Tharavad

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An eight-halled ettukettu tharavad

A typical tharavadu reproduced from K. M. Panikkar's article published in 1918. Capital and small letters represent females and males respectively. Supposing that the females A, B and C were dead and the oldest male member karnavar being d, if the male members t, k and others demanded partition, the property would be divided into three parts.

Tharavad, also spelled as Tharavadu (pronunciation) (തറവാട്), is the Malayalam word for the ancestral home of aristocratic families in Kerala, which usually served as the common residence for the matrilineal joint family under the Marumakkathayam system practiced in the state,[1][2]. The most of the Majour communities like Christian, Muslim, Hindu families had Tharavad. German linguist Hermann Gundert, in his Malayalam—English dictionary published in 1872, defines a Tharavadu as, "An ancestral residence of land-owners and kings", and also as, "A house, chiefly of noblemen".[3] By extension, the word refers not just to the family's house but to the extended family that shares that house. It was classically the residence of Jenmimar, but contemporary usage of the word is now more generic to all social classes and religions in Kerala.[4] Heads of tharavadus - usually the eldest living male - were known as Karnavars, and junior members as Anandravans.

Architecture

A traditional nadumuttam

Inseparable from the traditional concept of a tharavad is, historically, Kerala's distinctive Nālukettu architectural tradition. A classic Nalukettu tharavad would be built with four halls, each with a defined purpose, and collectively enclosing a Nadumuttam, or open-air courtyard. Wealthier and more prominent tharavads would construct mansions with multiple such atria, such as the eight-halled Ettukettu, with two nadumuttams, or Pathinarukettu, sixteen-halled with four nadumuttams, and the preserve of royal families and tharavads of similar rank. Rarely, twelve-halled Pathrandukettu were constructed. with three courtyards,[5] and there is a record of a 32-halled Muppathirandukettu being erected, although it was lost to a fire soon after construction.[6]

1901 photograph of a Nair tharavadu

References

  1. ^ Kakkat, Thulasi (18 August 2012). "Kerala's Nalukettus". The Hindu. Retrieved 13 December 2017.
  2. ^ Kunhikrishnan, K. (12 April 2003). "Fallen tharavads". The Hindu. Retrieved 13 December 2017.[dead link]
  3. ^ Hermann Gundert (1872). A Malayalam and English Dictionary. C. Stolz. p. 434. Retrieved 15 February 2017.
  4. ^ Pannikar, K.M. (1960). "A History of Kerala 1498 - 1801". Annamalai University Press.
  5. ^ Nayar, Devu (2022). "House as Ritual: Stories of Gender, Space, and Caste in Colonial Kerala". Masters of Environmental Design Theses. 6.
  6. ^ "Some Namboothiri Illams". www.namboothiri.com. Retrieved 1 December 2023.