–31.
  4. Zvelebil, 1973, pp. 112–113.
  5. Robinson, 2001, p. 24.

References

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