Secret Kumari Kandam Continent And Links To Lemurians
A. Sutherland - AncientPages.com - A mysterious 'land along the mount Meru (Panmalaiyadukkam) submerged during the time of the destruction of Kumari Kandam. The land of Kumari Kandam was from the land stretch of Himalayas to the rule of South Kumari Kandam till the South Pole.
Kumari Kandam is a great mystery. It was the legendary sunken continent, mentioned in several works of Tamil literature and described in the Sanskrit literature.
- ‘This magnanimous landscape, from 30, 000 – 11, 000 B.C, at a snail's pace submerged in the seawater by different destructions like earthquakes, tsunamis, and volcanic eruptions.’ Each time the people escaped, they moved towards the North and North West regions and the east.
- ‘Hole in the Ozone was the reason for melted Icebergs,’
- Science accepts mentioning it as ‘40 – 400 meters of the high tide made the sea erosion.’
- The present land is the residue of the Sea level that went off after the ice age.
- It gave rise to new land regions and new nations including India, Australia, and Africa
Tamil continent Kumari Kandam - believed to be the connection between Africa to South India – was located in the Indian and Pacific Oceans, and has long been identified and closely associated with a hypothetical "lost land" of Lemuria.
Before submerging, Kumari Kandam lay to the south of India, approximately south of present-day town Kanniyakumari, in the state of Tamil Nadu.
It was ruled by Pandiyan Kings of an ancient Tamil dynasty for 10,000 years and was divided into 49 territories. ‘Silappadhikaram,’ one of the Five Great Epics of Tamil Literature written in 2nd century CE, confirms this catastrophic event and another ancient Tamil source gives the list of Pandiyan Kings who ruled the Kumari Kandam.
Tamil literature also says that over a period of about just 11,000 years, the Pandyans, a historical dynasty of Tamil kings, formed three Tamil Sangams, in order to foster among their subjects the love of knowledge, literature, and poetry, which became the most important basis of Tamil culture, protecting and perfecting the Tamil language and literature.
The first two Sangams were located in antediluvian Tamil land to the south, which in ancient times bore the name of Kumari Kandam, literally the ‘Land of the Virgin’ or ‘Virgin Continent’, (in Tamil, ‘Kumari’ means ‘pure/virgin’).
The First Sangam (probably about 9000 B.C) is described as having been held at the Pandiyan King’s capital city, to the south of Madurai, and the Pandyan king, Agastya, was the president of this Sangam until the city was lost in the sea.
There were 89 Pandiyan kings (decedents and rulers of that period) and this Sangam lasted 4440 years and had 549 members, which supposedly included some gods of the Hindu pantheon such as Siva, Kubera, the lord of riches and treasures, frequently mentioned in the epic ‘Ramayana’ and Murugan, the Commander-in-Chief of the army of the devas and the son of Shiva.
Due to this cataclysm, the king and all people who survived moved to the remaining land of Kumari Kandam and the king moved his capital to Kapatapuram. At the same time, the present location of Tamil Nadu was ruled by Chera, Chola, and 46 other small kingdoms.
The Second Sangam lasted for 3700 years and had 59 members, with 3700 poets participating. It was ruled by 59 Pandiyan kings. This city was sunken, too.
These tectonic processes played an important role in the disappearance of the ancient continent known as Lemuria to western scholars. Sri Lanka together with India, Indonesia, and Malaysia was a part of this continent.
Now, when Kumari Kandam was no more, the Pandiyan King seized the part of lands belonging to the kingdoms of Chola and Chera and established a seaport on the southernmost tip of the Indian Peninsula – Korkai. The city became the capital, which was later moved to the present-day city of Madurai.
The Third Sangam was supposedly located in the current city of Madurai, the then capital city of Pandiyan King, and lasted for 1850 years. There were 49 Pandiyan kings during this period. The academy had 49 members and 449 poets.
According to an Indian historian, K. K. Pillay (1905 – 1981). ‘it is important to observe that the Lemurian continent must have existed, if at all, long long ago. According to geologists, the dismemberment of the Lemurian or Gondwana continent into several units must have taken place towards the close of the Mesozoic era.’
"The equator regions have always been most prone to natural catastrophes like earthquakes and volcano eruptions... according to Professor Karsten M. Storetvedt, University of Bergen, Norway.
'...These tectonic processes played an important role in the disappearance of the ancient continent known as Lemuria to western scholars. Sri Lanka together with India, Indonesia, and Malaysia were a part of this continent. Many islands in the Pacific and Indian oceans are remnants of this continent that in ancient times covered the whole area of today’s ocean.
'...descriptions of cataclysms in early literature when land suddenly went underwater are logical. But they should be proven to be scientific facts. This can be done with the help of sea-floor analysis that is possible to carry out. Modern theories find supportive evidence both in ancient literature and language history...'
Written by – A. Sutherland AncientPages.com Staff Writer
Copyright © AncientPages.com All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed in whole or part without the express written permission of AncientPages.com
Expand for referencesReferences:
D. Whittaker, The Lemurian Encyclopedia
Ma.So. Victor, The Submerged 'Kumari Continent'
More From Ancient Pages
-
America’s Oldest City Caral Illegally Invaded And Archaeologist Threatened With Death
Archaeology | Jan 21, 2021
-
Largest Ancient Gold Treasure Of Its Kind Discovered In Stavanger, Norway
Archaeology | Sep 7, 2023
-
Inscription Found In Ancient Thracian Tomb in Bulgaria’s Tatarevo Is A Verse from Solon’s ‘Prayer to the Muses’
News | Sep 29, 2015
-
Mythical Biringan City – Invisible Portal To Another World Where Dangerous Engkantos Reside
Featured Stories | Feb 2, 2018
-
Were Medieval Philosophers Familiar With The Multiverse Theory?
Featured Stories | Oct 4, 2018
-
The Inca Empire Was Powerful And Well-Organized – Why Were They So Successful?
Ancient History Facts | Sep 21, 2020
-
Xibalba: Nine-Leveled Underground Place Of Fear Ruled By Lords Of Death In Maya Beliefs
Featured Stories | May 12, 2020
-
Ostracism: Political Practice In Ancient Athens
Ancient History Facts | May 7, 2019
-
Unique Codex Cospi: Pre-Columbian Manuscript Will Soon Reveal Some Of Its Secrets
News | Oct 29, 2020
-
LIDAR Discovers 18-Kilometer (11-Mile) Maya Road In The Yucatan Jungle
Archaeology | Dec 5, 2023
-
10 Types Of Ancient Crosses In Different Cultures Explained
Featured Stories | May 23, 2017
-
Why Is The Hungry Ghost Festival Celebrated In August?
Ancient Traditions And Customs | Aug 12, 2019
-
Was The Mysterious Powerful Viking Warrior Buried In A Ship In Scottish Highlands A Woman?
Archaeology | Feb 12, 2017
-
A Warrior’s Princely Tomb With Artifacts Unearthed In Romania
Archaeology | Dec 27, 2022
-
Mysterious Ancient Village In A Prehistoric Anomalous Zone – Unexplained Sightings And Sounds – Part 1
Featured Stories | Jul 27, 2020
-
Fall Of The Ancient Maya Civilization Not Caused By Climate Change And Environmental Degradation – Scientists Say
Archaeology | Nov 18, 2021
-
Hindu Monkey God Hanuman May Have Been Homo Erectus – Scientist Says
Hindu Mythology | Mar 3, 2020
-
Hatra: Ancient Powerful Caravan City That Could Withstand Invading Roman Armies
Featured Stories | Dec 12, 2020
-
Lost Astronomical Treatise By Claudius Ptolemy Discovered
Archaeology | Mar 30, 2023
-
A 1,800-Year-Old Amasya Mosaic Goes On Display For The First Time After Seven Years
Archaeology | Jul 21, 2020