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queen Parukutty Nethyar navrangindia.blogspot.com |
Peculiar circumstances forced Maharajah Rama Varma (popularly known as Madrassil Theepetta Thampuran), to ascend the throne and ironically, later unsavory political situation left him with no choice except to step down as a ruler. His consort Parukutty Nethyar Amma, a young and strong-willed woman, assisted him from 1914 to 1932. She married the ruler, then heir apparent to the throne when she was pretty young, barely 14 years of age. On her fraternal side her family had the rare traditional honor of anointing the kings of Palakkad. Blessed by the deity Devi at the Chottanikkara Temple, the Nathyar Amma had the guts and wisdom to uphold the name of the ruling class putting behind the sad incidence of the abdication of the ruler's predecessor.
As per customs of the royal family, the seat of Queen of Kochi (Penvazhithampuran) was seen as Royal capital, as Kochi royal family had matrilineal traditions. It meant that the queen was regarded as sovereign head of the state under whose authority the King ruled. Since 1755, the Queen and her retinue had lived in Tripunithura, thereby making the city as the
official capital. Upon taking over the administration, queen Parukkty Amma gave much attention to the finances of the state that were at the lowest ebb. She improved the efficiency of her workers by way of increasing their salaries and developed better interaction with them. She trimmed the state's unwanted expenses by scrapping certain useless projects and departments. This way she vastly improved the state revenue.
At one point of her reign, she realized that the British who were known more known for their dishonesty and crafty nature than integrity and honesty when dealing affairs of princely states would one day savor her land and garb the vast revenue using some pretext. No greater instance, perhaps of her sagacity and administrative acumen could be furnished than her unerring choice of joining hands with the Indian nationalists who were demanding freedom from the foreign rule. It was a bold diplomatic move made by the Nathyar Amma that had put her on a strong pedestal. If there were a threat from the British Bobs to seize the state, the nationalists from across India would be right behind her defending her land and the people. It would have been a picky situation for the British had they made a wrong move.
Her visibility as a popular public figure, her close rapport with great leaders like Gandhiji, et al and her keen interest in Khadi cloth instead of English-made clothes, etc., were all being watched by the British and recorded in the intelligence Reports ( available at the National Archives of India). Now, they became more irksome than ever before. Her Royal Hill Palace of Kochi became the hub of nationalist activity and weaving of Khadi.
The abdication of the ruler by the British government with a falsified certificate by a London doctor to prove him insane an senile due to old age was looked upon as an attempt to intimidate Parukutty Amma or the "Consort" as she was referred to by the British and her closer association with freedom fighters. Slowly. she became a force to reckon with in nationalist circles.
The Nethyar Amma encouraged her son to join the freedom movement and she personally deputed him to accompany Gandhiji wherever he was on tour in the Cochin state. Besides, her influential relations enthusiastically entertained in their house whenever great national leaders visited Cochin. Her visible and open tirade against the British government proved to be a big road block for British interests in India.
Upon the death of the Maharajah in 1932, the Nethyar Amma took a break from politics and lived in a palace she had constructed for herself in her home town Trichur close her ancestral house, Padinjare Shrambhi. After her tour abroad with her grandson, she returned to India and divided her time between Trichur and Coonoor. here at Coonoor, a hill station (now in Tamil Nadu) she had two tea estates and a tea factory. being a humane person, a visionary and able administrator the Nethyar Amma stands apart among the women royal members of India. She has made a permanent niche in the history of Cochin kingdom and India's freedom struggle.
Her state was a 17-gun salute protocol and Parukutty Nethyar Amma was bestowed with the Kaiser-i-Hind medal by King George V in 1919 for tireless public work.
https://www.geni.com/people/Parukutty-Nethyar-Amma-Vadakke-Kurupath/6000000005617117141
https://navrangindia.blogspot.com/2015/04/parukutty-nethyar-amma-maveric-consort.html
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingdom_of_Cochin
http://www.geni.com/people/Parukutty-Nethyar-Amma-Vadakke-Kurupat
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Rama Varma XV- His Abdicated Highness. en.wikipedia.org |
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Kochi state zum.de/whkmla |
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Cochin kingdom, en.wikipedia.org |
Her visibility as a popular public figure, her close rapport with great leaders like Gandhiji, et al and her keen interest in Khadi cloth instead of English-made clothes, etc., were all being watched by the British and recorded in the intelligence Reports ( available at the National Archives of India). Now, they became more irksome than ever before. Her Royal Hill Palace of Kochi became the hub of nationalist activity and weaving of Khadi.
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Statue of Rama Varma XV at Subhash Park Ernakulam,en.wikipedia.org |
The abdication of the ruler by the British government with a falsified certificate by a London doctor to prove him insane an senile due to old age was looked upon as an attempt to intimidate Parukutty Amma or the "Consort" as she was referred to by the British and her closer association with freedom fighters. Slowly. she became a force to reckon with in nationalist circles.
The Nethyar Amma encouraged her son to join the freedom movement and she personally deputed him to accompany Gandhiji wherever he was on tour in the Cochin state. Besides, her influential relations enthusiastically entertained in their house whenever great national leaders visited Cochin. Her visible and open tirade against the British government proved to be a big road block for British interests in India.
Upon the death of the Maharajah in 1932, the Nethyar Amma took a break from politics and lived in a palace she had constructed for herself in her home town Trichur close her ancestral house, Padinjare Shrambhi. After her tour abroad with her grandson, she returned to India and divided her time between Trichur and Coonoor. here at Coonoor, a hill station (now in Tamil Nadu) she had two tea estates and a tea factory. being a humane person, a visionary and able administrator the Nethyar Amma stands apart among the women royal members of India. She has made a permanent niche in the history of Cochin kingdom and India's freedom struggle.
Her state was a 17-gun salute protocol and Parukutty Nethyar Amma was bestowed with the Kaiser-i-Hind medal by King George V in 1919 for tireless public work.
https://www.geni.com/people/Parukutty-Nethyar-Amma-Vadakke-Kurupath/6000000005617117141
https://navrangindia.blogspot.com/2015/04/parukutty-nethyar-amma-maveric-consort.html
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingdom_of_Cochin
http://www.geni.com/people/Parukutty-Nethyar-Amma-Vadakke-Kurupat