Thiruvananthpuram / Trivandrum Histoty
Thiruvananthapuram is an ancient region with
trading traditions dating back to 1000 BCE. It
is believed that the ships of King Solomon
landed in a port called Ophir (now Poovar) in Thiruvananthapuram in 1036 BCE. The city
was the trading post of spices, sandalwood and ivory. However, the ancient
political and cultural history of the city was almost entirely independent from
that of the rest of Kerala. The early rulers of the city were the Ays. With their fall in the 10th century, the city was
taken over by the rulers of Venad.
Swathi Thirunal
The rise of modern Thiruvananthapuram began with
accession of Marthanda Varma in 1729 as the
founding ruler of the princely state of Travancore (Thiruvithamkoor
in the local vernacular). Thiruvananthapuram was made the capital of Travancore
in 1745 after shifting the capital from Padmanabhapuram
in Kanyakumari district. The city developed into a major intellectual and
artistic centre during this period. The golden age in the city's history was
during the mid 19th century under the reign of Maharaja
Swathi Thirunal and Maharaja Ayilyam Thirunal.
This era saw the establishment of the first English school (1834), the
Observatory (1837), the General Hospital (1839), the Oriental Research
Institute & Manuscripts Library and the University College (1873). The
first mental hospital in the state was also started during the same period.
Sanskrit College, Ayurveda College, Law College and a second grade college for
women were started by Moolam Thirunal
(1885–1924).
Marthanda Varma Maharaja
Ayilyam Thirunal Maharaja
The early 20th century was an age of tremendous
political and social changes in the city. The Sree
Moolam Assembly, established in 1904 was the first democratically
elected legislative council in any Indian state. Despite not being under direct
control of the British Empire at any time, the city however featured
prominently in India's freedom struggle. The Indian National Congress had a
very active presence in the city. A meeting of the Indian National Congress
presided by Dr. Pattabhi Sitaramaiah was held
here in 1938.
The Thiruvananthapuram
Municipality came into existence in 1920. The municipality was converted
into Corporation on 30 October 1940, during the period of Chitra Thirunal Bala
Rama Varma, who took over in 1931. The city witnessed many-sided progress
during his period. The promulgation of "Temple
Entry Proclamation" (1936) was an act that underlined social
emancipation. This era also saw the establishment of the University of
Travancore in 1937, which later became the Kerala University.
With the end of the British rule in 1947,
Travancore chose to join the Indian union. The first popular ministry headed by
Pattom Thanu Pillai was installed in office on
24 March 1948. In 1949, Thiruvananthapuram became the capital of Thiru-Kochi, the state formed by the integration of
Travancore with its northern neighbour Kochi.[30] The king of Travancore, Chitra Thirunal Bala Rama Varma became the Rajpramukh
of the Travancore-Cochin Union from July 1, 1949 until October 31, 1956. When
the state of Kerala was formed on November 1, 1956,
Thiruvananthapuram became the capital of the new state.
With the establishment of Thumba
Equatorial Rocket Launching Station (TERLS) in 1962, Thiruvananthapuram
became the cradle of India's ambitious space programme. The first Indian space
rocket was developed and launched from the Vikram
Sarabhai Space Centre (VSSC) located in the outskirts of the city in
1963. Several establishments of the Indian Space
Research Organization (ISRO) were later established in
Thiruvananthapuram.
A major milestone in the city's recent history was
the establishment of Technopark—India's first IT
park—in 1995. Technopark has developed into the largest IT Park in India and
third largest in Asia, employing around 38,000 people in 280 companies This
placed Thiruvananthapuram on the IT map of India and it is today one of the
most promising in the country in terms of competitiveness and capability.
Thiruvananthapuram literally means City of Lord
Anantha. The name derives from the deity of the Hindu temple at the centre of
the city. Anantha is the mythical thousand hooded serpent- Shesha on whom Padmanabhan
or Vishnu reclines. The temple of Vishnu reclining on Anantha, the Sri
Padmanabhaswamy temple, which dates back to the 16th century, is the most
recognizable iconic landmark of the city as well as the district. Along with
the presiding deity of Sri Padmanabha, this temple also has temples inside it,
dedicated to Lord Krishna and Lord Narasimha, Lord Ganesha, and Lord
Ayyappa.The temple was built by King Marthanda Varma of the Travancore Royal
family when, in 1745, he shifted the Travancore capital from Padmanabhapuram in the south (today in the
neighbouring State of Tamil Nadu) to Thiruvananthapuram King Marthanda Varma
and started reigning as 'Padmanabha Dasa', the servant and representative of
Lord Padmanabha—perhaps a nobler variant of the 'Divine
Right Theory' that the West is familiar with . The vast temple complex,
with its tall 'Gopuram' decorated with detailed
carvings reflected in the huge temple tank, is today a centre of attraction for
the pious, the tourist and the merely curious.
The city was the capital of the Travancore state
before the independence. Consequent to the recommendations of the state
Reorganisation Commission, the Vilavancode taluk from Thiruvananthapuram was
merged with Tamil Nadu along with three other southern taluks of Thovala,
Agastheewaram and Kalkulam from Travancore and the state of Kerala came into
being on 1 November 1956.
The Ays were the leading political power till the
beginning of the 10th century AD. During the Chera-Chola Wars from 999 to 1110
AD, the city of significance was Vizhingam, which housed a university
(Kanthalur Salai). Trivandrum housed the famous temple. All of the regions were
attacked and sacked by the Chola army, till they were forced to retreat to
Kottar in 1110 AD. The disappearance of the Ays synchronised with the emergence
of the rulers of Venad.[3] During the Venad rule, the trustees of the temple
(Ettarayogam) became powerful enough to challenge the authority of the rulers.
Raja Aditya Varma was poisoned by them, and five out of six children of
Umayamma Rani were murdered by them. In 1684, during her regency, the English
East India Company obtained a sandy piece of land at Anchuthengu (Anjengo) on
the sea coast, about 32 km north of Thiruvananthapuram city, for erecting a
factory and fortifying it. The place had earlier been frequented by the
Portuguese and later by the Dutch. It was from here that the English gradually
extended their domain to other parts of Thiruvithamcore, anglicised as
Travancore.
During the regency of Umayamma
Rani, Travancore was invaded by a Mughal adventurer, known as the Mughal
Sirdar, forcing the Rani to take refuge in Nedumangad. The Sardar camped in the
suburbs of the present day Trivandrum, till he was defeated by Kerala Varma, a
prince from the Kottayam royal family, adopted into the Venad royal family. The
Rani was brought back in triumph to Trivandrum, but in 1696 AD, Kottayam Kerala
Varma was assassinated by the trustees within the precincts of his own palace.
During the regin of another Aditya Varma (1718–1721), the clashes between the royal officials
and the temple trustees became more common. Failing to get redress at the hands
of the king, the tenants of the temple lands marched to Trivandrum to present
their grievances to the Yogakkar (trustees), indicating the low ebb of the
power of the king.
Maharaja Marthanda Varma who reigned from 1729 to
1758 AD, and who is regarded as the Father of modern Travancore, modernised
Thiruvananthapuram. The locals of Thiruvananthapuram had supported him against
the Pillamar when he was the heir-apparent, and when he was attacked by the
agents of the trustees, he had fled to the safety of Trivandrum, from where he
counter attacked them. During his reign, he renovated the Padmanabha Swamy
temple and the walls of the fortress. He also shifted the capital legally from
Padmanabhapuram to Thiruvananthapuram, which he made a great centre of
intellectual and artistic activity in those days. In 1791 AD, the English East
India Company signed a treaty to protect Travancore from Mysore and in
accordance to that treaty, was allowed to install a Resident and troops in
Thiruvananthapuram. In 1799 AD, Velu Thampi,
then a Karyakar of Talakkulam, led a march of the local people to
Thiruvananthapuram to protest against the corruption of the Kings's ministers.
The accession of Maharaja Swathi Thirunal who reigned from 1829 to 1847 AD,
ushered in an epoch of cultural progress and economic prosperity. The beginning
of English education was marked in 1834 by the opening of an English school at
Thiruvananthapuram. An observatory and a charity hospital were also established
here in 1836. During the reign of Maharaja Uthram
Thirunal, Rev. Mead, an Anglican priest of the London Missionary Society
(L.M.S.), was employed by the Maharajah to improve the quality of education.
Schools, including one for girls, were started in Thiruvananthapuram.
During the reign of Maharaja
Ayilyam Thirunal (1860–1880), a full-fledged Arts College was started
here besides the several English, Malayalam and Tamil schools, all over the
State. A large hospital with lying-in-facility and a lunatic asylum were also
established in Thiruvananthapuram. The Trivandrum University College was
started in 1873, with Dr. Read as its principal. A Law class was opened in
Thiruvananthapuram in 1874 AD, and the main building of the old Kerala
Government Secretariat was designed and constructed by the Maharajah's chief
engineer, Mr. Barton. Mr. Barton also improved the sanitation of the city. It
was during the reign of Sri Moolam Thirunal (1885–1924), that the Sanskrit
College, Ayurveda College, Law College and a second grade College for Women
were started here. A department for the preservation and publication of
oriental manuscripts was also established.
One of the significant aspects associated with
Maharaja Sree Moolam Thirunal’s reign was the inauguration of the Legislative
Council in 1888. This was the first legislative chamber, instituted in an
Indian State. The Sri Moolam Assembly came into being in 1904. The activities
of the Indian National Congress echoed in Thiruvananthapuram and other parts of
Kerala during the reign of Maharaja Sree Moolam Thirunal.
During the regency of Maharani
Setu Lakshmi Bai, the college for Women at Trivandrum was raised to the
first grade.
A political conference of the Congress was held in
the city under the presidency of Dr. Pattabhi Sitaramaiah, in 1938. The period
of Maharaja Sri Chitra Thirunal Bala Rama Varma who took the reins of
administration in 1931, witnessed many-sided progress. The promulgation of the
Temple Entry Proclamation (1936) was an act that underlined social emancipation.
In 1937, a separate University for Travancore was started. This was later re-designated
as the University of Kerala, following the formation of the State of Kerala in
1956. With the accession of Travancore to the Indian Union after Independence,
the policy of the State Government as well as the political atmosphere
underwent radical changes. The first popular ministry headed by Sri Pattom A.
Thanu Pillai was installed in office on 24 March 1948.
Sree Chithirathirunal Maharaja
Sri Marthanda Varma
[Present]
e-mail : pratheepvasudev@gmail.com
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