Tharisapalli plates
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Tharisapalli plates or Tharisapalli shasanangal( തരിസാപള്ളി ശാസനങ്ങല് or തരിസാപ്പള്ളി ചേപ്പേടുകള്) are the copper-plate grant which was given to the Nestorian Bishop Mar Sapro Easho by Venad King Ayyanadikal Thiruvadikal in the year 895 AD. The document gifted lands of Tharisapalli near KorukeNikollam[1] to the Nestorian merchants who had taken refuge under the king after escaping the Islamic conquest from the Persian Sassanid Empire.
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[edit] Background
In 431 AD Nestorius, Patriarch of Constantinople had, at the Council of Ephesus, refused to accept The Virgin Mary by the title Mother of God and would only call her Mother of Christ. The conflict over this view led to the separating the Assyrian Church of the East from the Byzantine Church. The Nestorian Church was welcomed by the Sassanid Empire of Persia who was in conflict with Romans. The Nestorians were accomplished merchants and had trade links with India and other countries in Southeast Asia, mainly China. Increasing pressure from the Islamic conquests led a few of them to settle in these places. The plates give information about the arrival of people from Persia under the merchant Marwan Sabriso in the year AD 825 with two bishops named Mar Sapro and Mar Prodh.[2] They had improved the trade in Kollam and raised it to a major port in South India. This led to the king gifting them free land.
[edit] The plates
There were two sets of plates[3] as part of this document, and both were incomplete. The first one documented the land while second plate documented the conditions. The signatories signed the document in Hebrew, Pehlavi, and Kufic languages.
[edit] Significance
This is a major record in the history of Kerala.
[edit] References
Sivasankaran Nair, K ,VeNadinte pariNamam (വേണാടിന്റെ പരിണാമം), D C Books, 2005.
[edit] Notes
- ^ near the present Kollam and are believed to have taken by the sea.
- ^ Marthoma Church Website
- ^ "Five of these plates still exist -- Three of these are still in the Old Seminary in Kottayam and two are at the Mar Thoma Church Head Quarters, Tiruvalla." according to Marthoma Church website.