Was an ancient Indian town swallowed by tsunami?
Associated Press
Poompuhar, January 15:
For generations, the people of Poompuhar have spoken of the days when their sleepy fishing town was the capital of a powerful kingdom, and traders came from Rome, Greece and Egypt to deal in pearls and silk. Then, more than 1,500 years ago, it was gone. The thriving town, according to ancient Tamil-language texts, was ‘kodalkol’ — ‘swallowed by the sea.’ Perhaps, archaeologists and historians thought, the sea water had gradually risen. Or, some think now, perhaps it was something else. Nobody knew what had happened,” said Murugaiyan, a 38-year-old fisherman whose family has long talked of an ancient kingdom that vanished. On December 26, though, it all became clear to him, when the tsunami slammed into coastlines. “Now I know,” he said. “It must have been another tsunami.”
At least 170 people died in Poompuhar when last month’s tsunami hit. “The sea was unusually calm. Then we saw the sea rising suddenly and we knew something was terribly wrong. We started running,” Murugaiyan said. He believes the town’s past is echoed in what it’s going through now. “My grandfather used to say our town was taken by the sea. His grandfather told him there was a big town long, long ago - very rich, very beautiful,” said Murugaiyan. Poompuhar was the capital of the Chola rulers, a Tamil dynasty with a recorded history going back to the second century BC. It was a place where silk merchants and grain traders set sail for the Far East, Greece and Egypt, archaeologists say. The town had special enclaves for foreign visitors and the king’s soldiers. In the streets, languages could be heard from around the world. It was dotted with temples, a sign of a prosperous Hindu kingdom. But the ancient city now lies under water about three kilometers (two miles) offshore. All that remains are a few temples and the modern town, which consists of about 2,000 fishing families. Undersea excavations and studies by historians show that Poompuhar grew into a big town during the reign of Karikal Cholan, the second-century Chola king who established trade ties with China, Arabia and the Roman Empire.
Remnants of brick buildings, water reservoirs, a boat jetty and Roman coins have been found during undersea excavations. The archaeologists’ findings are supported by ancient Tamil literature, which have frequent references to Poompuhar. “The description we have in our ancient literature is that it was a bustling port town,” said S Jayadevan, professor of Tamil Studies at Madras University. It is not clear when the town was submerged, though most estimates put it somewhere between the third and sixth centuries. The tsunami has historians and archaeologists calling for new research into the coastal civilizations of ancient India, and the possible affect of earlier tsunamis. “The December 26 tsunami has added a new dimension,” said Rajendran. “Previously, archaeologists in our country never factored this into their work.”