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Kingdom ruled by the Malla kings of Bishnupur, in present-day West Bengal, India From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mallabhum (The country originally known as Mallabhoom or Mallabani[3] Bengali: মল্লভূম or Bishnupur kingdom[4]) was the kingdom ruled by the Malla kings of Bishnupur, primarily in the present Bankura district in Indian state of West Bengal.
Mallabhum kingdom | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
694–1947 | |||||||||
Capital | Laugram Pradyumnapur Bishnupur | ||||||||
Common languages | Bengali Sanskrit[1][2] | ||||||||
Religion | Hinduism | ||||||||
Government | Monarchy | ||||||||
Maharaja | |||||||||
• 694–710 CE | Adi Malla | ||||||||
• 1930–1983 CE | Kalipada Singha Thakur | ||||||||
Historical era | Classical India Medieval India Early Modern Period | ||||||||
• Established | 694 | ||||||||
• Disestablished | 29 December 1947 | ||||||||
| |||||||||
Today part of | West Bengal |
Mallabhum was a territory which included Bankura, a part of Burdwan, Birbhum, Santhal Parganas, Midnapur and also a part of Purulia. The Malla Rajas ruled over the vast territory in the south-western part of present West Bengal and a part of southeastern Jharkhand.[5]
From around 7th century CE until the advent of British rule, the history of Bankura district is identical with the rise and fall of the Hindu Rajas of Bishnupur.[citation needed]
According to Bhattacharjee, Tarun Dev (1982) During the Malla period, society was primarily organized around the village. The tax collectors were known as Gumasta, with their assistants called Aat Pahari or Paik. The village headman, responsible for overseeing the community, was referred to as the Mukhiya or Mandal, and was considered the protector of the village. The Malla kings maintained several service groups, and due to a shortage of money, they often compensated these groups with land rather than salaries. This land was of two types: Panchaki jamin, which had a small tax, and Bepanchaki jamin, which was exempt from tax. The lands were named based on the services provided, such as.[6]
1. Senapati Mahal: Land for the head of the soldiers.
2. Mahalbera Mahal: Land for the sentries.
3. Chharidar Mahal: Land for the bodyguards.[6]
According to LSS O’Malley:
Large portions of the old estate of Bishnupur were under jungle and the timber, firewood, honey, wax, etc., which they yielded, formed a valuable source of revenue. The right of collecting these jungle products was farmed out by the Raja, and the revenue he obtained thereby was called the Jungle Mahal, and had nothing to do with arable land.[7]
The Bishnupur Raj maintained a distinct Jungle Mahal, which consisted solely of forested areas, where forest resources were regularly harvested and sold.[7]
The ghatwals were a ‘quasi military body of men employed by the Rajas of Bishnupur’ who were posted as guards at various strategic Ghats or passes in hills and uplands. They also did police duties and acted as peacekeepers. Rent-free lands given to the ghatwals by the Rajas from time to time came to be known as Ghatwali lands. Though at the time of the Permanent Settlement (between 1791 and 1802) the area of lands held by ghatwals was not known later surveys of 1854-56 and 1879-1887 estimated the area of the ghatwali land in the Bishnupur Estate to be about 170,000 acres[7]
In the late 16th century, Bir Hambir, the ruler of Bishnupur, allied with Mughal general Man Singh during Akbar's campaign against Qutlu Khan Lohani, the Afghan ruler of North Orissa. Despite being ignored by Jagat Singh, Man Singh's son, Bir Hambir bravely rescued him from an Afghan ambush, solidifying his alliance with the Mughals. This act highlighted Bir Hambir's courage, strategic brilliance, and enduring legacy as a wise leader.[8][9]
Around 1770-71, as the "great famine" swept through the region, the South Western Highlands of Bengal had transformed into a land of the dead. According to W.W. Hunter, the situation was summed up in his famous Annals of Rural Bengal:
“Before the end of 1770, one-third of the population was officially calculated to have disappeared; in June the deaths were returned as ‘six is to sixteen of the whole inhabitants’, and it was estimated that ‘one half of cultivators and payers of revenue will perish with hunger.’…in 1771, it was discovered that the remnant of the population would not suffice to till the land”.
The greatest threat to the Company was depopulation, which, despite the famine, led them to continually pressure the local rulers—the now-weakened Rajas of Bishnupur (referred to as Bishenpore by Hunter).[7] In Bishnupur, hundreds of villages were completely abandoned, and even in the larger towns, fewer than one-fourth of the houses remained occupied. Purnia and Bishnupur were the two districts in Bengal that suffered the most from the famine.[10] In 1772, Warren Hastings estimated that by that time, one-third of the population had perished.[7]
Between 1788 and 1809, the Chuars and Paiks of the Bishnupur and Midnapore parganas revolted against the British East India Company under the leadership of Madhav Singha Dev.[11][12]
Malla's started their own calendar that is Malla era (Mallabda). It is told that Malla era started from Indra Dwadasi day in the year 102 Bengali calendar of the month Bhadro (August- September).[13]
Sl. No. | Name of the king[14] | Gregorian calendar | Bengali calendar | Malla calendar | Reign (year) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Adi Malla | 694 | 102 | 1 | 16 |
2 | Jay Malla | 710 | 117 | 16 | 10 |
3 | Benu Malla | 720 | 127 | 26 | 13 |
4 | Kinu Malla | 733 | 140 | 39 | 9 |
5 | Indra Malla | 742 | 149 | 48 | 15 |
6 | Kanu Malla | 757 | 164 | 63 | 7 |
7 | Dha Malla (Jhau) | 764 | 171 | 70 | 11 |
8 | Shur Malla | 775 | 182 | 81 | 20 |
9 | Kanak Malla | 795 | 202 | 101 | 12 |
10 | Kandarpa Malla | 807 | 214 | 113 | 21 |
11 | Sanatan Malla | 828 | 235 | 134 | 13 |
12 | Kharga Malla | 841 | 248 | 147 | 21 |
13 | Durjan Malla (Durjay) | 862 | 269 | 168 | 44 |
14 | Yadav Malla | 906 | 313 | 212 | 13 |
15 | Jagannath Malla | 919 | 326 | 225 | 12 |
16 | Birat Malla | 931 | 338 | 237 | 15 |
17 | Mahadev Malla | 946 | 353 | 252 | 31 |
18 | Durgadas Malla | 977 | 384 | 283 | 17 |
19 | Jagat Malla | 994 | 401 | 300 | 13 |
20 | Ananta Malla | 1007 | 414 | 313 | 8 |
21 | Rup Malla | 1015 | 422 | 321 | 14 |
22 | Sundar Malla | 1029 | 436 | 335 | 24 |
23 | Kumud Malla | 1053 | 460 | 359 | 21 |
24 | Krishna Malla | 1074 | 481 | 380 | 10 |
25 | Rup Malla II (Jhap) | 1084 | 491 | 390 | 13 |
26 | Prakash Malla | 1097 | 504 | 403 | 5 |
27 | Pratap Malla | 1102 | 509 | 408 | 11 |
28 | Sindur Malla | 1113 | 520 | 419 | 16 |
29 | Sukhomoy Malla (Shuk) | 1129 | 536 | 435 | 13 |
30 | Banamali Malla | 1142 | 549 | 448 | 14 |
31 | Yadu/Jadu Malla | 1156 | 563 | 462 | 11 |
32 | Jiban Malla | 1167 | 574 | 473 | 13 |
33 | Ram Malla | 1185 | 592 | 491 | 24 |
34 | Gobinda Malla | 1209 | 616 | 515 | 31 |
35 | Bhim Malla | 1240 | 647 | 546 | 23 |
36 | Katar Malla (Kattar/Khattar) | 1263 | 670 | 569 | 32 |
37 | Prithwi Malla | 1295 | 702 | 601 | 24 |
38 | Tapa Malla | 1319 | 726 | 625 | 15 |
39 | Dinabandhu Malla | 1334 | 741 | 640 | 11 |
40 | Kinu/Kanu II Malla | 1345 | 752 | 651 | 13 |
41 | Shur Malla II | 1358 | 765 | 664 | 12 |
42 | Shiv Singh Malla | 1370 | 777 | 676 | 37 |
43 | Madan Malla | 1407 | 814 | 713 | 13 |
44 | Durjan Malla II (Durjay) | 1420 | 827 | 726 | 17 |
45 | Uday Malla | 1437 | 844 | 743 | 23 |
46 | Chandra Malla | 1460 | 867 | 766 | 41 |
47 | Bir Malla | 1501 | 908 | 807 | 53 |
48 | Dhari Malla | 1554 | 961 | 860 | 11 |
49 | Hambir Malla Dev (Bir Hambir) | 1565 | 972 | 871 | 55 |
50 | Dhari Hambir Malla Dev | 1620 | 1027 | 926 | 6 |
51 | Raghunath Singha Dev | 1626 | 1033 | 932 | 30 |
52 | Bir Singha Dev | 1656 | 1063 | 962 | 26 |
53 | Durjan Singha Dev | 1682 | 1089 | 988 | 20 |
54 | Raghunath Singha Dev II | 1702 | 1109 | 1008 | 10 |
55 | Gopal Singha Dev I | 1712 | 1119 | 1018 | 36 |
56 | Chaitanya Singha Dev | 1748 | 1155 | 1054 | 53 |
57 | Madhav Singha Dev | 1801 | 1208 | 1107 | 8 |
58 | Gopal Singha Dev II | 1809 | 1216 | 1115 | 67 |
59 | Ramkrishna Singha Dev | 1876 | 1283 | 1182 | 9 |
Dwhaja Moni Devi | 1885 | 1292 | 1191 | 4 | |
60 | Nilmoni Singha Dev | 1889 | 1296 | 1195 | 14 |
Churamoni Devi (Regency) | 1903 | 1310 | 1209 | 14 | |
61 | Kalipada Singha Thakur | 1930–1983 | 1337 – 1390 | 1236–1289 | 53 |
According to Dr. Bloch, Superintendent of the Archaeological Survey of India, Eastern Circle, the twelve date temples range in chronological order as follows:[15]
Malla Calendar | Gregorian Calendar | Temple | Built By |
---|---|---|---|
928 | 1622 | Malleswar | Bir Singha Dev |
949 | 1643 | Syam Rai | Raghunath Singha Dev |
961 | 1655 | Jor Bangla | |
962 | 1656 | Kala Chand | |
964 | 1658 | Lalji | Bir Singha Dev |
971 | 1665 | Madan Gopal | Churamoni(Siromoni Devi), wife of Bir Singha[16] |
971 | 1665 | Murali Mohan | |
1000 | 1694 | Madan Mohan | Durjan Singha Dev |
1032 | 1726 | Jor Mandir | Gopal Singha Dev I |
1035 | 1729 | Radha Gobind | Krishna Singha, son of Gopal Singha Dev I[17] |
1043 | 1737 | Radha Madhab | Churamoni, wife of Gopal Singha Dev I |
1064 | 1758 | Radha Syam | Chaitanya Singha Dev |
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