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Abraham Pandithar
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Abraham Pandithar : ウィキペディア英語版
Abraham Pandithar
Rao Sahib Abraham Pandithar ((タミル語:ஆபிரகாம் பண்டிதர்), August 2, 1859 – August 31, 1919) was a Tamil musicologist and a traditional medicine practitioner from Madras Presidency, British India.
==Biography==
Abraham Pandithar was born in Sambavar Vadakarai in Tirunelveli district to Muthusamy Pandithar and Annammal of the Pandithar/Maruthuvar Family. Knowns also as Pandit Kulam. He studied at the CVES Normal Teachers Training School at Dindigal and in 1876, became a teacher in the same college. He belonged to a family of doctors and became interested in Siddha medicine. As the Pandithar or Maruthuvars are the descendants of Indian traditional Medicinal practitioners.
In 1879, he went to Suruli hills to research herbs growing there. There he met the Siddhar Karunandhar and became his student. After completing his studies he went to Tanjore and worked as a Tamil teacher in Lady Napier Girls School. His wife Gnanavadivu Ponnammal was the headmistress in the same school. In 1890, he left his teaching job to do research on medicine full-time. He started a farm outside Tanjore for growing medicinal plants. He named it Karanandhapuram after his teacher. It was called as Pandithar thottam (Pandithar's farm) by the locals. He also started a clinic - the Karunanidhi Medical Hall at his residence in Tanjore. In 1909, the colonial government awarded him the "Rao Sahib" title. In 1911, Gnanavadivu died and Pandithar married Bhagyammal.〔
The publication of ''Silapathikaram'' by U. V. Swaminatha Iyer in 1892, made Pandithar interested in Tamil music and he started studying it. He learnt traditional music from Sadayandi Bhattar and western classical music from Tanjore A. G. Pichaimuthu pillai. He did extensive research on the origins and form of Tamil music. He established the ''Sangeetha Vidhyalaya Mahajana Sangam'' - a music association and organised six music conferences during 1912–1914. In 1917, He published his research into Tamil music as ''Karunamirdha Sagaram'', a 1346 page book, that remains a seminal work in the field till today. He also published ''Karunamirdha Sagara Thirattu'' - a collection of Tamil practice songs (musicians of that period trained using Telugu songs). He also translated several ''Keerthanais'' into Tamil. He attended the All India Music Conference held at Baroda in 1916 and presented his research there.
Pandithar died in 1919. His family continued his research - His son Varaguna Pandiyan Pandithar wrote the Tamil musical research work Paanarkaivazhi and his daughter Maragathavalli Duraipandian Pandithar completed part 2 of ''Karunamirdha Sagaram''. His grandson D. A. Thanapandian Pandithar is also a musician and musicologist.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.tamilvu.org/courses/degree/d051/d0513/html/d0513661.htm )〕 In 2008, the Government of Tamil Nadu nationalised his works.
http://www.indian-heritage.org/music/garlanda.htm

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