Pazhassi Raja
Kerala Varma Pazhassi Raja (3 January 1753 – 30 November 1805), also known as the Cotiote Raja or Pychy Raja, was a prince and warrior from the western branch of the Kottayam royal family in the Malabar region of present-day Kerala, who asserted de facto control over his territories and led a protracted guerrilla resistance against the British East India Company's administrative and fiscal impositions.[1][2] His campaigns, spanning two phases from 1793 to 1797 and 1800 to 1805 and collectively termed the Cotiote War, were precipitated by British revenue collection policies that undermined local sovereignty and by the Company's seizure of Wayanad following the Treaty of Srirangapatna after Tipu Sultan's defeat.[3][4] Pazhassi Raja mobilized tribal allies, exploited the dense forests and hills of Wayanad for ambushes, and inflicted tactical defeats on British forces, notably repelling an expedition led by Arthur Wellesley in 1800, marking one of the earliest organized indigenous oppositions to British expansion in southern India prior to the 1857 revolt.[1][2] Betrayed by a local informant, he was surrounded and killed in combat near Pulpally on 30 November 1805, ending the uprising but cementing his legacy as a symbol of defiance against colonial overreach.[1][2]Early Life and Kingdom
Birth, Family, and Lineage
![Veera Kerala Varma Pazhassi Raja][float-right] Kerala Varma, later known as Pazhassi Raja, was born in 1753 into the Kottayam royal family, which ruled territories in northern Malabar, present-day Kerala.[5][6] He belonged to the Padinjare Kovilakam, the western branch of the Purannattukara Swarupam, the primary royal lineage governing the Kottayam kingdom from its headquarters at Pazhassi near Mattannur.[7][8][2] This branch derived its name and prominence from the village of Pazhassi, where family members often resided, leading to the titular designation "Pazhassi Raja" for Kerala Varma.[5][9] The Kottayam royal family identified as Brahma-Kshatriyas of lunar descent, claiming origins linked to ancient dynasties such as the Cholas, though historical records provide no definitive evidence for these assertions.[10][11] Kerala Varma had an elder brother, Ravi Varma, who was occasionally acknowledged as the nominal head of the family during periods of external pressure.[12] Specific details on parents remain sparsely documented in available historical accounts, with the focus in records centering on the collective authority exercised by branches of the lineage amid regional conflicts.[2]Rule Over Kottayam-Malabar Territories
Kerala Varma Pazhassi Raja, born on January 3, 1753, assumed de facto rulership of the Kottayam-Malabar territories in 1774 following the flight of senior royal family members to Travancore during Hyder Ali's Mysore invasions, which began impacting the region from 1766 onward. Tasked by the nominal Raja with protecting the kingdom, he administered from the family headquarters at Pazhassi, ensuring continuity of local governance amid repeated external incursions. His rule extended until his death in 1805, during which he prioritized regional defense and autonomy.[2][1] The Kottayam kingdom, alternatively termed Cotiote, covered northern Malabar areas including the Tellicherry taluk, Kurumbranad, Wayanad, and extensions to Gudalur in present-day Tamil Nadu. Governance adhered to the traditional Malabar structure, segmented into three kovilakams representing the eastern (Kizhakke), western (Patinjare), and southern (Thekke) branches of the Kottayam lineage. Authority was decentralized through naduvazhis as district heads, desavazhis as sub-rulers, and mukhyastans as administrative officials, supporting a feudal hierarchy reliant on martial Nair clans for enforcement and loyalty.[2] The economy centered on agrarian production, with janmis holding proprietary land rights, kanamkars or kanomdars managing tenurial leases with hereditary claims, and verumpattadars as lower-tier cultivators. Pazhassi Raja championed tenant protections against exploitative revenue demands, refusing tribute payments to Mysore sultans post-1773 conquests to preserve local resources and sovereignty. This stance cultivated widespread support among peasants and warriors, enabling effective mobilization against invaders. By the 1790s, British recognition of his authority as Kottayam's head underscored his established control, though it precipitated conflicts over fiscal impositions.[2][1]