The Chettiars trace their origins to their huge success as maritime traders in salt, silk, timber, spices and gold on the shipping routes of the Pandya Empire in the 11th and 12th centuries. Their thriving businesses took them to Ceylon, Burma, Malaysia, Indonesia, Singapore and Vietnam their enterprise, ingenuity and trustworthiness won them privileges both from their ancient rulers and the colonial ones, the British. They originally settled around the ancient ports of Kaveripoompattinam and Poompuhar in coastal Tamil Nadu, tying the teak they lavished on their mansions behind their ships, tempering the wood with a voyage-long soak in seawater. Driven inland by two tsunamis, they came to call 95 villages (now down to 74) scattered about Pudukkottai and Sivaganga as Chettinad, &lsquothe land of the Chettiars&rsquo. They also came to be known as the nagarathaars (&lsquosophisticated townspeople&rsquo literate, cultured, well-travelled and philanthropic), who brought Western influences and knowledge to these remote villages &mdash Italian marble, Belgian mirrors, Murano glass and French gargoyles decorate some of the more opulent naattukottais (&lsquoland-fortresses&rsquo, their entrances set upon the street but the long and high walls giving the distinct impression of fortification). WWII and the political diktats emerging from it brought a crashing end to this golden age, wiping out fortunes overnight, especially in Burma, where powerful Chettiar-run banks were foreclosed and all foreign nationals asked to go home, forcing many families to sell all their assets for a song. The Chettiars are still a powerful business community in Tamil Nadu, no doubt, but their numbers have dwindled, their villages and homes standing lonesome testimony to what once was.