K C R Raja
The story of Kizhakke Covilakam dates back to the
fourteenth century when the Zamorin decided to set up separate palaces for two
female members of the family. The first of them
Kizhakke Covilakam came up close to the Zamorin’s palace and the second,
Puthiya Covilakam not far from it, to the west of the Tali tank.
In 1704, the
perpetuation of the family became a big concern and the Zamorin decided to
adopt from Nileswaram two girls, one for each Covilakam. Their sister came over
in 1706 for the Mamamkam and opted to be a member of the Zamorin family. She
was given all the privileges of a member and a palace to the west of the
temple, the Padinjare Covilakam.
Thus for a few
centuries, Kizhakke Covilakam was located in Kozhikode. The members of that
Covilakam shifted to Kottakkal much latlater.
Kottakkal or Venkatakotta (the White Fort), as it was known
was part of the kingdom of the Valiyakonathiris
till the Zammorin captured it in the 14th
century. It was an outlandish, border police outpost, looked after by Karuvarur
Mossad, one of Valiyakonathiri’s powerful ministers. When the
Zamorin sent a messenger, Moossad locked him into combat and killed
him. Angered by this, the Zamorin sent the Moonalpad, who was from Kizhakke
Covilakam, to avenge the assassination.
The Moossad was killed and
Kottakkal was taken. Pleased with the outcome the Zamorin gifted half
the newly conquered territory to the Moonalpad and this included Kottakkal and the outlying villages.
Kottakkal remained a
remote village hardly used by the family until after the Mysorean
invasions. When the Mysoreans overran
Kozhikode in 1774, the members of the
three Covilakams fled, Padinjare and
Puthiya Covilakam to Punathur and
Kizhakke Covilakam to Travancore.
That Covilakam consisted of a 14-year girl named Manorama and her
brother.
They stayed there in
Ennekkatt near Alapuzha in a palace specially provided for them by the
Maharaja of Travancore , till 1798 when Tipu ceded Malabar to the British.
Thus the story of Kizhakke Covilakam at Kottakkal started
around 1799 when Manorama Thampuratty is said to have come to Kottakkal. Strangely,
it is also a story that begins with the end of the Zamorin empire which had
ruled Malabar for more than 7 centuries.
Kottakkal had fallen to Tipu without a fight and therefore
the Kotta remained intact. Tipu’s gunroads passed through Kottakkal and thus
the village graduated from narrow footpaths to a road that permitted the
movement of carriages. And Tipu’s extensive road network connected Kottakkal to
the principal places in Kerala.
The growth of Kottakkal from then till the early part of
the twentieth century is synonymous with the growth of the Covilakam.
For the Zamorin family, 1799 was an inflexion point: it marked the formal end of an empire; a
transition from centuries of war to a new mode of living in peacetime.; the retention of a royal lifestyle, without
the powers of royalty; and ownership of huge estates spread all over Malabar.
Each of the branches had to take care of these estates and find their way to
prosperity by managing them efficiently.
The grand
matriarch of Kizhakke Covilakam was Manorama Thampuratty. She began life as
a child prodigy who recited and
explained at the age of 12 the whole of
Bhattoji Dikshita’s double volume grammar work Praudha Manorama. This perhaps
earned her the name Manorama. By the time she came to Kottakkal, at the age of
38, she had grown from a prodigy to a
literary genius engaging herself in discussions with the best Sanskrit scholars
in Kerala. Her publications were known in literary circles. And with her, Kottakkal too began to
surface on the map of Kerala.
Manorama Thampuratty died in 1828 at the age of 68. She had
three sons and three daughters. From the three daughters has grown today’s
family size of 186 members. Not much is known of the eldest son ( 1788-1832) who
passed away at Guruvayur and is referred
to in family records as
“ Guruvayur Theepetta
Thampuran”. The second son, Kuttunni, (d1856) who went on to become the Zamorin,
continued to bring in scholars to Kottakkal and started organising the family
estates, introducing systems and
procedures in revenue collection. He was also responsible for restarting the
great cultural festival Revathipattathanam at Tali. The youngest brother was known to have been a scholar and
administrator and before he died ( 1845, eleven years ahead of his elder
brother) did much to make Kottakkal a
more habitable place. It was however left to their nephew, Jesthan Raja (1823-1879)
to build on the ground work of the frontiersmen and make an enduring impact on the growth of this village.. He had a fairly long tenure as a Sthani and was
Eralpad for some years. He brought in
traders from neighbouring regions, set apart a place for the weekly fair (
Chanda), had a traveller’s bungalow set up for visiting officials, built the
walls and gopurams of the Shiva temple and planned public amenities that would benefit
the community at large.
The Eralpad was a visionary. Recognising the need to bring
to the family the benefits of modern education, he hired an English teacher,
Venkita Subbiah from Kumbhakonam, to stay in Kottakkal and teach English to our
family members. The first recruits of
Venkatasubbiah were Veerarayan and
Manavedan. Before he died in 1879, the Eralpad had also taken several
initiatives in education; he started a primary school in Kottakkal; worked with
the then Zamorin Kuttyettan Raja, a great visionary himself (1869-1892), to
start an English school in 1877 with an Oxford-educated Englishman, C M Barrow
as its Principal, followed by a series
of distinguished educators, both English and Indian. The school became the Kerala Vidyashala in 1878 and the
Zamorin’s college in 1900.
At Kottakkal, others soon followed these two
stalwarts: Zamorin Cheriakunhunny Raja (
d 1900) in creating and expanding public amenities like renovating the flooring
of the two temples and creating a usable public tank, Arattukulam ; Zamorin, KunhiAnujan (d1912) in providing to
the Covilakam members better housing inside the Covilakam complex and extending
this facility outside the Covilakam to the spouses of the male members; and of
course, Manavedan Raja who, in the early 1920’s, took over the administration
when collections were falling and the estates were being badly managed. He
streamlined the management of the Covilakam estates, vastly improved revenue
collection and moved the Covilakam into an era of prosperity.
Among the disciples of Venkita Subbiah, Manavedan Raja was perhaps the first to put
his knowledge of English to good use. Indeed, he had many firsts: the first to
learn English: the first from the family to earn a graduate degree; the first
member to enter government service; and
the first to become the District
Collector and then a Judge. Having benefitted from a liberal education, Manavedan
wanted the family to follow suit. He started the Raja’s high School in
Kottakkal in 1921, and to sustain its growth created an endowment, financed to
a sizeable extent by his own contributions. He became the Zamorin in 1932 and
did much to develop the Zamorin’s College at Calicut.
As the family progressed and grew in size, Kottakkal too
grew - in terms of trade and commerce, education and the social mix. The
Covilakam’s administrative infrastructure, temple management, and welfare
programmes in education and health generated
employment and income in the
village. This was reflected in the
relatively rapid increase in population and the migration of Tamil brahmins, Mangaloreans , muslims, traders, craftsmen,
carpenters and construction workers,artisans, artistes, educationists, retail traders, and estate managers. The
Covilakam was by then the largest creator of jobs in Kottakal and a Grand
Protector.
The Grand Protector
was soon put to test in one of the most violent revolts in Malabar – the Moplah
Rebellion of 1921 that was motivated partly by political, partly communal and
partly economic concerns. Large numbers of families flocked and took shelter
inside the Covilakam till the rebellion subsided. The Grand Protector did not
fail them. Supplies of essentials including food grains were maintained through
the intervention of the District Collector. And the entire expenses were met
from the Covilakam funds.
It is perhaps not known to many that during the riots, the
Covilakam was guarded by loyal Moplas under the leadership of Kunhahmedkutty Musaliyar and Valiya Koyamu
whose men kept vigil day and night.
The period of stability and relative prosperity, achieved
in the 1920’s was perhaps too good to last. The Great Depression of the 30’s
affected the family as much as it did the country. Prices of agricultural
products plummeted and the family’s fortunes were hit by falling revenues. Soon
the Second World War broke out (1939-45) causing sharp price rises, supply
shortages and rationing of essential items including rice, sugar and kerosene,
the last hitting us badly as kerosene lamps were our main lighting medium and
even children studied by the lamp side. The children of that period, like this
writer, recall the austere life that we were suddenly forced into.
Into this scenario came a dreadful disease that took a toll
on many young lives in the family. Female members, some soon after, and some
before, marriage fell prey to tuberculosis which was considered incurable;
streptomycin had not been discovered and there was no known remedy. In the late
thirties and during the war years 1939-1945, one saw several young lives ebbing
away to a tragic end.
By the time the
Covilakam lost its prime position, another giant had arisen in Kottalkal- the
Aryavaidyasala under the leadership of P S Varier. Started in 1902 as a
small village clinic, the Vaidyasala
became the new centre of gravity, the new provider of jobs, the new protector.
It went further. The foresight and vision of P S Varier saw the establishment
of a sound ayurvedic health care system that encompassed hospitals, nursing
homes and a medical college. The Vaidyasala attracted celebrities from all parts
of the country who came for treatment includingJayaprakash Narayanan’s later, the President of India. Kottakkal became
nationallynationallyl
The management of the Kizhakke Covilakam estates had taken
a big hit during the war period and by the mid 1940’s the family had become too
huge and unwieldy to live under one roof as a
joint family. Dissensions grew
and by 1945 the inevitability of partition was in the air. It finally
materialised in the 1950s, signalling
the formal transition from one of the most orthodox joint families of Kerala to
a large number of nuclear families,
scattered all over the State.
Looking back, this seems to have been a blessing in
disguise. It forced the members, particularly the younger generation, out of an
illusion of prosperity and safety into a new lifestyle and new aspirations
based on education, and intellectual achievement. It released the dormant
energies of members, male and female, drove them to seek fresh pastures and not
rest on past family achievements.A powerful aid of far-reaching consequence
was the decision of the Karanavars in 1941 to let the girls go past the 5th standard into high school and beyond. This
was almost a revolutionary measure then, but one that empowered them and turned
them into high achievers. Among the members today, there are scientists,
chartered accountants, engineers, software specialists, doctors, teachers ( at
school, graduate and postgraduate levels) musicians and artistes, civil
servants. And the female members are as much at ease in these professions as
the males.
There is a new urge to go back to the roots, explore the
family’s moments of achievement and forge new relationships. In this, they are
joined, as this Directory shows, by many sons and daughters of the male members
to constitute a large, inclusive, extended family. The annual Family reunion at
Kottakkal which, started 20 years ago, has been held every year except during
the pandemic year of 2020. We now have a new digital meeting place, a new
platform for social interaction, wherever we are and a new opportunity to
strengthen the emotional bond that holds us together. That bond can grow in
several directions: in developing a new sense of identity; in offering mutual
help; in helping the young ones to prepare for an uncertain tomorrow. That would be a happy ending to a long drawn
out era, a happy ending to this story and a happy beginning of a new age of
hope and promise.
( Based on several sources including: The Zamorins of
Calicut by K V Krishna Iyer: Calicut : The
City of Truth by M G S Narayan;
Samoothirinadu by N M Nambudiri; Logan’s The Malabar Manual; and notes on the
family by K C Kuttiettan Raja)