Kannimar Shrines and Iconography

A Set of Tamil Folk Goddesses Interpreted in a Pan-Indian Context

Authors

  • Brenda E. F. Beck University of Toronto Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/rosa.19310

Keywords:

Folk Shrine, Great and Little Traditions, Hindu Temple, Kannimār, Pleiades, Sapta mātṛkā

Abstract

The Kannimar are seven look-alike goddesses affiliated with the Pleiades. In local Tamil folk temples of Tamilnadu’s Kongu area they are worshipped in one cluster, as sisters. They are mediators who occupy a middle ground, both spatially and ritually. The seven are served together, soon after the most prominent gods and goddesses, but ahead of other deities, mainly devotees and service-providers whose shrines are found in the same broad compound. The seven Kannimar provide a key bridge linking local to pan-Indian belief traditions. Their role resembles that of certain women in the human sphere, where it is common for a mother to mediate between father and son, or for a sister to bridge the awkward gap between her family of birth and that of her in-laws. The Kannimar also operate as handmaidens dedicated to the service of the great goddess Kali. They are her loyal communicators and errand runners. These seven females are youthful charmers, but they are also fierce womb-guardians who have nurturing powers and awesome resurrection abilities. The relative placement of the Kannimar within the local folk universe, can offer us multiple insights into a wide range of human and divine relationships expressed through the Hindu pantheon.

Author Biography

  • Brenda E. F. Beck, University of Toronto

    Brenda Beck has studied the Kongu region of Tamilnadu almost continually since 1964. She is an anthropologist, a folklorist and a researcher who has worked on both the social and religious dimensions of Tamil society. She is currently an Adjunct Professor in the Department of Anthropology, The University of Toronto, Scarborough campus.

References

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Beck, Brenda E. F. 1964–1966. ‘Kannimar Stories.’ A tape-recorded set of stories and myths later hand transcribed as part of a set of tales, songs and myths gathered in the Kongu region of Tamilnadu and now available (a) in its original transcribed form at: The folklore archives of the Smithsonian Library, Washington, DC and (b) in digitized form at: The library of the University of Toronto, Scarborough.

—— 1972, Peasant Society in Konku: A Study of Right and Left Subcastes in South India. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press. A 2019 Tamil language version is available from Adaiyaalam Press, Tiruchi, Tamilnadu. This work contains several of the temple maps, in the collection mentioned.

—— 1982. The Three Twins: The Telling of a South Indian Folk Epic. Bloomington, IN: University Press, now available as a download (due to an ACLS re-publication project) at: https://quod.lib.umich.edu/cgi/t/text/text-idx?c=acls;idno=heb33132.0001.001. This work contains a few temple maps.

—— 1992. Elder Brothers Story (Annanmar Katai in Tamil): Vols. I and II. A folk epic of Tamilnadu in Tamil (with English on facing pages), collected, translated and edited by Beck. Madras, Tamilnadu: Institute of Asian Studies.

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—— 2015. The Legend of Ponnivala. Graphic novel in two volumes, from Beck 2013. Pollachi, Tamilnadu: N.I.A. Educational Institutions. Available from Amazon.com.

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Published

2021-02-16

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Beck, B. E. F. (2021). Kannimar Shrines and Iconography: A Set of Tamil Folk Goddesses Interpreted in a Pan-Indian Context. Religions of South Asia, 13(2), 188–229 . https://doi.org/10.1558/rosa.19310