There are several references to the calendar in early
Tamil literature.
Nakkeerar, the
Sangam period author of the
Neṭunalvāṭai, wrote in the third century CE that the Sun travels each year from
Mesha/
Chittirai in mid-April through 11 successive signs of the zodiac. The same is referenced to by Kūdalūr Kiḻar in
Puṟanāṉūṟu.
Tolkappiyam, the oldest surviving Tamil grammar text, divides the year into six seasons and Chittirai marks the start of the "ilavenil" (summer) season. The fifth century CE treatise of
Cilappatikaram mentions the 12
rāśis (zodiac signs) that correspond to the Tamil months. The sixth century epic
Manimekalai alludes to this to the Hindu solar calendar. Inscriptional evidences from
Pagan in Myanmar from the 11th century CE and in
Sukhothai in Thailand from the 14th century CE point to South Indian courtiers being tasked with defining the traditional calendar that followed a similar cycle. == Description ==