Missing:
Historic items from Kerala's Premier University Museum
By N P Chekkutty
Kerala is observing
the 200th anniversary of the martyrdom of Kerala Varma Pazhassi Raja, a native
prince of North Kerala who fought the British East India Company's forces in
the thick forests of Wynad and fell dead on November 30, 1805. TH Babar, the
British collector of Malabar who led the colonial forces against the local
hero, had carried the body of the dead fighter in his own palanquin to
Mananthavady and had cremated him there with full honours. His remains are kept
in a mausoleum on a hillock there.
Babar had recorded
in his note to the then Madras Governor that he was a great hero who fell at
the British bullets, after a series of guerrilla battles that continued for
many years. The Raja was one of the pioneers in South India, who, after Tipu
Sultan of Mysore, fought and resisted British efforts to annexe the country in
the late 18th century.
Ironically, even as
the people of the region are celebrating the memories of their folk hero, the
authorities at Calicut University, the premier centre for higher education in
the region, are busy inquiring into the mysterious circumstances in which a
historic artefact, intimately connected with the history of Pazhassi Raja, has
been missing from its museum. A beautifully carved palanquin, donated by the
East India Company to one of its officers who helped hunt the Pazhassi Raja,
kept in the museum of the University's history department, was recovered from a
nearby bush.
"The palanquin
is of great historical value as it dates back to the early days of colonial
conquest in Malabar," says Dr MGS Narayanan, eminent historian who had
collected it from an ancient family in Calicut for the University's history
museum back in the '80s. He said the palanquin was donated to Pulapre
Karunakara Menon by the company in recognition for his services. Menon had
joined the company as a sepoy in the 1790's and according to the notes left by
TH Babar, it was he who identified the body of Pazhassi Raja after the decisive
battle in the forests near Mananthavady when the company forces killed the Raja and a few of his
loyal followers and tribal warriors. It
was Babar who had arranged the cremation of the Raja and the mausoleum of the
late prince still remains in the hillock, attracting thousands of visitors
every year.
Scholars at the
University's history department said that it was not only the palanquin that
was taken out of the museum where the University had collected and stored a
large number of historical articles over the past many decades. Even as a
controversy over the missing palanquin raged, the University has found that
three ancient copper plates, valued in thousands of dollars in the
international art market, have also disappeared from its coffers. These copper
plates, which are historical documents recorded on thin copper sheets, date
back to the 12th and 13th centuries and are of immense value to the history of
the region. They are also valuable as ancient artefacts, highly sought after in
the western market.
University sources
said that one of the copper plates, dating back to the 12th century has been
traced to the London Museum recently. Dr Kesavan Veluthat, a scholar on ancient
Kerala history, has said that the copper plate is now with the London Museum.
The museum authorities have confirmed to him that they had acquired it from an
antique dealer in London in 1979. The two other copper plates are still missing
and have left no trace so far.
Dr MGS Narayanan who
has done an extensive study on the ancient copper plates as part of his studies
on Kerala history, said that the one that has surfaced in London is of great
value to Kerala studies. The plate was of 12th century origin and it describes
in detail the proceedings of the ancient Brahmin sabha at a village called
Chellur, now Talipparamba in North Kerala. Chellur and Payyannur were among the
64 original villages set up by Brahmins in Kerala over 1,000 years ago and
their history is the story of medieval Kerala and its relations with other
parts of India. The copper plate which was part of the huge collection of books
and documents in the North Kerala royal family of Kolathiris was donated to the
Calicut University by the eminent scholar, Chirakkal T Balakrishnan Nair, who
belonged to the royal family. The copper plates were kept in a secure box in
the university museum for almost three decades after it acquired them in the
early Seventies.
The plate was traced
to London when the British Library sought the service of a famous South Indian scholar from Tanjore
to decipher the writings which were in ancient Tamil/ Malayalam. It was Dr
Subbarayaulu of Tanjore University who informed the scholars in Calicut
University about the copper plate in London, triggering alarm bells in the
Calicut University who found much of its treasures were gone.
Following the
furore, the University instituted and inquiry with Dr MGS Narayanan and Dr S M
Mohammed Koya, both historians who served the university as members. Dr MGS
Narayanan, who headed the probe panel, said that they had submitted the report
to the Vice Chancellor more than three months ago. But so far no action has
been taken to recover the missing artefacts or find the culprits.
The scholars in the
university are agitated and express the suspicion that a powerful clique is
operating within the university, helping antique dealers get away with such
booty. Senior scholars say that only a CBI inquiry with the help of Interpol
could help locate the missing valuables now safely hidden away in the western
museums and retrieve these historical artefacts back to their original owners,
the people of the state.
(Cobrapost News
Features)