Kammanadu (or Kamma-nadu, also Kamma-rashtram) is a historical region in the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh. It consisted of parts of the present day Guntur district and Prakasam districts.
According to historian and geographer K. Iswara Dutt, Kammanadu consisted of the Narasaraopet, Sattenapalle, Bapatla mandal and Ongole mandal taluks, including the villages of the Addanki area. It was bounded by Srisailam in the west, Palnadu and Velanadu in the north, the Gundlakamma River in the south and the Bay of Bengal in the east. The erstwhile Vinukonda taluk and the Chirala mandal taluk are also often included, which are anyway indicated by the boundary at the Gundlakamma River.
Etymology
According to one theory, Kammanadu derived its name from the Gundlakamma River, which is a prominent river between the
Krishna River and
Pennar rivers in coastal Andhra.
[: " Kammanadu: This region should have acquired its name from the river Gundlakamma. The Kammanadu the area around Narasaraopet taluq of Guntur district of the east of Srikakulam in Krishna district..."] "Kamma" in this context means a stream or river.
[: "Here, Kamma indicates a stream. Cf: Gundlakamma: Prakasam District; Perakamma: a big Kamma, River Krishna"] According to another theory, Kammanadu was the region between Gundlakamma and
Pērakamma (the "big river", perhaps the Krishna river).
[: " Kammanadu: the region between the rivers Gundlakamma and Perakamma rivers in Guntur and Prakasam districts of Andhra Pradesh"] However, the
Tenali mandal and
Repalle mandal taluks of the Guntur district, closer to the Krishna river, are referred to as
Velanadu. They are not generally regarded as part of Kammanadu.
[ The modern town of Guntur is likely to have been at the edge of Kammanadu.][
]
History
Between the seventh and thirteenth centuries AD, Kammanadu was ruled by a branch of the Telugu Cholas with their capital at Konidena (which is now a small village).
Ethnicity
The people that emigrated from Kammanadu were referred to as belonging to a kammakula (kamma family) . Prominent among them were the general Vennaya-bhatta of the Chalukya dynasty emperor Vikramaditya V (r. 1008–1015), and generals Sarvadeva and Chamundaraya of Vikramaditya VI (r. 1076–1126). Terms such as kamma-brahmana, kamma-komati, kamma-sreshti and kamma-kapu are also attested in inscriptions as descriptions of people. The famous poet Adikavi Pampa (902–941), the author of Pampa Bharata in Kannada language, was referred to as a kamma-brahmana.
The prominent Kamma community of present-day is believed to be derived from the kamma-kapus, i.e., Kapus (agricultural families) of Kammanadu.
Inscriptions
Various historic inscriptions referring to the region have been found. A reference to Karmarashtram appears in the inscriptions of the Ikshvaku king Madhariputra Purushadatta (3rd century A.D) found at Bethavolu (Jaggayyapeta).[Burgess, J. 1886, Buddhist Stupas of Amaravathi and Jaggayyapeta, Madras Presidency, Archaeological Survey of India, p. 110.] Later ones include the inscription of the Pallava king Kumara Vishnu II, son of Buddha Varma found in the village of Chendaluru, and one of the Eastern Chalukya king Mangi Yuvaraja (627-696 AD) written in Sanskrit.
In the inscriptions ascribed to period from the 3rd to the 11th century AD, the words Kammarashtram, Kammaratham, Kammakaratham, Karmarashtram, Karmakaratham, Karmakarashtram and Kammakarashtram were used interchangeably. The subsequent inscriptions of Telugu Chodas and mentioned Kammanadu; for example, the Konidena inscription of Tribhuvana Malla from 1146.
Some of the important inscriptions relating to Kammanadu are:
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Epigraphica Indica, Vol VIII, pp. 233–236 (Chandaluru copper plate inscription of Kumara Vishnu)
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Epigraphica Indica, Vol XV, pp. 249–252 (Ongole copper plate inscription of Pallava king Vijaya Skandavarma)
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Epigraphica Indica, Vol XXIV, pp. 137–143 (Chura inscription of Vishnugopa)
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Epigraphica Indica, Vol XVIII, p. 250 (Kopparapu copper plate inscription of Pulakesi II, 7th century CE)
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Epigraphica Indica, Vol XVIII, p. 27 (Aluru inscription of Chalukya king Vikramaditya V, 1011 CE).
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South Indian Inscriptions, Volume 6, Inscriptions 124, 128, 129, 132, 139, 147, and 179.