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* [[P. Govinda Pillai]], a veteran Communist Party of India (Marxist) leader and ideologue from Kerala
* [[P. Govinda Pillai]], a veteran Communist Party of India (Marxist) leader and ideologue from Kerala
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==Matrimony Site==

Matrimony Site and info for '''Pillai community''' is www.pillaimarriage.com[[http://www.pillaimarriage.com]] .



==See also==
==See also==

Revision as of 05:53, 14 April 2009

Pillai, Pillay, Pulle or Pilli is a popular title of Tamil- and Malayalam-speaking people of India and others living in Sri Lanka, Singapore, Malaysia, South Africa and Fiji, mostly from Vellalar and Nair communities.

Though it started as a Hindu title, today Pillai is also found amongst Christians both as a surname and a given name.

South African Tamils use the spelling Pillay, whereas some Sri Lankan castes may also use Pulle or Pilli.

Tamil Nadu usage

In Tamil Nadu this title or surname is mostly used by people of the Vellalar caste among the population of Tamil descent (particularly in southern districts), and the Nair caste population of the Malayalam-speaking immigrant population. The usage of the title is prevalent, though to a lesser extent, among Mukkulathors and Tamil Yadavas The Elur Chetty community in South Tamilnadu and Kerala also uses this surname.

Saiva pillai

Saiva pillai are the forward caste peoples hailing from Tamil Nadu. They are living in large numbers in areas like tiruchirapalli, tanjore, tirunelveli and throughout Tamil Nadu. Their main occupation is agriculture as they are called as merasthars (landlords) in areas around trichy. They also got elected as panchayath union head in villages. Most of the saiva pillais peoples work as teachers, lawyers and mainly government jobs in Tamil Nadu. Most of them don't do business.

In Kerala Saiva Pillai is being counted along with Nair and its sub-castes like Menon, Nambiar etc.

Kerala usage

File:Ettuveedan.jpg
Nair feudal chief from the Ettuveetil Pillamar

Pillai is a subdivision of Nair, a Kshatriya caste of Kerala belonging to the Nagavanshi order. Pillai was one of the highest titles of dignity held by the Hindu caste of the Nairs of Travancore. The title of Pillai was bestowed through a formal ceremony known as Thirumukom Pidikkuka i.e. holding the face of the King and included the payment of a fee known as Adiyara to the King. A person thus bestowed with this title now secured the honorific title of Pillai suffixed and the distinctive title of Kanakku (meaning accountant) prefixed to his name. However Kanakku and Pillai were never used together. Eg: either a person, Krishnan, would be referred to as Krishnan Pillai or Kanakku, followed by his maternal uncle's name, and Krishnan. The latter style was used in royal writs and communications. So important were the privileges granted by this title that as late as in 1814 a Brahmin, Sanku Annavi, sometime Dewan of Travancore obtained the same from the Maharajah. Prominent among the Pillais of medieval Kerala were the Ettuveetil Pillamar of Travancore.

Chempakaraman Pillai

A title superior to the ordinary Pillai was that of Chempakaraman Pillai, an innovation of Maharajah Marthanda Varma of Travancore. The individual whom it was the king's pleasure to honour was first taken in a procession by the nobles and ministers of the state, atop an elephant, around the main four streets of the city of Trivandrum and then received in the palace by the Prime Minister and seated next to him. The ceremony concluded by treating him to Paan Supari. A person thus honoured prefixed Kanakku, followed by Chempakaraman instead of the name of his maternal uncle, followed by his own name, e.g. Kanakku Chempakaraman Krishnan. [1]

Andhra Pradesh usage

The Gavara community uses Pilla as a title, whereas the Aaraama Dravidulu community uses Chellapilla. The same surname is used by many other castes like mala, kapu etc.

List of castes using the title

History of the title

"Pillai" was historically used throughout the medieval period as an honorific title bestowed on high functionaries serving in various royal courts in south India. Although traditionally bestowed on members of high status and aristocratic castes, the name became adopted as a surname by a broad layer of the Tamil peasantry during the 19th and 20th century. With the extension of tenancy rights, the growth of the market economy and with new opportunities for middle class employment, members of cultivator communities, starting with the Vellalar peasantry, began adopting the name as both a form of upward social mobility and as a means of differentiating themselves from the broader peasantry.[citation needed] Those adopting it for this reason included communities considered historically oppressed (see Maravar and Adi Dravida). The phenomenon was particularly notable amongst members of the Tamil diaspora in Sri Lanka, Singapore, Malaysia, South Africa, and Fiji, a diaspora created in part by the export of indentured agricultural labour at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th century.[citation needed]

Amongst some Tamil communities the name is also now used as a caste name or signifier, though without any real historical basis. The use of a similar surname in Kerala is of different historical origins.


Politicians and Revolutionaries

[[Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam {Thanthai Selva}]

Others


Matrimony Site

Matrimony Site and info for Pillai community is www.pillaimarriage.com[[1]] .


See also

References

  1. ^ Castes and Tribes of Southern India, Edgar Thurston, ISBN 9788120602885
  2. ^ www.nairs.in
  3. ^ G. K. Pillai new Commerce Secretary, The Hindu, Oct 01 2006
  4. ^ A. S. Pillai