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Tirukkuṛaḷ

Thirukkural
திருக்குறள்
Thiruvalluvar Statue at Kanyakumari 02.jpg
Author Thiruvalluvar
Original title Muppaal
Working title Thirukkural
Country India
Language Old Tamil
Series Patiṉeṇkīḻkaṇakku
Subject Secular ethics
Genre Poetry
Published Palm-leaf manuscript of the Tamil Sangam era (possibly between 4th and 1st centuries BCE)
Publication date
1812 (first known printed edition)
Published in English
1840

The Tirukkural' or Thirukkural (Tamil Name: திருக்குறள்), or shortly the Kural literature]] consisting of 1330 couplets or kurals, dealing with the everyday virtues of an individual. Considered one of the greatest works ever written on ethics and morality, chiefly secular ethics, it is known for its universality and non-denominational nature. It was authored by Valluvar, also known as Thiruvalluvar.

Considered as chef d'oeuvre of both Indian and world literature, the Tirukkural is one of the most important works in the Tamil language. This is reflected in some of the other names by which the text is given by, such as Tamiḻ maṟai (Tamil veda), Poyyāmoḻi (words that never fail), and Deyva (Deiva) nūl (divine text). Translated into at least 82 languages (as of 2014), Tirukkural is one of the most widely translated non-religious works in the world. The work is dated to sometime between the third and first centuries BCE and is considered to precede Silappatikaram (1st century CE) and Manimekalai (between 1st and 5th centuries CE), since they both acknowledge the Kural text.

The Tirukkural is structured into 133 chapters, each containing 10 couplets (or kurals), for a total of 1330 couplets. The 133 chapters are grouped into three sections:.

Each kural or couplet contains exactly seven words, known as cirs, with four cirs on the first line and three on the second. A cir is a single or a combination of more than one Tamil word. For example, Thirukkural is a cir formed by combining the two words thiru and kuṛaḷ. The section Aram contains 380 verses, Porul has 700 and Inbam has 250.

The overall organisation of the Kural text is based on seven ideals prescribed for a commoner besides observations of love.

"The book without a name by an author without a name."

There are claims and counter claims as to the authorship of the book and to the exact number of couplets written by Thiruvalluvar. The first instance of the author's name mentioned as Thiruvalluvar is found to be several centuries later in a song of praise called the Garland of Thiruvalluvar in Thiruvalluva Malai. Just as the book remained unnamed at the time of its presentation at the court of the ruler, the author too did not name himself in the writing of the book. Over the centuries that followed, people started calling the work "Tirukkural" and its author as "Thiruvalluvar". Monsieur Ariel, who translated the Krual text into French, thus called it "the book without a name by an author without a name."


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