History of Kozhikode

Vasco da Gama in Calicut, 1502

Kozhikode (Malayalam:കോഴിക്കോട് [koːɻikːoːɖ] ( listen)), (Calicut), is a city in the southern Indian state of Kerala. It is the third largest city in Kerala and the headquarters of Kozhikode district.

Kozhikode has a long and illustrious historyone of resplendent trade, poignant invasions and liberation struggles. It was dubbed the "City of Spices" for its role as the major trading point of eastern spices[1] during the Middle ages and probably as early as Classical antiquity. Kozhikode was once the capital of an independent kingdom by the same name and later of the erstwhile Malabar District.

Foundation

Image of Calicut, India from Georg Braun and Frans Hogenberg's atlas Civitates orbis terrarum, 1572

During the Sangam period (3rd  4th century BC), the land where Kozhikode now stands was an uninhabited region of the Chera Empire. This land, part of the larger Tamilakam partly fell within the Kudanad (Western land; west of Kongunad) to the south and partly within Puzhinad (marshy tract) to the north. The dominion of the Cheras extended as far as present day Vatakara, beyond which lay the kingdom of Eli (Ezhi). The ports of the Chera empire played an important role in fostering trade relations between Kerala and the outside world. According to scholars, Tyndis or Tondi (present day Kadalundi or Ponnani) to the south of Kozhikode was a flourishing seaport. During the 9th century, this region became a part of the Second Chera Empire. The Cheras (also known as Perumals) ruled the territory until 1102.

The rise of Kozhikode as a major trading centre and a port city does not seem to have happened before the 13th century. While the first reference to the Kingdom of Kozhikode and Samoothiri is made by Ibn Battuta in his accounts (1342–1347), there is no reference to Kozhikode by Marco Polo, who visited Kerala towards the end of the 13th Century. He does however mention the kingdom of Eli. This provides a clue to a plausible date for the rise of Kozhikode as a major kingdom on the Kerala coast. Nevertheless, Prof. Krishna Ayyar has assigned 1034 CE as the year of foundation of the city.[2]

According to the Keralolpathi (Genesis of Kerala), the last of the Chera kings, Cheraman Perumal, partitioned the kingdom among his feudatories and secretly left for Mecca with some Arab traders where he embraced Islam and lived the rest of his life in obscurity in Arabia. The date of this partition is a significant turning point in the history of Kerala. It is now clear that the Cheraman Perumals ruled in the 8th, 9th and 10th centuries and that the last Cheraman Perumal was Rama Varma Kulasekhara (1089–1102). Although there is no basis for the last Perumal's conversion to Islam and pilgrimage to Mecca, it is now accepted that following his mysterious disappearance the land was partitioned and that the governors of different nadus (fiefdoms) gained independence, proclaiming it as their 'gift' from the last sovereign.[3]

There is some ambiguity regarding the exact course of events that led to the establishment of the Samoothiri's rule over Kozhikode. According to Prof. A. Sreedhara Menon (who entirely rejects the story of Cheraman Perumals disappearance, his conversion to Islam and the subsequent gifts to his feudatories), immediately following the 'fall' of the Rama Kulasekhara, Kozhikode and its suburbs formed part of the Polanad Kingdom ruled by the Porlatiri.[4] The Eradis of Nediyirippu in Ernad (somewhere around present Kondotty) where land-locked and sought an outlet to the sea to initiate trade and commerce with the distant lands.[5] To accomplish this, the Eradis marched with their nairs towards Panniyankara and besieged the Porlatiri in his headquarters, resulting in a 50-year war. The Eradis emerged victorious in their conquest of Polanad. After this, Menokkis were made as the ruler of Polanad and came to terms with the troops and people.[6] After this, the town of Kozhikode was founded close to the palace at Tali.[7] Then, the Eradis shifted their headquarters from Nediyirippu to Kozhikode. The Governor of Ernad built a fort at a place called Velapuram to safeguard his new interests. The fort most likely lent its name to Koyil Kotta the precursor to Kozhikode.

Zheng He's navigation chart from Hormuz to Calicut, 1430

However, M.G.S. Narayanan in his book, Calicut: The City of Truth states that the Governor of Eranad, Mana Vikrama (who became the Samoothiri of Kozhikode later) was in fact a favourite of the last Cheraman Perumal, Rama Kulasekara as the former was at the forefront of the wars with the Chola-Pandya forces to the South and led the army to victory.[3] The King therefore granted him, as a mark of favour, a small tract of land on the sea-coast in addition to his hereditary possessions. This patch of wasteland is called Cullikkad in the Keralolpathi. To corroborate his assertion that Mana Vikrama was in fact a favourite of the last Perumal, Narayanan cites a stone inscription of the last ruler (1102) discovered at Kollam in South Kerala. It refers to Nalu taliyum ayiram arunurruvarum eranadu vazhkai Manavikiraman mutalayulla camantarum-'The four Councillors, The Thousand, The Six Hundred, along with Mana Vikrama, the Governor of Eranad and other Feudatories'.

However, the Eradis[8] being land-locked lacked direct access to the coast line as the territory of Polanad (Porakilanad) lay between Eranad and Kozhikode. Having been given the royal sword and the injunction Cattum konnum adakki kolka (conquer by courting and conferring death) by the last Cheraman (according to Keralolpathi), the Ernad Utayavar (Governor) waged war against the Porlatiri (Porakilar Adhikari) and attacked Panniyankara. M.G.S seems to indicate that the land sought by the Ernadis, lay in fact beyond and not within the kingdom of Polanad.

With the conquest of Polanad, the status of the Utayavar (Governor) increased and he became to be known as Swami Nambiyathiri Thirumulpad and the Kingdom of Kozhikode also came to known as Nediyiruppu Swarupam after the original house of the Eradis at Nediyiruppu. The king's title gradually evolved into Samoothirippadu or Saamoothiri or Saamoori over the years. The Europeans called him Zamorin. The foundation of the city of Kozhikode was therefore laid during the initial years of the 12th century.

The history of Kozhikode can the roughly divided into several periods marked by a few epoch-making events. These include the city's establishment, the arrival of the Portuguese, the arrival of the Dutch, the Mysorean Invasion, the rise of British Power, the beginning of the Indian Independence Movement and finally freedom from British rule in 1947

Arrival of the Portuguese

The Zamorin of Calicut as portrayed by the Dutch

This single event marked an epoch in the history of Kerala and India, not because Vasco da Gama 'discovered the sea route to India' as is in the common parlance (since the Chinese, the Middle eastern and the African kingdoms already traded directly with India) but unlike the others, the Portuguese yearned for political power and for imperial domination. Vasco da Gama's fame is more often argued as due to historical reasons for which he was hardly responsible[9] in that he was accompanied by a Portuguese-speaking Arab merchant provided by the Sultan of Melinda in East Africa. Vasco da Gama was sent by the King of Portugal Dom Manuel I and landed in Kozhikode at Kappad in May 1498[10]. The navigator was received with traditional hospitality, but an interview with the Samoothiri failed to produce any concrete results. Vasco da Gama's request for permission to leave a factor behind him in charge of the merchandise he could not sell was turned down by the King, who insisted that da Gama pay customs duty like any other trader, straining the relation between the two. The next expedition was sent by the King of Portugal under the leadership of Pedro Álvares Cabral in 1500. His agent secured a settlement to erect a factory at Kozhikode. This however, precipitated matters between the Arabs and the Portuguese. The Portuguese capture of Arab vessels and ensuing massacre was retaliated by the locals who burned down the factory and butchered half of the Portuguese on land. Cabral sailed for Cochin, where he was cordially received and allowed to load his ships. Vasco da Gama reached Kozhikode the second time with 15 ships and 800 men in February 1502. When da Gama's call to expel all Muslims from Kozhikode was vehemently turned down, he bombarded the city and captured several rice vessels, cutting off the crew's hands, ears and noses.

With rising bonhomie between the Maharaja of Kochi and the Portuguese, there followed several wars in which the Portuguese propped up Kochi and Cannanore against the Samoothiri. Scores of men perished in these wars on all sides starting in 1503 and continuing till the early 1570s. In the year 1509, Afonso de Albuquerque was appointed the second Viceroy of the Portuguese possessions in the East. A new fleet under Marshall Coutinho arrived with specific instructions to destroy the power of Kozhikode. The Samoothiri's palace was captured and destroyed and the city was set on fire. But the King's forces rallied fast to kill Marshall Coutinho and wounded Albuquerque. Albuquerque nevertheless was clever enough to patch up his quarrel and entered into a treaty with the Samoothiri in 1513 to protect Portuguese interests in Kerala. Hostilities were renewed when the Portuguese attempted to assassinate the Samoothiri sometime between 1515 and 1518. From the 1520s the Samoothiri's naval fleet was administered by the Kunjali Marakkars who inflicted heavy damages to Portuguese property till 1589. Samoothiri Maharaja was assisted mainly by four ministers namely Mangatachan the Chief Minister, Dharmoth Panicker, Army Chief and Teacher of Martial Arts, Kuthiravatathu Nair, Finance Minister and Kunjali Marakars, Chief of Naval Force.

In 1503, the Portuguese had built a fort in Chaliyam with the consent of the Raja of the Kingdom of Tanur (Vettattnad) from where they re-established supremacy over Indian waters. It provided the Portuguese ample opportunities to harass the Samoothiri and enter the heart of his kingdom in the event of war. The Chaliyam fort was 'like a pistol held at the Samoothiri's throat'. The Samoothiri attacked Chaliyam and recaptured the fort in 1571 coinciding with the defeat of the ruler of Vijayanagara, an ally of the Portuguese. The Portuguese were forced to abandon the fort, which was then completely demolished. The fall of Chaliyam fort marked the beginning of the end for the Portuguese in the great game of the East. The Portuguese approached the Samoothiri again in 1578 for reconciliation. By 1588 they were settled in Kozhikode and in 1591 built a church on land donated by the Samoothiri (who even laid the foundation stone). The Samoothiri's growing friendship was nevertheless a result of his gradual estrangement with the Kunjali Marakkars.

By 1663, the Portuguese flag ceased to fly in Kerala as the Dutch arrived at the scene and captured all their strongholds of Quilon, Cranganore, Purakkadm, Kochi and Cannanore.

Arrival of the Dutch

The Dutch Admiral Steven van der Hagen reached Kozhikode and concluded a treaty on 11 Nov 1604. It provided for a mutual alliance between the two to expel the Portuguese from Indian soil. In return they were given facilities for trade at Kozhikode, including spacious storehouses. The Dutch could not however stay for long. Their force weakened after constant wars with Marthanda Varma of Travancore (until 1753) and were forced to surrender to a British force that marched from Kozhikode to Kochi on 20 Oct 1795(as part of the larger Napoleonic Wars between Holland and England in Europe).

The Mysore invasions

Hyder Ali ascended the throne of Mysore in 1761. By 1764, he obtained a pledge of neutrality from the British at Tellicherry in the event of a conflict with the Kerala powers. In the February 1766, Hyder Ali marched into northern Kerala. Except for a few decisive battles, he faced meagre opposition and entered Kozhikode. The Samoothiri Maharaja sent the members of his family to Ponnani, blew up his palace and to avoid the humiliation of surrender committed self-immolation. A revenue officer named Madanna was appointed Civil Governor of Malabar with headquarters at Kozhikode. Rebellion soon broke out and the Mysorean garrison was besieged by the Nairs. Hyder Ali rushed to crush the rebellion devastating the country side and employed draconian measures to suppress the Nairs including defrocking of their social status and forcible religious conversion of prisoners to Islam. Successfully achieving his objectives, he had to return to Mysore soon to deal with the Maratha threat. Rebellion broke out again. Hyder Ali engaged in diplomacy this time through Madanna and agreed to withdraw his forces for which a war indemnity was to be paid to him. But he made a second attempt in December 1773 and re-established his authority in Malabar. However, with the help of the British, the Nairs led by the famous Ravi Varma of Padinjare Kovilakam, wiped out the Mysorean garrison in Kozhikode by 1778. By 1783 Tipu Sultan established his authority over Northern Kerala. Tipu persecuted the local Hindu population, destroyed numerous temples and forcibly converted many to Islam. He planned to shift the capital from Kozhikode to the south of the city on the banks of river Chaliyar and even named it 'Farookhabad' now called Feroke. This ambitious plan soon ended in failure. In November 1788, Kozhikode was attacked by the Nairs under Ravi Varma of the Padinjare Kovilakam. Tipu returned in 1789 to re-establish his authority. This however brought him in direct conflict with the British based in Madras, which resulted in four Anglo-Mysore Wars. Kozhikode and the surrounding districts were among the territories ceded to the British at the conclusion of the Third Anglo-Mysore War by the Treaties of Seringapatam with the British on 22 February and 18 March 1792. The newly acquired possessions on the Malabar Coast were organised into the Malabar District of Madras Presidency, and Kozhikode became the district capital.

Engraving of the coast of Calicut (James Forbes, 1813)

British domination

The British reached Kozhikode in 1615 under Captain William Keeling and concluded a treaty of trade under which, among others, the English were to assist Kozhikode in expelling the Portuguese from Kochi and Cranganore, a term that the British never fulfilled. In 1664, Samoothiri Maharaja gave the English permission to build a factory in Kozhikode but did not extend any other favours as he was by now growing suspicious of all European traders. The English maintained neutrality in the conflict between Mysore and the Kerala powers in 1766 and was an important factor which facilitated early success to Hyder Ali. However, tensions between the English and Mysore arose soon. The English army under Major Abington helped Ravi Varma of Padinjare Kovilakam in the recapture of Kozhikode in 1782 from Mysore. The East India Company however did not stand by Lord Cornwallis' promise to the exiled rulers that they will be restored after the expulsion of Tipu. By 1792, the whole of Malabar including Kozhikode came under the British dominion. Ravi Varma now turned against the company, but was soon captured in 1793. The rebellion continued even after the capture of Ravi Varma till 1797.

A series of twenty-two riots perpetrated by individuals or groups of Mappilas began to characterise the early British period in and around Kozhikode, a common feature of which was murder of Hindu janmis (landlords) and desecration of Hindu temples. In 1855, H.V. Conolly, the district magistrate of Malabar was murdered by four Mappila convicts at Kozhikode. The riots culminated in the 'Malabar rebellion'(1921) against the British with acts of violence targeting Hindus as well. While it was widely believed in the initial years that the riots were the result of issues of land tenures and tenant rights, it is now generally agreed that apart from poverty and agrarian grievances, religious bigotry(encouraged by the Khilafat Movement) and the loss of valuable social status to the Mappilas with the ouster of the Mysore rulers, played an important role too.

National movement

The city was also witness to several movements as part of the struggle for Indian independence from the British. A conference of the Congress was held at Kozhikode in 1904 with C. Vijayaraghavachariar in the chair. A branch of the All India Home Rule League founded by Ms. Annie Besant started functioning in the city. In 1916, Sri K.P.Kesava Menon staged a walk out of the Town Hall when he was denied permission by the Collector Mr. Innes to address the meeting in Malayalam. The period saw a rise in political journalism as well. The Mathrubhumi in March 1923 and Al Amin in October 1924 were started by Sri K.P.Kesava Menon and Muhammad Abdur Rahiman respectively with the aim of fostering the spirit of Nationalism. On 12 May 1930, Satyagrahi's assembled at Kozhikode beach under the leadership of Muhammad Abdur Rahiman to break the 'Salt Laws' were attacked by the police injuring more than 30 people. K.P.Krishna Pillai and R.V.Sharma defended the National flag from forcible seizure by the police on this occasion. During the second Civil Disobedience Movement (1932), all four hundred delegates who attended the All Kerala Political Conference in September 1932 were arrested. The incident wherein Mrs. L.S.Prabhu (of Thalassery), who courted arrest during the conference, was ordered to surrender all her gold ornaments including the tali or mangalsutra received nationwide condemnation. Kozhikode was also a major centre for the rising Communist Party of Malabar (1939) and the Quit India Movement (1942). Kerala chapter of the communist Party was formed in a secret meeting held at Kallai Road in the year 1937.

After Indian Independence in 1947, Madras Presidency was renamed the Madras State. In 1956 when the Indian states were reorganised along linguistic lines, Malabar District was combined with the state of Thiruvitankoor-Kochi to form the new state of Kerala on 1 November 1956. Malabar District was later split into the districts of Kannur, Kozhikode, and Palakkad on 1 January 1957.

See also

References

  1. "Lectures 26–27". Purdue University. Archived from the original on 16 July 2009. Retrieved 23 September 2009.
  2. Ayyar,K.V. Krishna, The Zamorins of Calicut- From the Earliest Times to A.D.1806(1938),Calicut.
  3. 1 2 M.G.S. Narayanan,Calicut: The City of Truth(2006) Calicut University Publications
  4. Sreedhara Menon.A,A Survey of Kerala History(1967),p.152. D.C.Books Kottayam
  5. Bhāratīya sthalanāma patrikā (page 44) published by Place Names Society of India
  6. Sewell, Robert (1884). Lists of inscriptions, and sketch of the dynasties of southern India. p. 197. The Zamorin made Menokki ruler of Porallatiri and came to terms with the troops and people. After this follows an account of the founding of the town of Kozhikode, close to the Samoothiri's palace at Tali
  7. K. V. Krishna Ayyar; University of Calicut. Publication Division (1938). The zamorins of Calicut: from the earliest times down to A.D. 1806. Publication Division, University of Calicut. p. 82. ISBN 978-81-7748-000-9. Retrieved 25 July 2011.
  8. Divakaran, Kattakada (2005). Kerala Sanchaaram. Trivandrum: Z Library.
  9. Panickar.K.M, A History of Kerala(1959) Annamalai University
  10. "‌Portuguese (1505 – 1961)". myeduphilic. Retrieved 5 November 2017.

A.Yeshuratnam, The East India Company and the principal Rajas of Malabar, Dr. A. Yeshuratnam, thesis at the Calicut University Library.

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