GOVERNOR RAVI ADDSSED IN TANIL JANAM TV PART2 25 11 25 https://youtu.be/hi-dnXPqyIM
GOVERNOR DOES NOT KNOW; DRAVIDA APPEARS IN NATIONAL ANTHEM MINISTER RAGHUPATHY HIS FOOLISHNESS TO TWIST https://youtu.be/jAKKN-b1ROE Ragupathy minister DMK ularal https://youtu.be/f_0vko6sHrY do xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Draviḍa (द्रविड).—(DRĀVIḌA). In ancient days the whole of South India was known by the name Tamilaka, as Tamil was the language used throughout South India. Strictly speaking, all the languages used in South India were given the name Tamil. The word 'Tamil' underwent changes in the language of North India and took the form 'Drāvida'. Etymologists are of opinion that the changes that took place in the word Tamil were are follows:— Tamil—Damil—Damiḍ-Dramiḍ—Draviḍ—Drāviḍ. Reference to the Drāviḍa country occurs in most of the Purāṇas. Mahābhārata states that Sahadeva, one of the Pāṇḍavas, sent a note for collecting taxes from the people of Drāvida. Sabhā Parva, Chapter 31, Stanza 71. "There are other countries also in the southern Bhārata such as Dravida, Kerala, Prācya, Mūṣīka, Vanavāsīka Karṇāṭaka, Mahiṣaka, Vikalpa and Mūṣaka." This statement (Mahābhārata Bhīṣma Parva, Chapter 9) throws light on the various countries which existed in South India at the time of Mahābhārata. In Bhāgavata, Skandha 10, it is mentioned that Kaṃsa, the uncle of Śrī Kṛṣṇa, was the son of Dramila, a gandharva. (See under Kaṃsa). Drāviḍa (द्राविड) refers to one of the six types of Temples, according to chapter 4 of the Puruṣottamasaṃhitā: a Pāñcarātra text consisting of more than 1800 verses devoted to temple-building and the practical concerns of the Pāñcarātra priestly community.—Description of the chapter [ālayalakṣaṇa-mūrdheṣṭakā-vidhāna]: After telling about the requirements for proper pratiṣṭhā-installation procedures (1-6), Vasiṣṭha then tells about the stones to be collected for making icons (7-9a) and the standard of measures to be used in making the icons and the temple (9b-10). [...]. The six kinds of temple styles—nāgara, drāviḍa, vṛtta, vṛttāyata, vesara and sarvatonirgama—are briefly described (44-50). 2) Drāviḍa (द्राविड) refers to one of the five types of Vimāna (“temple-structures”), as discussed in chapter 4 of the Mārkaṇḍeyasaṃhitā: a Pāñcarātra text comprising some 2200 Sanskrit verses mainly dealing with temple-building, iconography, pūjā (worship procedures), utsava (festivities) and prāyaścitta (expiatory measures).—Description of chapter [vimānalakṣaṇa]: There are five styles of vimānas, or temple-structures [e.g., nāgara] [...]. Once a vimāna-building has been constructed, as the final touch and the ritual conclusion of the building ceremonies, an “iṣṭakā-ceremony” is to be performed by ritually placing the final bricks at the very top of the dome (8-33); [...]. "Dravida" is not a single caste but a geographical and linguistic term referring to the southern regions of India. Within this region, the term is used in two main contexts Robert Caldwell (1856, 3rd edn, repr. 1956: 3–6) was the first to use ‘Dravidian’ as a generic name of the major language family, next to Indo-Aryan (a branch of Indo-European), spoken in the Indian subcontinent. The new name was an adaptation of a Sanskrit term draviḍa- (adj drāviḍa-) which was traditionally used to designate the Tamil language and people, in some contexts, and in others, vaguely the south Indian peoples. Caldwell says: Caldwell refers to the use of Drāviḍa- as a language name by Kumārilabhaṭṭa's Tantravārttika (seventh century AD) (1956: 4). The Dravidian Languages , pp. 1 – 47 Publisher: Cambridge University Press AND DMK STOLE IT FROM CALDWELL AND GU POPE CALLING SELF AS TAMIL *Dravida Sishu in Soundaryalahari* tava stanyam manyE tuhinagirikanyE hrdayata: paya:pArAvAra: parivahati sAraswatamiva I dayAvatyA dattAm dravidasisurAsvAdya tava yat kavInAm praud’AnAm ajani kamanIya: kava yithA II The Milk of your Breasts, O daughter of the Mountain, I think is as if from heart there flowed an ocean of the milk of poesy, when the Dravida child tasted this as you gave it to him in compassion, He became the poet laureate of the master poets. (Norman Brown’s translation) Thus Dravida means whole south beyond Vindhya parvatham. Not as told by Caldwell and Ragupathy. KR IRS 261125 -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Thatha_Patty" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. To view this discussion visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/thatha_patty/CAL5XZoq9j9o-GABxAJqKajv7pLQft6FK%3D_BJC1VDNFSrqGAd2Q%40mail.gmail.com.
