HomeTravelTamil Nadu’s Thirumalapuram Reveals Secrets of Early Iron Age Society

Tamil Nadu’s Thirumalapuram Reveals Secrets of Early Iron Age Society

Tamil Nadu’s Thirumalapuram excavation reveals Iron Age burials, pottery, and gold artefacts, offering new insights into early southern Indian societies and their rich cultural evolution.

October 17, 2025 / 14:22 IST
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Inside Tamil Nadu’s Newest Archaeological Find: Thirumalapuram’s Iron Age Burials And What They Mean (Image: Archaeological Survey of India)
Inside Tamil Nadu’s Newest Archaeological Find: Thirumalapuram’s Iron Age Burials And What They Mean (Image: Archaeological Survey of India)

Deep in the Tenkasi district of Tamil Nadu, archaeologists have uncovered a fascinating Iron Age burial site at Thirumalapuram. This discovery is helping experts better understand the evolution of early southern Indian societies and their complex cultural practices.

Spread across nearly 35 acres, the site reveals a large burial complex surrounded by natural streams and fertile land, suggesting that ancient communities selected this location for both its geography and ritual significance. Excavations have unearthed several stone-slab chambers, urn burials, and pottery fragments, offering a rare glimpse into the funerary traditions of the period.

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Among the most striking finds is a rectangular chamber built using around 35 stone slabs and filled with cobblestones. Inside, archaeologists found urns containing human remains, pottery, and metal objects. This combination of stone enclosures and urn burials marks a unique transition phase in Iron Age mortuary customs seen in Tamil Nadu.

The pottery unearthed at the site ranges from black-and-red ware to polished red-slipped vessels, many decorated with white motifs. Some feature symbolic drawings of human figures, animals, and mountains, believed to represent aspects of faith, clan identity, or early mythology.