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India | Archaeology | Volume 14 Issue 8, August 2025 | Pages: 408 - 410
Elephant Walk - A Rare Practice in Royal Land Donations in Medieval South India
Abstract: This study presents a captivating glimpse into the nuanced ceremonial practices of land donations during early and medieval South India, particularly highlighting the rarely discussed custom of pitagai natantu-a symbolic act involving a female elephant walking the perimeters of land to demarcate royal grants. It is evident that the ritual served not merely as a bureaucratic mechanism but as a grand gesture of imperial authority, sanctity, and spectacle, blending religious devotion with political symbolism. Through a detailed examination of Pallava and Chola copper plate inscriptions, the author skillfully uncovers a shift in donation protocols-from simple offerings to elaborate, orchestrated events involving temple elephants, village heads, and revenue officials. The act of the elephant tracing boundaries appears both literal and metaphorical, hinting at the ruler's desire to display dominion while evoking sacred legitimacy. This suggests that such rituals, though sparsely mentioned, were not isolated practices but reflections of a broader ideological framework-where even animals were imbued with spiritual and administrative significance. Taking this further, the recurring yet uneven presence of the ritual across dynasties raises intriguing questions about its political utility, religious symbolism, and eventual decline. The inquiry doesn't just chronicle history-it opens a door for deeper interdisciplinary studies linking epigraphy, anthropology, and religious customs. In sum, the article provides a thoughtful and engaging exploration of a unique, elephant-led ritual that stands as a marker of both cultural continuity and change in South Indian polity.
Keywords: land donation, temple elephant, pitagai natantu, South Indian epigraphy, Brahmadeya rituals
How to Cite?: Dr. S. Chandnibi, "Elephant Walk - A Rare Practice in Royal Land Donations in Medieval South India", Volume 14 Issue 8, August 2025, International Journal of Science and Research (IJSR), Pages: 408-410, https://www.ijsr.net/getabstract.php?paperid=SR25802190428, DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.21275/SR25802190428