Kallidaikurichi Aiyah Nilakanta Sastri () (b.
August 12,
1892- d.
June 15,
1975) was an
Indian
historian and
Dravidologist who is generally regarded as the greatest and most prolific among professional historians of
South India.
Career
Nilakanta Sastri was born in a poor
Brahmin family in
Kallidaikurichi near
Tirunelveli, on
August 12,
1892. He completed his FA in M.D.T Hindu College, Tirunelveli and his college education in
Madras Christian College.
Sastri obtained his
MA by coming first in the
Madras Presidency. He joined the Hindu College as lecturer in 1913 where he taught till 1918.
He served as Professor of History,
Banaras Hindu University from 1918 to 1920.
After that he became the Principal of the (then) newly started Arts College of
Annamalai University.
In 1929, he was employed as Professor of History at National College,
Trichy. The same year, he succeeded
Sakkottai Krishnaswamy Aiyangar as the
Professor of
History and
Archaeology at the
Madras University, a post he held till 1946.
He was the Professor of
Indology (Currently renamed as Department of History and Archaeology) at the
University of Mysore from 1952 to 1955.
. He was appointed as the
ex-officio Director of Archaeology for the
Mysore State in 1954. He was also the President of the All-India Oriental Conference in the early 1950s.
From 1957 to 1972, he served with the
UNESCO's Institute of Traditional Cultures of South East Asia, as the Director of the institute.
In 1957, he was awarded the
Padma Bhushan, India's third highest civilian honour. In the summer of 1959, he was a visiting professor at the
University of Chicago where he delivered a series of lectures on South Indian History .
Nilakanta Sastri died in 1975.
Views
Eminent
Historian Professor
R.S. Sharma writes of him as:
"K.A. Nilakanta Sastri, the great historian from South India, was not a revivalist. His "History of South India" is a very dependable book." Tamil historian
A R Venkatachalapathy views him as "
arguably the most distinguished historian of twentieth-century Tamil Nadu".
Criticism
In 1915, a
Bengali historian
Jadunath Sarkar, wrote an essay
Confessions of a History Teacher in the
Modern Review regretting the lack of acclaimed historical works in
vernacular languages and stressed that efforts should be made to write history books and teach history in vernacular languages.
Nilakanta Sastri, who was then a young teacher in Thirunelveli, wrote a letter to the newspaper opposing Sarkar's suggestion by saying that "English serves me better as a medium of expression than Tamil - I mean in handling historical subjects. Perhaps the vernacular is not so well off in this part of the country as it should be".
Sastri's comments evoked sharp criticism from the nationalist poet
Subramanya Bharathi.
According to Venkatachalapathy, Sastri's Tamil proficiency was not good and he relied on Tamil scholar
S. Vaiyapuri Pillai for understanding Tamil literary works. Thus he was not able to analyze the changing meaning of words over time. Venkatachalapathy says,
the professional historiography in Tamil Nadu practiced during K. A. Nilakanta Sastri's period there was rarely any interrogation of sources (except in terms of authenticity and chronologyBibliography
In all, Nilakanta Sastri authored 25 historical works mostly on the history of South India.