V. V. S. Aiyar
Varahaneri Venkatesa Subramaniam Aiyar
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Portrait of V. V. S. Aiyar
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Born
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Died
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Cause of death
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Drowned
in Papanasam Falls under mysterious circumstances
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Nationality
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Other names
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V.
V. S. Aiyar
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Education
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Known for
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Religion
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Varahaneri Venkatesa Subramaniam
Aiyar
(April 2, 1881 – June 3, 1925), also known as V.V.S. Aiyar, was an Indian revolutionary from Tamil Nadu who
fought against the British
occupation of India. His contemporaries include Subramanya
Bharathi and V.O.
Chidambaram Pillai, who subscribed to the militant form of resistance against
the British. He went into exile in Pondicherry, then
under French rule,
when his militant activities attracted a warrant for his arrest from the
British colonial government.
V.V.S. Aiyar was also a Tamil writer
and is considered as the father of modern Tamil short story. He also translated
the Ramavatharam of Kambar and Tirukkural into
English. V.V.S Aiyar is mentor of Vanchinathan.
Early
life
Venkatesa Subramaniam Aiyar was born on April 2, 1881 in a
middle class Brahmin family in
the suburb of Varahaneri in Tiruchi. After
his early education,he studied in St. Joseph's College and took his B.A in
History, Politics, and Latin; he studied for the Law profession and passed the
Pleader (junior lawyer) examination from the Madras University in 1902. He then
practised as the pleader in the District courts of Tiruchi. Aiyar then moved to
Rangoon in 1906
and started practising as a junior in the Chambers of an English Barrister.
From Rangoon, he left for London in 1907 and enrolled in Lincoln's Inn aiming to
becoming a Barrister at Law. While in
London, V.V.S. Aiyar came into contact with Vinayak
Damodar Savarkar, an Indian revolutionary, at the India House. Under
Savarkar's influence Aiyar began to take an active role in the militant
struggle for Indian
independence.
Friends
Venkatesa Subramaniam Aiyar was a close friend of Shuddhananda
Bharati, he start with him the Bharadwaja Ashram at Shermadevi; the
ashram was so called because his Gotra was Bharadwaja.
Political
activities
Aiyar's militant attitude prompted the British
Government in 1910 to issue a warrant for his arrest for his alleged
involvement in an anarchist conspiracy in London and Paris. Aiyar resigned from
the Lincoln's Inn and escaped to Paris. Although he wished to remain in
Paris as a political exile, he had to return to India. Aiyar landed in Pondicherry on 4
December 4 1910 disguised as a muslim to escape arrest and remained there
as exile. Aiyar remained in Pondicherry for over ten years. While in
Pondicherry, Aiyar met with fellow revolutionaries Subramanya
Bharathi and Aurobindo. In
Pondicherry, Aiyar was involved in the plot to assassinate Mr. Ashe, the
Collector of Tirunelveli. One of
his students, Vanchinathan
assassinated General Ashe. Thus more trouble arose for V.V.S. Aiyar and his
companion Subramanya Bharathi.
On 22 September 1914 the German cruiser SMS Emden entered
the Madras harbour
and bombed the city. The British colonial government blamed this on the
activities of the exiles in Pondicherry, and urged the French Governor to
deport V.V.S. Aiyar and his companions to Africa. The French police brought
several charges against the revolutionaries, but failed to convict them. During
this period Aiyar translated the Tirukkural into
English. He later revealed that he wanted to leave a legacy behind if he were
forced to leave the country.
Aiyar returned to Madras after World War I and
worked as the editor of the newspaper Desabhaktan (Patriot). He
was arrested in 1921 on sedition charges
and spent nine months in prison. While in prison Aiyar wrote the book A
Study of Kamba Ramayana.
Death
V.V.S. Aiyar drowned in the Papanasam Falls, while he tried
to save his dawning daughter Subhadra, on 3 June 1925.
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