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Origin name of the fort
The actual name of Gingee is
Sengiri meaning perhaps the Red Hill in Tamil that has got
corrupted into Gingee. Some say that the name Sengiri has
originated from 'Sanjeevi' the hill mentioned in Ramayana from
where Hanuman gets the life saving herb, the Sanjeevini Booti for
Lakshamana when he is lying unconscious during the war between
Rama and Ravana. The Sanjeevi herb is the panacea of Indian
mythology. It has been explained as the combination of two roots,
Sam (pleasure) and Ji (life). The name has also been traced to
Singavaram the neighbouring Vaishnavite shrine, whose lord is
supposed to be the guardian deity of the place.
The local tradition has another
explanation to offer. The legend runs that seven virgin sisters
once lived here and one of them was known as Senjiamman. Their
modesty was threatened with the possibility of violation of their
chastity. Even though a valiant man named Thadikara Virappan
rescued them from danger, they could not survive the insult and so
committed suicide. Their spirits are even now believed to be
haunting the place and considered the genii loci. Each of the
sisters has got her own little shrine still existing and attracts
votaries from the neighbourhood. It is very probable that
Senjiamman who is worshipped on top of one of the hills gave her
name to the particular hill and this afterwards came to be the
common designation of the whole circle of hills and villages
below.
Another of the sisters,
Kamalakanniamman, has a shrine dedicated to her at the base of
Rajgiri, which, on certain days in the year attracts a great
number of worshippers. This hill was originally known after the
goddess as Kamalagiri. Gingee also had an earlier name known as
Krishnapura. This name was possibly given to it by its first
ruling dynasty that were of shepherd class and whose tutelary
deity was Lord Krishna. However, it is possible that it might have
received the name from its powerful ruler, Krishnappa Nayak.
The Bijapur Nawabs who held the
fort from about 1660-77 A.D. called it Badshabad, while the
Marathas who succeeded them called it Chandry or Chindy. The
Mughals, on their capture of the fort in 1698 A.D. named it Nasrat
Gaddah in honour of Nawab Zulfiquar Khan Nasrat Jang, the
commander-in-chief of the besieging army. Later, the English and
the French called it Gingee or Jinji. The early Madras records of
the English give the spelling Chingee or Chengey. Whatever might
be the name by which it might have been known in different epochs,
it has retained the name Gingee.
The chief source for the first
two hundred years of the history of the place is the
"Complete History of the Carnatic Kings" among the
Mackenzie manuscripts. One Narayan, who claimed to be a descendant
of the Ananda Kon Clan of Gingee, compiled it, after a
consultation with numerous authorities, both Hindu and Muhammadan.
According to Narayan, Gingee became a fortified place only about
1200 A.D. Ananda Kon of the shepherd community, accidentally found
a treasure in one of the cavities of the Western hill while
grazing his sheep. Making himself the head of a small band of
warriors, he defeated the petty rulers of the neighbouring
villages and built a small fortress on Kamalagiri which he renamed
Anandagiri after himself.
The Kon dynasty ruled Gingee from
1190 to 1330 A.D. This shepherd race was then superseded by the
chief of a neighbouring place called Kobilingan, who belonged to
the kurumba caste and ascended the throne of Gingee. He was a
feudatory of the powerful Cholas. This way Gingee came into the
hands of various ruling dynasties of South India starting from the
Cholas.
C K Gariyali IAS
Source : Chennaionline |