Content deleted Content added
No edit summary Tags: Reverted Visual edit Mobile edit Mobile web edit |
No edit summary Tags: Reverted Visual edit Mobile edit Mobile web edit |
||
Line 29:
The '''Tamil script''' (<big>{{lang|ta|தமிழ் அரிச்சுவடி}}</big> {{transliteration|ta|ISO|Tamiḻ ariccuvaṭi}} {{IPA-ta|tamiɻ ˈaɾitːɕuʋaɽi|}}) is an [[abugida]] script that is used by [[Tamils]] and [[Tamil language|Tamil]] speakers in [[India]], [[Sri Lanka]], [[Malaysia]], [[Singapore]], [[Indonesia]] and elsewhere to write the [[Tamil language]].<ref>{{Citation | title=The Unicode 5.0 Standard | edition=5 | publisher=Addison-Wesley | place=Upper Saddle River, NJ | year=2006 | isbn=0-321-48091-0 | last=Allen | first=Julie }} at p. 324</ref> It is one of the [[official scripts of the Indian Republic]]. Certain minority languages such as [[Saurashtra language|Saurashtra]], [[Badaga language|Badaga]], [[Irula language|Irula]] and [[Paniya language|Paniya]] are also written in the Tamil script.
[[Keezhadi excavation site|According to the Tamil Nadu Archaeology Department (TNAD), the cultural deposits found during excavations at Keeladi in Tamil Nadu's Sivaganga district date back to between the 6th century BCE and 1st century CE, or 2,600 years ago. This is about 300 years earlier than the third century BCE that was previously believed. In 2018, six carbon samples were collected from the fourth season of excavations and sent to Beta Analytic Lab in Miami, Florida for Accelerator Mass Spectrometry (AMS) dating. One sample collected at a depth of 353 cm dated back to 580 BCE. The excavations at Keeladi have revealed artifacts that indicate the existence of an urban civilization in the Sangam age on the banks of the Vaigai River. The findings include evidence of weaving, dyeing, and glass bead industries, as well as gold ornaments, copper articles, and ivory combs. Other artifacts include terracotta and ivory dice, gamesmen, and evidence of hopscotch, which suggest the Keeladi people enjoyed hobbies like games. Some of the symbols found in Keeladi's pot sherds also resemble signs from the Indus Valley, which suggests the site may be part of the Vaigai Valley
[[Tamil inscriptions|Noting that the oldest Tamil-Brahmi inscriptions found in Theni and Madurai districts dated back to 500 BCE, while the oldest Sanskrit inscription found in Rajasthan dated back to just 300 CE, Madurai MP and writer Su Venkatesan said the Tamil language is way older than Sanskrit.]]
|