Biography
No directly verifiable information about Ilango Adigal exists outside of Cilappatikaram ("The Lay of the Anklet") and its prologue. According to the text, Ilango Adigal was a Chera prince ("Kudakko Ceral Ilanko"). He was the younger son of the Chera king "Imayavarampan" Ceralatan and Conai/Nalconai of the Chola dynasty. His elder brother was Cenkuttuvan, the future warrior-king from the Chera family. Ilango is said to have renounced royal life after a soothsayer informed the Chera court that the younger prince was destined to succeed his father. To avoid this fate, he chose the path of asceticism and became a Jain monk, residing in a monastery called "Kunavayirkottam", located outside the Chera capital of Vanchi. It was likely another poet, Chathanar — a friend of Ilango — who discussed the legend of Kannaki with him and inspired the creation of the epic poem. In several parts of Cilappatikaram, the main characters are shown encountering a Jaina monk or nun.Legacy
The epic ''Cilappatikaram'' — credited to Ilango Adigal — inspired another Tamil poetic work titled '' Manimekalai,'' which serves as its sequel. ''Manimekalai'' centers on the daughter of Kovalan, the protagonist of ''Cilappatikaram'', and Madhavi, the dancing girl who had an affair with him.Historic dating
The dating of Ilango Adigal, the author, to early historic south India or the Sangam period remains uncertain. This is primarily due to the absence of any mention of Ilango Adigal in the Fifth Ten of the Patitruppattu Collection, a text that provides a detailed biography of Cenkuttuvan, his royal family, and his reign (and yet does not refer to the king having a brother who became an ascetic or composed an epic). As such, scholars have posited that the biography of Ilango Adigal was likely interpolated into ''Cilappatikaram'' at a later date. Scholar Zvelebil suggested that the Ilango Adigal background and his connection to Cenkuttuvan could be a product of "poetic fantasy", possibly introduced by a later member of the Chera dynasty (in the 5th or 6th century CE), reflecting on events from the 2nd or 3rd century CE. Zvelebil, however, expanded on this by stating: The author lango Adigalappears as a character in the final canto of the poem (lines 155–178), where the phrase "I also went in .. is used. Scholars interpret this "I" as referring to Ilango Adigal himself. According to Zvelebil, the background was likely added by Ilango Adigal to ensure that he remained part of the collective memory within the epic he composed. Zvelebil suggests that Adigal was probably a Jain scholar who lived several centuries later, and that his epic "cannot have been composed before the 5th or 6th century AD". R. Parthasarathy, another scholar, suggests that Ilango Adigal was likely neither a prince nor connected to the Chera dynasty. Instead, he believes that these references were added to elevate the status of the text, secure royal patronage, and play a key role in the institutionalization of the worship of the goddess Pattini and her temples in the Tamil country (modernGajabahu Synchronism
The epic ''Cilappatikaram'' also mentions, among other details, the "Gajabahu Synchronism" (Canto 30, lines 155-164). This reference was famously used by historians such as K. A. Nilakanta Sastri to date the poem and early Tamil history to 2nd/3rd century CE. ''Cilappatikaram'' (Canto 30, lines 155-164) states that the poet Ilango Adigal attended the consecration of the Pattini temple by Chera king Cenkuttuvan, at the Chera city of Vanchi, in the presence of Gajabahu, the king ofSee also
* Five Great Epics *References
Bibliography
* * * * *Translations
* * *External links
* {{Authority control Tamil epic poets Indian Jain monks 2nd-century Indian Jains 2nd-century Jain monks 2nd-century Indian monks 2nd-century Indian poets Silappatikaram Indian male poets Chera poets