Panchalankurichi

Panchalankurichi is a small but historic village, 3 km from Ottapidaram and 21 km from Thoothukudi in Thoothukudi district, Tamil Nadu, India. Panchalankurichi was once a Palayam and is best known as the birthplace of Veerapandiya Kattabomman, an 18th-century Palayakarrar ('Polygar'), who opposed the British East India Company governance in the area and its revenue-raising methods.

Panchalankurichi
village
Country India
StateTamil Nadu
DistrictThoothukudi
Languages
  OfficialTamil
Time zoneUTC+5:30 (IST)
Lok Sabha constituencyThoothukudi

History

Panchalamkurichi (often spelled Panjalamkurichi), in the Kovilpatti taluk of Tuticorin, is traditionally recognized as one of the 72 palayams of Madura. The name is a reference to the stand taken against the Nayaks of Madura by the Pancha (or Panchala, meaning the doab) Pandyas, local chieftains tributary to the Pandyas, at a nearby kurichi or valley in the central area of Tirunelveli.

In 2006, the Tirunelveli district administration organised a festival at Panchalankurichi to celebrate the birth anniversary of Veerapandiya Kattabomman.[1]

gollark: Unfortunately, apparently no mainstream language is remotely aware of most useful language features which aren't just mildly extended C or OOP.
gollark: It has nice pattern matching syntax.
gollark: In Haskell you can actually do `let 2 + 2 = 5 in 2 + 2`.
gollark: They're near-identical languages, and in any case most of the computer-science concepts underlying them are the same.
gollark: I mean, Java is *basically* C#.

References

  1. "Kattabomman festival celebrated". The Hindu. 14 May 2006. Retrieved 4 March 2018.

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