Padmanabhaswamy Temple, Thiruvananthapuram – Temple
Records
A pertinent event in the long-recorded history of the
temple was the construction of a "granta-pura" (record-room) within
the temple compound itself around 1425 A.D. by the then Venadu King Veera Iravi
Iravi Varma, to store the "Mathilakam" (within-the-walls) records, as
the then existing temple records were known. A major portion of those
records (numbering around 30 lakhs of documents) from the Mathikalam, had been
donated later to the Archives Department in 1867, at the time of the formation
of the latter.
Despite their cultural value, only a minuscule portion
of these grantas (bundles) of cadjan leaf records, written mostly in ancient
scripts of proto-Tamil and
archaic-Malayalam, have been deciphered. The translations of this section of
manuscripts by some scholars serve as a rare but very inadequate primary source
material on the temple and its rich traditions. The rest of the 30 lakh
documents – three thousand bundles of records pertaining to the temple - each
bundle consisting of over a thousand cadjan records – segregated under 70
"heads" - is still lying idle with the Archives Department.
According to Aswathi Thirunal Gouri Lakshmi Bayi, a
member of the Travancore Royal Family and author of a book on the temple, from
a very early period in recorded history the temple had employed two kinds of
'record writers'. One group was to record the proceedings and transactions of
the Ettarayogam, a council of temple administrators, that included the then
king. The other was to write and preserve the records of the day-to-day
functioning of the temple, maintain correct accounts of the temple-treasury,
and of temple-revenue-collections and temple-expenditure, and as well as write
down all the other records, connected with the functioning of the temple.
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