Palas of Bengal Paper PDF
Palas of Bengal Paper PDF
Palas of Bengal Paper PDF
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Indian MusEUiM,
Calcutta, the ^oth May, 1914.
7V/.. Pala>^ of Bengal.
Introduction.
Mt&c the death of Harsavarddhana, nothing is definitely known about the his-
tory of Bengal and Bihar, till the rise of the Palas. In fact the only definite date
after the death of Harsavarddhana, is the year 66, of the Harsa era, on the Shahpur
image of vSuryya.' We know from the Aphsad inscription of Adityasena, that
Madhavagupta was the contemporary of Harsa,* and that Adityasena succeeded in
making himself independent in Magadha. The Deo-Banarak
The Guptas
^ of Magadha. ,- r- -^ tt
mscription ofz Jivitagupta ^i r j-i.
- . •
'^ i. i
II carries the genealogy of the
family for three generations further. These princes Devagupta, Visiiugupta and
Jivitagupta II continued to assume Imperial titles, though most probably their
possessions were insignificant. The dynasty came to an end with the last-named
prince, Jivitagupta II.
The exact circumstances which led to the fall of this ancient dynasty are not
known, but it seems certain that the event took place in troublesome times. Bengal
was run over by Yasovarmmadeva of Kanauj during the first two decades of the
eighth century a.d.^ Most probably Jivitagupta II was the king who was over-
thrown by this invasion. Adityasena's only definite' date is
The dark period.
g^^ ^^^ ^^^ ^^^-^ ^^^^^ ^^ about 40 or 50 years for four
generations, which is certainly not too much. We do not know anything about
the successors of Jivitagupta II, but we know of several other foreign invasions of
Bengal about the same time from contemporary records. The invasion from Kanauj
was followed by one from Assam. The King Harsadeva
oreign invasions.
conquered Bengal, Orissa and the Northern Sarkars {Gaud =
Odr^adi-Kalinga-Ko^ala-pati). As his grandson, Jayadeva, the Licchavi, was reign-
ing in the sixth decade of the eighth century a.d.,^ the date of his maternal grand-
father must be placed some time earlier. Most probably this invasion from Assam
closely followed upon the heels of that from Kanauj, or we may one day be sur-
prised to learn that both armies invaded Bengal jointly. Harsadeva must have
held Bengal for a sufficiently long time, so as to enable him to pass through that
country and conquer 0(^m {Oihso.) Kalinga (Northern Sarkars), and Kosala (Orissa
Hill Tracts). The Gauda-vaho and the Rajatarangini has familiarized us with the
44 R. D. BANERJI ON
story of the banished king, Jayaplda, who came to Bengal, married the daughter of
the king, and freed him from the subjection of his liege-
From Kanauj, Assam.
^^^^ ,
^^.^ording to the able translator of the Rajatarahgini,
the true date of this king between 760 and 800 a.d. Finally Bengal was con-
is
quered by the Gurjara and Rastrakuta kings. The Gurjara king Vatsaraja, accord-
ing to the Gwalior inscription of Mihira-Bhoja, had seized by main force the imperial
sway from the house Bhandi
of :
Dhruva.'' So according to the Wani and Radhanpur grants Dhruva, father of the
Rastrakuta king Govinda III, drove Vatsaraja back into the desert, and wrested
from him the double royal umbrellas of Gauda, and according to the Baroda grant
1 Mem. A.S.B., Vol. Ill, p. 3, note 2. « Anu. Rep, Arch.. Surv. lud., 1903-04, p. 281.
8 Cowell and Thomas, Harsacarita, Or. Tr. Fund Series, p. 116. * Ind. Ant., Vol. XI, p. 157.
6 J.R.A.S., 1905, pp. 103-04. f Ind. Ant., Vol. XII, p. 160, 11. 39-40. 7 Epi. Ind., Vol. VI, p. 243.
THE PALAS OF BENGAL. 45
Govitida III caused Karkaraja's arm to become the doorbar of the comitry of the
Lord of the Gurjaras, who had become evilly mfiamed by conquering the Lord of
Gauda and Vaiiga. The verses in both grants do not refer to the same person.
The first verse refers to Vatsaraja, the contemporary of Dhruva, but the second verse
refers to Nagabhata IT, son of Vatsaraja, who was defeated by Govinda III.
This brings us to the fourth foreign invasion of this period, the invasion of the
Rastrakutas. It is evident from tlae verses quoted above that the Gurjara king's
conquest was not a lasting one. Close on his heels followed the southerner and
obliged him to reHnquish his conquests and even forced him to retire into the desert
country, his original home. When the double white umbrella was snatched away
from Vatsaraja, the Kingdom of Gauda and Vahga must also have passed into the
hands of the Rastrakuta conquerer. Nothing is known definitely about the close of
the Rastrakuta occupation, but most probably it did not last long. As soon the
Rastrakuta forces were withdrawn, the local princes must have re-asserted their
authority.
During this period of foreign invasions and consequent anarchy and misrule, the
old Royal dynasty must have come to an end, the harassed populace felt the
necessity of a strong and able ruler. They held an election about the details of
The election of a king which we know nothing. As a result of this election
by the subjects Gopaladeva, the son of a successful soldier named Vapyata,
was elected king. In the Khalimpur grant of Dharmmapala it is said that the people
made him take the hand of fortune :
—
Matsya-nyayam-apohihmi prakrtibhir-laksmyah karan-grahitah Srl-Gopala iti
The composer of the Khalimpur inscription puts the cause of this election very
nicely in the above verse Matsya-nyayam-apohitum, " to escape from anarchy," as
:
Mr. K. P. Jayaswal translates it.'' That the danger of being swallowed up into the
kingdom of a powerful neighbour, was not exaggerated, is amply evident from the
fcregoing account of the foreign invasions of Bengal during the dark period.
Nothing is known about the origin of this new line of kings, who continued to
hold sway over Bihar or Bengal till the final conquest of the country by the Muham-
madans. In the oldest inscription of this dynasty Dayitavisnu, the grandfather of
Gopala I, is called the progenitor of this line of kings, and it was stated, that he
the king Vigrahapala III was born in the race of the Sun.' The Ramacarita and
the BengaH poem Dharmmamafigala of Ghanarama give a different account alto-
gether. This account is given very fully in the Kaiiurpala of Ghanarama's work,
according to which the kings of the Pala dynasty after Dharmmapala were really
the descendants of the Sea-god. This tradition is not very coherent as Maha-
mahopadhyaya Hara Prasada Sastri has shown. In the Ramacarita, king Dharm-
mapala is mentioned as "the light of the race of the Sea."* Thus the Rama-
carita corroborates the tradition embodied in Ghanarama's work to some extent.
It shows that the origin of the new line of kings was remembered by the people
long after their accession and even after their The descent from the Sea most
fall.
probably indicates that the forefathers of this line of kings came from the vSea and
in the absence of a plausible account of their ancestry became known as the chil-
dren of the Sea-God.
I
Ibid., Vol. II, p. 350. -2
Mem. A.S.B., \'ol., Ill, pp. 2-3 and 20.
CHAPTER II.
on, to be the contemporary of a king who was overthrown by the son of Gopala.
Most probably Gopala I had a shorter reign than Vatsaraja, who had overrun
Bengal before the accession of the former, but lived long enough to see the former's
son conquer his former possessions.
According to Taranatha, Gopaladeva is said to have reigned for 45 years and
, , . ,
Mr. V. A. Smith puts accession to the year 732 a.d.,* but
Ivength of reign and ^^ /
^^ we shall see later on when we come to the first definite
^ 1 , 1
successor.
date of this dynasty, that this is a little premature.
Gopaladeva ascended the throne about 750 a. d. and was most probably succeeded
by his son Dharmmapaladeva after a very short reign.
1 Epi. Ind., Vol. IV, p. 248, v. 5. « Ind. Ant , Vol. XXII, pp. 174—5. » ibid., Vol. XXI, p. 255.
* Ibid. Vol. XXXVIII, p. 245. 6 J.R.AS., 1909, p. 76.
— — , —
48 R. D. BANERJI ON
Dharmmapaladeva, the second king of the Pala dynasty, was the real founder of
the greatness of his Hne and the Empire over which his successors ruled. He was
also the leading figure in Northern Indian politics in the last half of the eighth
and the first half of Most probably Bengal enjoyed some
the ninth centuries a.d.
respite from foreign invasions during the reign of Gopala I,
Dharmmapala.
^^^ ^^^^^ j^.^^ his SOU felt Strong enough to take part in
the disputes of the contemporary monarchs of Northern India, and to conduct
long campaigns. Before proceeding to discuss the events of his reign we should
consider his date which is the first fixed point in the History of Bengal during
this period. The chronology of the Palas of Bengal was for a long time in a
hopelessly confused state. Leaving aside the earlier theories about the dates of
the Palas we find even in recent times widely divergent theories about the date
of Dharmmapala. In the XVth Volume of his reports the late Sir Alexander
Cunningham fixed the date of Dharmmapala' s accession in 831 a.d. In his
article' on the Cambay plates of Govinda III, Mr. D. R. Bhandarkar places
Dharmmapala in the earlier part of the tenth century.' Dharmmapala 's date seems
to have become fixed from synchronisms, which have been given for the first time
in the preface of the Ramacarita of Sandhyakaranandi by the learned Editor. The
synchronisms have also been noticed almost simultaneously by two other scholars
Mr. V. A. Smith and Mr. D. R. Bhandarkar.*
^
The first question about the true date of Dharmmapala was raised incidentally
in 1 891 by the late Dr. Kielhorn on a passage in the Bhagalpur grant of Narayana-
pala:
Jitv = endra-raja-prabhrtin = arafln = uparjjita yena Mahodaya Snh, dattah punah
sa valin = arthayitre Cakrayudhay = anativamanaya.^
At that time Dr. Kielhorn was unable to identify the kings Indraraja or
Cakrayudha. The discovery of the Khalimpur grant supplied some additional
facts and the well-known verse :
For a long time nothing could be made out of the historical allusions in
the two verses quoted above. It was known to the scholars that a certain verse
of the Jaina Hari-vamsa-purana referred to a king named Indraraja who was
a contemporary of Vatsaraja and was living in the year 705 of the Saka
era, 783 a.d.^
i.e. But so far nobody was able to connect Indrayudha with
the Indraraja of the Bhagalpur grant. Some time before November 1896, a
stone inscription was discovered in some excavations which were being carried
1 Arch. Survey Rep., Vol. XV, p. 150. 2 Epi. Ind., Vol. VII, p. 33.
3 J.R.A.S., 1908, p. 252. 4 Epi. Ind., Vol. IX, p. 26, note 4.
6 Ind. Ant.. Vol. XX, pp. 187-88. 6 Epi. Ind,, Vol. IV, p. 248.
•>
Ind. Ant, Vol. XV, p. 141, Peterson's 4th report on the search of Skt. MSS, in the Bombay Presidency.
—— —
according to which during the victorious march of Govinda III, Dharmma and
Cakrayudha submitted of their own accord to that king :
So it is evident that the Kings Nagabhata II and Govinda III were the
contemporaries of Dharmmapala and Cakrayudha. We possess a certain date for
Nagabhata II, in the Buchkala inscription; the Vikrama year 872=815 a.d.°
1 Nachrichten von der Konigl. Ges. der Wiss. zu Gottingen, Phil. Hist, klasse, 1905, p. 301.
i Ann. Rep. Arcbl. Surv-., 1903 — 04, pp. 281 and 284.
S J.B.B.R.A.S., Vol. XXII, pt. LXI, p 118, + Ibid. 6 Epi. Ind., Vol. IX, p. 198.
— ,
50 R. D. BANERJI ON
Govinda Ill's certain dates range from 794 to 813 a.d> Consequently Dharmma-
pala must be placed in the last decades of the eighth and the first decades of the
ninth century a.d.
The most important event in the reign of Dharmmapala is his conquest
of Northern India. The Rastrakuta king Dhruva had driven
The events of Dhaimma- Gurjara invaders back into the desert and the Rastra-
^-^^
pala s reign. _ 1 i- t 1
kuta occupation of the country most probably did not last
long, otherwise there would not have been any necessity of a fresh invasion
under Govinda III. The whole of Northern India most probably relapsed into
that restless state which necessitated the election of a strong ruler in Bengal
On his accession, an able man like Dharmmapala practically found the whole
country at his mercy. The ancient race of Bhandi had been ousted from the
throne by Vatsaraja, Nagabhata's father, and a king named Indrayudha was
reigning at Mahodaya or Kanauj in the Vikrama year 705 = 783 a.d. It may be
that he also belonged to the family of Bhandi. When we remember that ac-
cording to the verse of the Bhagalpur grant of Narayanapala, Dhrammapala ousted
a king of Kanauj named Indraraja and gave the kingdom to Cakrayudha, we
feel certain that this Indrayudha is no other than the Indraraja of the Bhagalpur
grant.
Dharmmapala's Northern Indian campaign must have begun some time after
783 A.D. In the Jaina Harivarhsa Purana we find that in the year 705 of the
Saka era Indrayudha was ruling in the North, SrI-Vallabha in the South, the Lord
of Avanti in the East, and Vatsaraja in the West:
^akesvabdaiatesu saptasu diiam panclwttaresuttaram
Pafindrayudhanamni Krsnanrpaje Srivallabhe daksindm
Purvam Snmad-Avanti-hhuhhrti nrpe Vatsadiraje par dm
Sorya namddhimandale jayavute vire vardhe vati.
We know already from the Wani and Radhanpur grants that Dhruva, Sri
Vallabha and Vatsaraja were contemporaries. In the year 783 Dhruva must
have been in his old age, and long before that he must have driven Vatsaraja back
into the desert country from Kanauj and Bengal as the latter is only mentioned as
ruler of the West. Again, as Indraraja or Indrayudha Vi^as reigning in the North in
783 Dharmmapala's Northern Indian campaign must have taken place after
A. D., so
that year. As has been already stated above, Dhruva and Vatsaraja seem to have had
very long reigns. The invasion of Northern India by these two kings seems to have
taken place during the earlier parts of their reigns. Bengal most probably enjoyed
about fifty years' respite from foreign invasions before Dharmmapala came to the
throne. Though Indrayudha, the contemporary of Dhruva and Vatsaraja, was dis-
possessed of his throne by Dharmmapala, yet it appears that both of these kings died
before Dharmmapala's accession, as their sons, Nagabliata II and Govinda III, are
mentioned in the inscriptions as his contemporaries. The first act of Dharmmapala
after his accession seems to have been the invasion of The exact Kanauj.
cause of this invasion has not been revealed to us by any
Conquest of Kanauj and of the records discovered up to date. Most probably
displacement of Indra- ,
. , ^. .
, , . , , .
In this condition both Dharmmapala and Cakrayudha sought the help of the
Rastrakuta Emperor Govinda III. This is proved by the 23rd verse of the
'
unpublished grant of Amoghavarsa I in the possession of Mr. S. R. Bhandarkar.
Being solicited by the most influential king of Northern India and his subordinate,
the king of one of the oldest cities in India, the Rastrakuta monarch led a campaign
against the powerful Gurjaras. The result of this campaign has already been stated
above while quoting the 23rd verse of the unpublished grant of Amoghavarsa I.
1 Ind. Ant., Vol. XXXV, p. 17. « Arch. Survey Rep., 1903-04, p. 281.
—
52 R. D. BANERJI ON
The upon the Gurjaras by the RastrakQta Emperor had a very last-
defeat inflicted
ing effect. Govinda III made his nephew, the Mahasamantadhipati Karkaraja II
of the Gujarat Branch of the Rastrakuta family, a door-bar for the country of the
Gurjaras, which we learn from the verse of the Baroda grant of Karkaraja quoted
above. Besides the unpublished grant of Amoghavarsa I, we have further evidence
of the defeat of a Gurjara king by Govinda III. In the Radhanpur grant of
Govinda III it is stated that the Gurjara king fled on hearing of the approach
of Govinda III, as the rainy season flies away on the approach of autumn;
Gurjara King to invade Northern India, was over. The Mahasamanta became such
an efficient door-bar that the Gurjaras were confined to the desert tracts of Rajputana
for more than two generations. Dharmmapala and Cakrayudha were left in undis-
puted possession of their territories. Further mention of this triangular struggle
between the Palas, Gurjaras and the Rastrakutas is to be found in two inscriptions
of Mahendrapala, edited by the late Dr. Kielhorn just before his death. In these
grants it is stated that Vahukadhavala, a feudatory of the Gurjara Emperor Mahen-
drapala, but a Calukya by descent, defeated a king named Dharmma. Now as
Vahukadhavala was the third in ascent from Balavarman, the contemporary of
Mahendrapala, it is probable that he was a contemporary of Nagabhata II, who, as
we have seen above, was the contemporary of Dharmmapala of Bengal. So it now
appears to be certain that the king Dharmma defeated by Vahukadhavala was no
other than Dharmmapala of Bengal, who was fighting for his lost prestige in Northern
India. In his article on the Una grant of Mahendrapala, Dr. Kielhorn says that as
Balavarman was a contemporary of Mahendrapala and lived in 893 a.d., so his
grandfather Vahukadhavala must be the contemporary of Bhoja I.* But this is
hardly possible as king Dharmmapala must have preceded Bhoja I to some extent at
any rate. As Balavarman, as well as his son, Avanivarman II, were the contemporaries
of Mahendrapala so it becomes certain that Balavarman was advanced in age when
Mahendrapala came to the throne. So Balavarman himself must be taken to be the
contemporary of the Emperor Bhoja I. Consequently Avanivarman I becomes the
contemporary of Ramabhadra and Vahukadhavala of Nagabhata II. This statement
is amply supported by the fact that Nagabhata II had a long war with Dharmmapala
the campaign of Dharmmapala and Govinda III against Nagabhata II, the Pala and
Rastrakuta kings fell out and in the struggle which ensued Dharmmapala was
defeated. This must have taken place after the defeat of Nagabhata II by the
confederate armies :
Dharmmapala must have reigned for at least thirty-two years as his Khalimpur
grant is Taranatha says that he ruled for sixty-four years, which
dated in that year.
is impossible as we shall see in the following pages. The late Dr. Kielhorn was also of
Dharmmapala had a long reign.* In the Monghyr grant it is stated that
opinion that
Dharmmapala married the daughter of the Rastrakuta chief Parabala, a lady named
Rannadevi.' Recently Dr. Kielhorn has published an inscription found on a pillar
at Pathari, in the Native State of Bhopal in Central India. According to this
inscription a king of the Rastrakutas named Parabala was
reigning in the Vikrama year 917 = 861 a.d.* This Parabala
^anf ^e?It[onr'
is Dharmmapaladeva, So
most probably the father-in-law of
if Parabala married his daughter to the Pala king, the latter must have had reigned
for a very long time. Parabala and his father were very long-lived men. His
father Karkaraja defeated a king named Nagavaloka, who was a contemporary of
Chahamana Guvaka I of Sakambhari and one of whose grants is dated in the year
813 of the Vikrama era = 756 a.d.^ Dharmmapala had a son named Tribhuvanapala,
who is mentioned in the Kha'impur grant as the dutaka, and who seems to have died
during the lifetime of his father as Dharmmapala was succeeded by his second son
Devapaladeva after a reign of about forty years.
No coins of Dharmmapala have been discovered as yet, and the only other
inscription of Dharmmapala besides the Khalimpur grant is a small votive inscrip-
tion of the 26th year of his reign, found at Bodh-Gaya in the Gaya district of
Bengal. The sculpture, on which the inscription has been incised, was removed to
the Indian Museum in 1895 when Mr. Broadley's collection of antiquities was sent to
Calcutta by the order of the Government of Bengal. The inscription was published
in 1908 by Pandit Nilmoni Chakravartti, Professor of Pali and Sanskrit in the
Presidency College, Calcutta. Mahadeva in a
It records the erection of a four-faced
place called Campasayatana, by a man named Kesava, the son of a sculptor named
Ujvala, and the excavation of a tank at the cost of three thousand drammas, in
the 26th regnal year of Dharmmapala.** His Khalimpur grant was issued from
Pataliputra. It is well known that he is the king of Bengal repeatedly referred to
in the Rastrakuta and Gurjara records. In the Monghyr grant of his son Devapala,
Dharmmapala 's followers are said to have bathed at Kedara, and at the mouth of
the Ganges during his expeditions, and this bears out the statements made in the
1 Ibid., Vol. VI, p. 103. 1 Nach. Kon. Ges. der Wiss. lu Gottengen, 1905, p. 303.
6 ibid., p. 231, note
3 Ind. Ant., Vol. XXI, p. 255. * Epi. Ind., Vol. IX, p. 250. 4.
Khalimpur grant. This grant was issued in his 32nd year and records the grant of
the villages named Krauncasvabhra, Madhasammali and Palitaka in the Vyaghratati
mandala of theMahantaprakasa visaya, and Gopippah of the Amrasandika mandala
of the Sthalikkata visaya, all of which were situated in the Paundravardhana hhukti,
to the temple of the god Nunna-Narayana at Subhasthah, at the request of his
feudatory, the Mahasamantadhipati Narayanavarmman, which was communicated
to the king by the Prince Tribhuvanapala.
—— '
CHAPTER III.
as far as the two oceans, whose waters are red with the rising and the setting of
the sun ":
1 Ind. Ant., Vol. XXI, p. 255. 2 Epi. Ind., Vol. II, p. 162. 8 Mem. A.S.B, Vol. Ill, p. 8.
— —
56 R. t). BANERJI ON
"Attending to his (Kedaramisra 's) wise coimsel the lord Gauda long
of
ruled the sea-girt earth, having eradicated the race of the Utkalas, humbled
the pride of the Hunas, and scattered the conceit of the rulers of Dravida and
Gurjjara."
The invasion of Utkala is a new point, but the fight with the Hunas perhaps
is the same as that with the Kambojas referred to in the
Monghyr We know
from an independent source that
grant.
there was a war with the Dravidas,
i.e. In the Nilgund inscription
the Rastrakutas.
Amoghavarsa I, it is stated that he was " worshipped by the lords of Vanga,
Ariga, Magadha, Malava and Vengi" :
Ari-nrpati-makuta-ghattita-caranas = sakala-bhuvana-vandita-^auryyah ,
or itself followed that. In either case it is quite clear that the Gurjara king
Ramabhadra suffered this reverse at the hands of this king of Bengal, for neither
in the Gurjara copper-plate grants nor in their stone inscriptions are any victories
assigned to him.
During the reign of Devapala, a Brahmana named Viradeva, an inhabitant
of Nagarahara, came on a pilgrimage to the Mahabodhi and paid a visit to the
Yasovarmmapura Vihara. During his stay in Magadha, Devapala heard of him
and he was made the principal abbot of Nalanda.' The Monghyr grant was
issued to named Mesika, in the Krimila Visaya,
record the grant of a village
and the ^ri-nagara brahmana
bhiikti, named Vihekarata, of the Aupamanyava
to a
gotra and the Asvalayana ^akha, in the 33rd year of the king. The dutaka of the
grant was the king's son Rajyapala. There is a vast mass of MSS. literature
Epi. Ind., Vol II, p. 162, verse 9. ' rbjd,^ Vol. VI, p. 103. 3 ind. .-Vnt., Vol. XVII, p. 309.
—
in Bengal recording the descent of Brahmanas. For the most part these MSS.
. .
are carelessly copied and hardly rehable, save for the names
,
Inscriptions and Mss. , ^ -, «.
^^^ descent^ ofr Brahmanas. These
-,
The Prince Rajyapala was made a Yuvaraja before the grant of the copper-
plate in the 33rd regnal year, but he must have died during the lifetime of his father
as we find that the king Devapala was succeeded by Vigrahapala I, the son of his
cousin Jayapala and the grandson of Vakpala, the younger
His successor and relations. .1 1 -1 r
,1
brotner ol -i-m -r -r. 1 •.
1
J.A.S.B., Pt. I, 1896, p. 21. ''
Ind. Ant, Vol. XV, p. 305, v. 6.
3 J.A.S.B., N.S., Vol. IV, p. 108. Mem. A.S.E., Vol III.ip. 13.
— — s
58 R. D. BANERJI ON
The name of the village where Umapati lived is given as Kanjivinda in the 2nd
verse, but it is clearly a mistake for Kanjivilva, the name of a well-known town.
Nothing is known about the other relatives of this king, besides his son Narayana-
pala M^ho succeeded him. The votive inscriptions mentioned above were incised in the
2nd year of the king and most probably Vigrahapala I or Surapala I had a very
short reign.
very troublesome times. The Gurjaras,
Narayanapala succeeded to the throne in
after their long confinement in the desert, were issuing again for the conquest
of Northern India, and this time they were destined to succeed and to make
Mahodaya or Kanyakubja Bhoja I succeeded his father
their capital. Ramabha-
dra and at the beginning his kingdom seems to have consisted of the ancestral
lands of the Gurjara-Pratiharas. Step by step Bhoja advanced towards the North.
Kanauj or Mahodaya became his capital as several of his grants were issued from
that place. It is not known from whom the Gurjara king wrested Kanauj, and
it may be that it was taken either from the Palas or one of
Bhoja l^and^his war with ^j^^.^ contemporaries. Nothing is known about the state of
Uttarapatha or Northern India about this time, but it is
certain that the Palas lost much of their territorial possessions during this period.
Bhoja I invaded Bengal and defeated the king disastrously. The war with Bengal
is mentioned in his Gwalior inscription:
I Tabaqati-Nasiri (Bib. Ind.), p. 491. ^ Cimuiugham, Arch. Surv. Rep., Vol, III, p. 128.
3 Ibid. * Iii'i- Ant., Vol. XV, p. 305, v. 9.
inscription dated Vikrama Samvat gi8=86i a.d., states that his father
is Kakka
gained fame in a fight with tlie Gavidas at Mudgagiri :
—
Tatopi ^ny'Utah Kakkah piittro jato mahamatih.
YaSo Mudgagirau labdham, yena Gaudaih samam rane. — verse 24.'
named Bhandadeva erected a monastery for ascetics in that city. Up to the seven-
teenth year of Narayanapala, Mudgagiri was in his possession as his grant was issued
from that place in that year. From this grant we learn that at least a part of
Tirabhukti or Mithila continued to be in the possession of Narayanapala.^ The
Pratihara Kakka most probably gained renown during the siege of the famous fort
of Mudgagiri or Mungir.
It appears that during the long reigns of Amoghavarsa I and Bhoja I, and they —
were to some extent contemporaries, the Gurjaras had not —
Invasion of Amoghavarsa I.
^^^^ .^^^ collision with the RSstrakutas. In the Sirur and
Nilgund inscriptions of Amoghavarsa I, that monarch claims to have been worshipped
by the kings of Vanga, Ahga, Magadha, Malava and Vengi :
The kings Vahga Ahga and Magadha were most probably one and the same
of ,
come into conflict with the Gurjaras who were then occupying most of Northern
India, but of this no record has been discovered up to date.
But as we have seen above, the Gurjaras succeeded in annexing Magadha and
most probably Tirabhukti or Tirhut permanently to their dominions and succeeded
in keeping them till the rise of the Cedis under Karnnadeva, when Mahipala I
1 J.R.A.S., 1894, pp. 3 & 7. 2 Ibid., 1895, P- 515- * lid. Ant., Vol. XV, p. 306,1. 30.
60 R. D. BANERJI ON
annexed Magdha to his territories. The Rastrakuta invasion was not a lasting one,
like the previous ones, and, at the close of the war, the Ourjjara-Pratiharas re-
occupied Magadha.
According to the Bhagalpur grant, up to the seventeenth year of the king
Mudgagiri was in his occupation. After that nothing is known about him. He was
succeeded by his son Rajyapaladeva. The names of the other relations of the king
are not known. The earliest record of Narayanapala is the Gaya inscription of the
seventh year. This is at present in the courtyard of the Visnupada temple in Gaya
City. Its discovery was announced by the late Sir Alexander
Inscriptions of
Cunningham
° in his reports,
r-
with a drawing.'
o As this in-
Narayanapala. >
^ ^
samkle^a-ra^ih sphura-
2. -d = amala-gunayam dhyana-vrttaii sthirdtma\\Prodbhut-dti-darppa-pravala-mana-
samtrdsa-hehi-svahhavam Krtv-aitan-narasingham sphuta-vikata-satam rupam
= aty-%igra-rmidram i
ye-
I
Cunningham, Arch. Surv. Rep., Vol. Ill, p. 120, No. 6, pt. XXXVI,
—
The language of the inscription is very incorrect Sanskrit, like that of the Buddhist
Sanskrit manuscripts of Nepal, and the record itself has been very carelessly incised.
The purpose of the inscription is to record the erection of a monastery for Brahmahi-
cal ascetics by a man named Bhandadeva in the seventh year of the king Narayana-
paladeva, in the month of Vaisakha. It opens with an invocation to Visnu, in his
Man-lion (Narasirhha) incarnation and curiously enough it is at present outside the
small temple of Narasiiiiha, in the courtyard of the Visiiupada temple, which, as we
shall see later on, was certainly built during the reign of Nayapaladeva. It may
mean however that the small temple of Narasiriiha was built by Bhandadeva near
the monastery and was rebuilt during the time of Nayapaladeva. The genealogy of
the builder is given as follows:
VAMADEVA,
married Vallabhadevi,
I
SIHADEVA,
1
VAPPADEVA,
I
BHANDADEVA.
Another small inscription of Narayanapala was found by Pandit Vinoda Vihari
Vidyavinoda of the Indian Museum, Calcutta, in the Inscription gallery of that
Museum. He has published it in the journal of the Vahgiya Sahitya Parishad.^
It is incised on a long piece of carved stone, probably the portion of a pedestal.
Most probably it came with the other sculptures from the Bihar Museum founded by
Mr. Broadley, when that collection was shifted to Calcutta, according to the direc-
It records the erection of an image in the ninth year of the king Narayanapala,
in the month of Vaisakha, by a Buddhist Elder, named Dharmmamitra, an inhabi-
tant of the Andhra country.
The Bhagalpur grant of Narayauapaladeva was issued when the king was stay-
ing at Mudgagiri and records the grant of the village of Makutika to the temple of
Siva at Kalasapota, which was situated in the Kaksa visaya, of Tirabhukti, thus
proving that up to that time Tirabhukti or modern Tirhut was under the Pala kings.
The Dutaka was the Bhatta Punyakirtti, otherwise named Guravamisra,
of this grant
who erected the Ganida-stamhha at Badal. The other inscription is not dated. It
was incised to record the erection of a stone monolith surmounted by an image of
Garuda by the Bhatta Guravamisra, the minister of the king. According to this in-
scription Guravamisra was the minister of Narayanapala, his father Kedaramisra
that of Surapala, and Devapala, his grandfather Somesvara, a general, and his great-
grandfather Darbhapani, the minister of Devapala, while his great-great-grandfather
Garga was the minister of Dharmmapala. The synchronism is shown below.
Pala Emperors. Ministers
I Gopala I,
Darbhapani,
III Devapala. Jayapala,
Somesvara,
Surapala I Kedaramisra,
IV or Vigrahapala I,
V Narayanapala. Guravamisra.
We learn from the position of the Badal pillar that the Varendrl or Northern Bengal
was included in the kingdom of Narayanapala, and after the loss of Magadha and
Tirabhukti his son must have succeeded to a very small principality which was
situated either in Radha (Western Bengal) or in the Vanga (Eastern Bengal) as we
know from about this time a Mongolian tribe invaded Northern
later records that
Bengal through modern Sikkim or Bhutan and occupied Gauda. Later on we shall
see that Gauda was in the occupation of Mongolians in the Saka year 888=966 a.d.
So the invasion must have taken place some fifty or hundred years earlier. These
Mongohans are named Kambojas in a Sanskrit inscription. In the Mungir grant of
Devapala and the Badal pillar inscription, Devapala is said to have fought the
Kambojas, but this may refer to the Western Kambojas. The Mongohan or Kamboja
invasion of Northern India must have taken place jast after Narayanapala as no
Pala records have been found in Northern Bengal till the accession of Mahlpala I.
Magadha was annexed by the Gurjara-Pratiharas to their dominions, and after
Narayanapala we find the names of the Gurjara princes in the votive inscriptions of
Magadha. For a long time scholars have been at a loss to assign a place to a king
named Mahendrapala several of whose inscriptions have been found in the Gaya
,
District. All along he has been considered to be one of the Palas of Bengal. The
late Dr. F. Kielhorn also thought that he was one of the Palas, and mentions him in
a footnote in his list of Mr. V. A. Smith, in his recent
the Pala kings of Bengal.'
article on the Palas of Bengal, goes so far as to assert that he was the successor of
Govindapala, whose inscriptions are dated Vikrama Samvat 1232 and 1235, i.e. 1175
and 1 178 A.D.^ Mahamahopadhyaya Hara Prasad ^astri thinks that Mahendra-
pala may have belonged to the Pala dynasty/ Two inscriptions of this king are
definitely known have been discovered in the Gaya District. One of these were
to
found at Ram-gaya, on the other side of the river Phalgu, just opposite the temple
of Gadadhar at Gaya, while the other was found at Guneriya, a village near the
Grand Trunk Road. Major Kittoe spoke of a third inscription of this king, but of
that we shall have to speak later on. The first of the inscriptions of this king, the
one at Ramgaya, was examined by the lale Sir Alexander Cunningham, and the first
line was deciphered by him. According to him, the record is incised on the pedestal
of the figures of the ten incarnations of Visnu. Following Cunningham's descrip-
tion, the image was at last found in the walls of a modern temple ot Siva at
Ramgaya, and after great difficulties, a clear impression was secured. It was evident
even at the first sight that the record was considerably older than the inscriptions of
Govindapala, Ramapala or even Mahlpala I. The figures of the ten avataras are
now completely hidden by whitewash, but the pedestal has been cleared of it, and it
was found that the record had been incised on the right half of it. Acute-angled
characters of the ninth century a.d. had been used in it, and on no account can it be
placed later than the tenth century. As the record has only been partially edited
before, I take the opportunity of placing it on record :
1
Epi. Ind., Vol. VIII, App. p. 18, note 2. 2 i„d. Ant., Vol. XXXVIII, p. 246.
s Mem. A.S.Li., Vol. Ill, p. 16.
64 R. D. BANERJI ON
(i) Om Samvat 8 ^n-Mahindrapala rajyabhise-
i \
" Oin, the year 8 (from) the coronation of Mahindrapala. (The gift) of Saha-
deva, the son of the Risi (Rsi) Saudi (Sauri)."
Mahendrapala, in the ninth or tenth centuries a,d., immediately suggests the
name of the son of Bhoja I, the great Pratihara Emperor Mahendrapaladeva. A
comparison with the Asni inscription of Mahipala confirmed me in the opinion that
no other person than the great Pratihara monarch was being referred to. The forms
of P and / are very much similar to those used in Asni inscription and the Ghos-
rawan inscription of Devapala. Moreover, the form of the name is identical with that
used in the Asni inscription, where we find the name as Mahindrapala, and not
Mahendrapala as in other inscriptions. Dr. Fleet read this name as Mahisapala.
I saw a beautiful impression of this inscription in the Allahabad exibition of 1910-
II, and there the name is clearly legible as Mahindrapala. Another inscription of
Mahendrapala is to be found at Gunariya, near the Grand Trunk Road, in the Gaya
District, which was brought to notice by Major Kittoe. Kittoe's drawing of the
inscribed portion of the sculpture is very clear and the record can be edited from
it:—
(i) Ye dharmma =tesam ta-
hetu prabhava hetun
(2) -thagato hy = avadat tesamca yo nirodho evam vd-
(7) -rmmeyam . . .
Kittoe found a third inscription of this king somewhere in Bihar, but as he did
not state the exact locaUty, it is no use searching for it. Some day it will come up
as a new discovery of some one who chances to stumble on it. According to Major
Kittoe this inscription was dated in the 19th year of the king :
—
" One mentions the fact of the party having apostatized, and again returned to
the worship of the Sakya, in the 19th year of the reign of Sri Mahendrapaladeva."
There are two votive inscriptions of Mahendrapaladeva in the British Museum. One
of these records the erection, most probably, of an image by a Buddhist monk named
Kusuma in the ninth year of Mahendrapala.' The nature of the contents of the other
inscription is not known, but
dated in the second year of Mahendrapaladeva.
it is
It may be that the third inscription mentioned by Major Kittoe, has found its way,
by some means or other, into the British Museum. As for the reading of the date,
there need not be any difficulty about that, as Kittoe's readings are invariably faulty.
So we have definite proof that in the eight and ninth years of the king
Mahendra-
pala, Magadha formed an integral part of the Gurjara-Pratihara Empire, which at
that time extended from the Arabian Sea to the Bay of Bengal.*
Parametvam-paramabhaUamka-paramasaugata-MaMmjMhimja-^yl-mad-GopUade-
vapravarddhamana-kalyana-vijaya-rajy-etyadi samvat 15 asmine dine
4 ^ri-mad
Vikyamaiila-deva-vihare likhiteyam bhagavati. '
We
possess two inscriptions of GopSla II, aad from these we learn that
Magadha
was temporarily recovered by the Palas during the reign of this monarch. The first of
these inscriptions was discovered by the late Sir Alexander Cunningham,
at Bargaon
in the Patna District, the ancient Nalanda.'^ It records the fact that an image of the
goddess Vagisvarl, at Nalanda, was covered with gold leaf by some unnamed personage
in the first year of Gopaladeva.'^
The second inscription was discovered amidst the
ruins of the Mahabodhi temple at Bodh-Gaya and records the erection of
image of
Buddha by a person named Sakrasena during the reign of Gopaladeva, no year being
mentioned. These inscriptions prove that some time during the reign of Gopala II,
South Bihar or Magadha was temporarily occupied by the Palas. The reason of this
sudden enterprise is not far to seek. During the long reign of Anioghavarsa I, whose
certain dates extend from 817 to d>'jy a.d., there was no war between the Gurjaras
and the Rastrakutas.* In fact the only war between Bhoja I and the Rastrakutas
was his war with the Rastrakutas Dhruvaraja II of Gujarat some time before 867
A.D., in which Bhoja I himself was worsted.^ After Bhoja I, Mahendrapala
succeeded to an empire which had reached its greatest extent at that time, from
Punjab to the borders of Bengal, and from the foot of the Himalayas to Saurastra.''
Mahendrapala' s reign was a very short one, as his certain dates range from 893 to
907 A.D. He had two wives and was succeeded by Bhoja II, his son by Dehana-
ga.'' Most probably there was some dispute about his succession, which, may have
been contested by his half-brother Mahipala II. Bhoja II was assisted to the throne
by the Cedi Emperor Kokkalla I, which is referred to in the Bilhari inscription :
1
J.R.A.S. , 1910, pp. 150-51. '^
Cunningham, Arch. Surv. Rep., Vol. I, p. 36, pi. XIII. i.
5
J A.S.B., N. S., Vol. IV, p. 105. * J.R.A.S., 1904, pp. 647-8. 6 Ind. Ant, Vol. XII, p. i8j.
6 Epi. Ind., Vol. IX, p. 4. ^ Ind. Ant., Vol XV, p. no. 8 ^pi. ind.. Vol. I, p. 256.
» epi. Ind., Vol. II, p. 306,
. —
66 R. D. BANERJI ON
So the Cedi Emperor also set up the Rastrakiita king Krsna II, whose surname
was Vallabharaja, on the throne of his father Amoghavarsa I. Krsna II defeated the
Gurjaras and at the same time led an invasion into Bengal:—
Tasy = ottarjjita-Gitrjaro hrta-hata-llat-odhhata-irlmado
Gaudanam vinaya-vratarppana-gurus = Samudra = nidraharah,
Dvarasth = Amga-Kalimga-Gamga-Magadhair = abhyarccit = ajtiai = ciram sunns =
sunrtavag = bhuvah parivrlah ^n Krsnaraj o-bhavat
-verse 13, Deoli plates of Krsna III, and verse 15, Karhad plates of the
same.'
'
*
The mention Ganges as the extrem-
of the confluence of the
ity of Narasimha' s pursuit of Mahipala, without any mention of the Gauda king,
most probably indicates that the Eastern frontier of the Gurjara-Pratihara Empire
at that time extended up to the junction of the Ganges with the Sea. This is not to
be wondered at as it is now certain that Magadha formed an integral part of the
dominions of Mahipala' s father Mahendrapala. During this war Gopala II of Bengal
may have taken the opportunity of recovering some of the traditional possessions of
his family and pushed the Western frontier as far as the eastern banks of the Sone
This re-occupation of the Magadha may have been temporary, and Mahipala may
have recovered the possession of his Eastern Provinces, with the help of the
Candella Yasovarmman ^ As no inscriptions of Gopala' s successor Vigrahapala II
have been discovered, we are not in a position to say definitely whether Magadha
continued to be a province of the Pala Empire or was re-annexed by the Gurjaras.
A MS. of the Paiicaraksa written in the 26th year of Vigrahapaladeva II is preserved
in the British Museum collection : the latter part of itscolophon runs thus :
1 Ibid., Vol. V, p. 193 ; ibid., Vol. IV, p. 283. ' Ibid., Vol. VII, p. 38.
'i Karnnataka-SabdanusasaDa, ed. Lewis Rice, p. 26 * Epi Ind., Vol. I, p. 122.
THE PALAS OP BENGAL. 67
dent kingdom was established in Eastern Bengal. The existence of this kingdom
was made known by the discovery of two copper-plate grants of Devakhadga, the
last king of this dynasty. From these copper-plate grants it is now known that
the dynasty reigned for three generations :
—
Khadgodyama.
Jatakhadga.
I
Devakhadga.
Nothing is known about their dates save and except that the grants were issued
in the thirteenth year of Devakhadga.
The learned Editor of the plates has assigned
them to the eighth or ninth century a.d.^But on comparison with the inscriptions
of the Pala Emperors it is found that their correct date would be the first half of the
tenth century a.d. These two plates are the earliest inscriptions from Eastern
Bengal proper, and the record next in order was incised so late as the reign of king
Laksmanasena of Bengal.
' Bendall, Catalogue of the Sanskrit Manuscripts in the British Museum, p. 232, J.R.A.S., igtn, p. i^i.
i Mem. A.S.B., Vol I, p. 86.
CHAPTER IV.
The period which follows is entirely different in character, the principal actors
having changed. The great Gurjara-Pratihara Empire was rapidly dissolving and
the Rastrakuta kings were gradually becoming weaker. Rastrakuta and Gurjara
invasions became things of the past. New actors were appearing in the political
arena. The invasion of the Great Cola Conqueror left a deep impression on north
eastern India. gave Bengal a new dynasty of kings and indirectly hastened the
It
ruin of the Pala Empire. After the Badal pillar inscription of Narayanapala, there
is no other inscription which can throw Hght on the history of Northern Bengal for
three generations, i.e. till the time of Mahipala I. About this time some Mongolian
tribes occupied the whole of the Northern Bengal and either massacred the old
inhabitants or gradually forced them back southwards. A monolithic pillar now
standing in the grounds of the place of the Maharajas of Dinajpur bears a record of
one of these MongoHan kings, who also claimed to be the lords of Gauda {GaudeS-
vara). At present the whole of Northern Bengal is strewn over with pre-Muham-
madan ruins and so far the general theory had been, that
Kamboja or Mongolian these temples, monasteries and towns were ruined at the
invasion of North
-^^ ^^ ^^^^ Muhammadan occupation of the country. But
Bengal.
recently a plausible theory has been started by Mr. Rama
Prasad Cauda, B.A., on the basis of Dinajpur pillar inscription, according to which
the ruin of these ancient cities of Northern Bengal should be differently interpreted.
The inscription on the Dinajpur pillar was brought to notice in 1871 when it was
pubhshed with a rude lithograph.' The late Dr. Bloch examined the inscription
during one of his tours and hastily gave a reading which I am afraid cannot be
supported. Mr. Cauda obtained some very clear and beautiful rubbings of this
inscription during one of his many visits and submitted a paper on it to the Asiatic
Society of Bengal.* According to Mr. Cauda, the Koch, Mech and the Palias of the
present day are the descendants of the Mongolians who invaded and settled in North
Bengal during the latter half of the ninth and the tenth century a.d. The inscrip-
tion on the Dinajpur pillar, which forms the basis of Mr. Canda's paper, records the
erection of a temple of Siva during the reign of a king of Gauda of the Kamboja
race, in the year 888 of some unspecified era. The date is expressed as a chrono-
gram Kunjara-Ghata-varsena which probably mean# 888.
: ,
'^^^
^^^^^ ^^^^ ''^^^^^ ^'^ referred to the Vikrama era as in that
*^1nscription.'"^^^"'
case it would be equivalent to 831 a.d., which is too early
to suit the characters used in this inscription. Neither can it be referred to the
1 Ind. Ant., Vol. I, pp. 127 and 227. 2 J.A.S.B., N.S , Vol. VII, p 619.
R. D. BANERJl ON THE PALAS 01^^ BENGAL. 69
Gupta era as in that case it would be equal to 1207 a.d., which is certainly too late.
The Kalacuri-Cedi era has never been found to have been used in Bengal. The Saka
era suits best though it has but been sparsely used in the North- East, In that case
S. 888 = 966 A.D. falls just after the reign of Devapala, the Pratihara King of Kanauj.
At that time the invaders must have settled down so that the invasion itself must
have taken place some time earlier. Northern Bengal was in the undisputed posses-
sion of Narayanapala at the time of the incision of Guravamisra's record. So this
invasion must have taken place some time between 850-950 a.d. The irruption of
these Mongolian hordes must have taken place through the Himalayas, and most
probably they were dispossessed of their former homes in the hills by some other
invaders. So the Palas after Narayanapala, i.e. Rajyapala, Gopala II, and Vigraha-
pala II, were having a rather bad time of it with the Gurjara Empire in the West
and occasional Rastrakuta raids thrown in, and with Barbarian hordes advancing
in untold numbers through the mountain passes of the North. No wonder that
Magadha was annexed to the Gurjara-Pratlhara Empire. At the time of the invasion
of Indra III, the Eastern Frontier of the Gurjara-Pratihara Empire most probably
extended right up to the modern Bhagirathi, and its confluence near Saugor Island.
North Bengal must have remained in the possession of the Mongolian kings up to
the end of the tenth century a.d. In the beginning of the eleventh century we find
that the Palas have recovered possession of Northern Bengal,
Kamboja kings of Gauda. ^-^^ onwards right up to the end of the second
^^^^ ^^^^^^ ^^-^
Punjab, as shown by the phrase " Yona-Kambojesu" in the XIII Rock Edict of
Asoka.^ The occurrence of the name in a Bengal inscription does not mean that
the Kambojas, whole or part, immigrated into Bengal from the Punjab across the
whole of Northern India, because that would have been an impossibility in those
days but shows that all Mongolians were called Kambojas, and that people with
Mongolian features crossed over into Bengal through the Northern Mountains and
as Kambojas. They may or may not have been a part of the people who became
known during the Maury a period as the Kambojas.
The occupation of Gauda by a barbarian tribe, at a time when the whole of
Magadha was in the possession of the Gurjaras, shows that the kings of the Pala
Vigrahapala are not known. Most probably he lost even what had belonged to
Gopala II as his son Mahipala I is said to have recovered his paternal kingdom^ His
only recorded war seems to have been conducted in Eastern Bengal. In the Amga-
chi and Dinajpur grants there is a verse about this :
Bete praci pracura-payasi svacchafn = apiya toy am svairam bhrantvd tad = anu
malay-opatyaka-candanesn
Krtva sandrais =tarusu jadatam ^Ikavaii' ^ahhra-tulyah praley-ddreh katakcim =
—
abhajan yasya send-gajendrdh. verse ii Dinajpur grant of Mahipdla.'
But this is not very certain, as in the Amgachi grant of Vigrahapala the verse is
place in that year of the king has been acquired for the
Asiatic Society of Bengal hj Mahamahopadhyaya Hara Prasada Sastrl. Magadha
seems to have continued in the possession of the king for a long time. In the
eleventh year of the king an image of Buddha was dedicated in or near the temple
of the Mahabodhi at Bodh-Gaya, and in the same year the great temple at
Nalanda was restored, as had been burnt down in a fire. After the conquest of
it
J.A.S.B.. 1892, pp. 80 & 1>3. i Iiid. Ant., Vol. XXI, p. loi, and J A.S.B., 1892, p. 83, note 26.
= J.A.S.B., 1892, pp. 8—84, II. 23-24
THE PALAS OF BENGAL. 71
and Karnadeva and the invasion of the Cola king Rajendra Cola I. The invasion of
the Cola king took place before the 13th year of that prince,
-^
-j r- j
Invasion 01 c^
-r^
I.e. betore 1025 a.d. Rajendra Cola earned the viruda of
" Gangegonda" or " Ganga-vijayl " by pushing as far North as the
Ganges during this
„-. ^, ^
,
raid. The Tirumalai Rock inscription of the great conqueror
records the Northern Campaign in detail. It is said that
the king seized the "Odda-wsay«" which was difficult to approach. This is clearly
the Odra Visaya of the copper-plate inscriptions of Orissa.
Conquest of Odra and Then he entered '' Kosalainadu," i.e. the Kosala of the in-
'
Kosala. . .
•
have been its ruler and is said to have aided Ramapala in his wars in Northern
Bengal. man is said to have defeated Karna-Kesari, the king of Orissa.^
This
Most probably Dandabhukti was the march-land between Orissa and Bengal, corres-
ponding to the modern British districts of Midnapur and Balasore, and the man
had defeated the king of Orissa in one of his expeditions against Bengal. It is
more probable for a king of the march-lands to come into conflict with the king
of Orissa than for the ruler of Magadha. Moreover the order in which the names
of the countries are mentioned prevents us from supposing that Bihar is the
country mentioned as we shall see later on. From Dandabhukti the king passed
on to Bengal, attacking and occupying the province of " Takkana-I^adam." This
name has been taken to be the equivalent of " Daksina I^ata " by the late Dr.
Kielhorn, which is the ancient name of Southern Gujarat.' But Messrs. Hultzsch
and Venkayya take it to mean "Daksina Virata" or Southern Berar."^ Mr. Ven-
kayya is a great authorit}^ on Tamil, and he supposes that " the Tamil term
" Ilada" does not correspond to Sanskrit Lata (Gujarat) but to Virata (Berar)".
But nowhere did it strike the learned scholars that the order in which the countries
are mentioned, prevents us from supposing that either Berar or Gujarat is men-
tioned. In fact the country mentioned is Southern Radha. Mr. Venkayya will
find, on re-considering the question, that Daksina-Rddhd is a
better equivalent for
" Takkana-I^adam "
Tamil Takkana-Ladam than Daksina-Virata. Immediately after
we have the mention of V angala-de^a which all authorities agree as being equal
,
Southern Gujarat or Berar and then return to the East to conquer East Bengal,
1 Epi lad., Vol. Ill, p. 323 ^ Mem. A.S.B., Vol. Ill, p. 36.
3 Epi. Ind., Vol. App. p. 120, No. 733, Vol. VIII, App. II, p. 22, No. 11.
•*
Ann. Rep. on Epigriiphv .M adras, 1906-07, p. iyi.
— —— ,
"^2
R. D. BANERJI ON
after which he turns back to the West to defeat Mahipala in North Bengal and
again rushes to North Gujarat or Berar to conquer it. The more natural explana-
tion is that Rajendra Cola defeated Ranasura, the ruler of Southern Radha, and
then passed on through that country to invade Vahga. From very early times a
part of Bengal has been called Radha. It occurs in a dated inscription of the In do-
Scythian period as Rara. This inscription is at present in the Indian Museum, in
(i) The newly discovered grant of the Sena king Vallalasena, found at Sitahati,
near Katwa, in the Burdwan district of Bengal, where we find that the
village granted, Vallahitti, was situated in the North Radha (Uttara-
Radha-mandale):- The very name Uttara-Radha occurs in the Tirumalai
inscription as we shall see later on. Besides this, the kings of the Sena
dynasty seem to have ruled in the Radha country :
There being a Uttara-Radha we can say from immediate inference, that there was
"
a Daksina-Radha, which in Tamil becomes " Takkana-Ladam.
At the time of the Cola invasion a king named Ranasura was ruling Southern
Radha. In Bengal there is a tradition that a dynasty of kings with the affix Sura
ruled in Bengal before the Palas. We have no reliable evidence for this. But three
kings of this family, at least with the word Sura affixed to their names, have been
mentioned in epigraphs. These are: Ranasura, of the Tirumalai inscription Uaksmi- ;
inscription of the time of Gopila III, found at Manda in the Rajshahi district of
Bengal. After conquering Southern Radha, the Cola king did not proceed to subdue
the northern portion of it, but on the other hand, passed eastwards towards Vahga,
I
J.A.S.B., N.S., Vol. V, p. 239. '>
Vangiya Sahitya Parishad Patrika, Vol. XVII, p. 235.
8 Ibid., p. 235. * J.A.S.B., Vol. LXV,.i895, p. 2ro.
THE PALAS OF BENGAL. 73
which was then ruled hj a king named Govinda-Candra. This king has been wrongly
named Govinda-Candra or Govi-Canda,
identified with a king
Conqu^st^of^Eastern
^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^ ^^^^^ ^^^ current in the State of Kuch-
Bihar and the Rungpur district of Bengal. The king of
that name mentioned in the Tirumalai inscription is expressly stated to be the King
of Eastern Bengal, and so there is very little chance of identifying him with the
local hero of
Rungpur. After conquering Eastern Bengal, Rajendra Cola turned to-
wards the West and faced Mahipala, who had been rightly identified by the late Dr
Kielhorn with the Pala king Mahipala I, who was defeated. The inscription is so
worded that one at once understands that by defeating
Mahipala, the king was able to reach '< Uttira-Ladam and
'
So now it is clear that the Ganges formed the Northern boundary of the conquest of
Rajendra Cola I. Curiously enough he did not attempt to cross the Ganges to the
other side. The Tirumalai being a Praiasti does not mention such
inscription
details. But the desired details are supplied by an ancient manuscript discovered
by Mahamahopadhyaya Hara Prasada Sastri and now in the library of the Asiatic
Society of Bengal. In 1893 the Mahamahopadhyaya pubhshed notes on a find of
ancient Sanskrit manuscripts among which was a drama named Canda-Kausika, by
Arya Ksemlsvara. This play was enacted before the king by his order, and it con-
tains a verse in which the king Mahipala I is compared with Candragupta and a
people named Karnatakas, to the Nandas. So this contemporary work gives the
credit of defeating the Karnatakas to Mahipala I. The Karnatakas seem to be
the southerners who invaded Bengal under Rajendra Cola I. It appears that though
Mahipala I was defeated by Rajendra Cola when he crossed into Radha from East
Bengal, he prevented him from crossing the Ganges into Varendra or Northern
Bengal, and so the Cola conqueror had to turn back from the banks of the Ganges.
The manuscript on which Mahamahopadhyaya Hara Prasada Sastri relies is not a
modern one, as it was copied in 133 1 a.d * The invasion of the Cola king did not
change the political divisions of the country, but it left one permanent mark in the
shape of a body of settlers, who occupied the thrones of Bengal and Mithila as the
Sena and Karnata dynasties during the latter days of the Palas.
The Cola invasion took place, as has been stated above, before the thirteenth
Mem. A.S.B., Vol. Ill, p 55. i J.A.S.B., Vol. I,XII, 1893, p. ?5o,
. —
74 R. D. BANERJI ON
year of the king, i.e. 1025 a.d. The very next year we find that the Wheel of Law
at Benares is being repaired, and a new temple [Gandha-kutl) built by the brothers
Sthirapala and Vasantapala under the orders of the king.
The record an inscription discovered amidst the ruins
of these events is found in
of Sarnath near Benares more than a hundred years ago.^ It is incised on the
pedestal of an image of Buddha which is at present in the Provincial Museum at
,
Lucknow. This image was dedicated in the Vikrama year 1083 = 1026 a.d. Very
soon after this Benares was taken away from the Palas by the Cedi Emperor of
Gahgeyadeva who invaded North-Eastern India about this time and had occupied it
six or seven years ago. Some time before 1881 a.d., some metal images were found
near a village Imadpur in the Muzaffarpur district of Bengal;^ which were pronounced
The struggle with the by Dr. Hoernle to have been dedicated in the 48th year
Cedi Empire.
^f Mahipaladeva.' As these images were found in Tirhut or
Tirabhukti, it is natural to conclude that Mithila was in the possession of the Palas
up to the 48th year of Mahipala I. But six years before the erection of the temple
of Sarnath, Mithila passed out of the hands of the Palas.
Conquest of Mithila. ^_
In the year 1020 a.d. Gangeyadeva was m possession 01
t , 1 i , . •
Very soon after Benares passed into the hands of the Cedis. Karnnadeva, the
son of Gangeyadeva, was in possession of Benares in 1042 a.d. (Kalacurl-Cedi year
793).^ Tirabhukti or Mithila was never recovered by the Palas. The only Pala
records referring to this Province are the Bhagalpur grant of Narayanapala and the
Imadpur image inscription of Mahipala I.
Mahipala I was succeeded by his son Nayapala, who is called Nyayapala on the
authority of some unpublished record, by Mahamahopadhyaya Hara Prasada Sastri.
According to Taranatha, Mahipala reigned for fifty- two years,
Successor^atid^ length
^hich is most probably correct as the Imadpur images were
dedicated in the 48th year of the king. Of the relations
of the king we only know the names of the brothers vSthirapala and Vasantapala,
who were most probably nearly related to him besides his son Nayapala. The long
reign of Mahipala I is very fruitful in inscription and manuscript records. The
earliest of these is the manuscript of Astasahasrika Prajhaparamita, now in the
1 As. Res., Vol. IX, p. 204. 2 Proc. A.S.B , 1881, p. 9S. 8 Ind. Ant , Vol, XIV, p. 165, note 17.
4 Cat of Sans. MSS. in the Durbar Liby., Nepal. Hist. Intro., p. 18, anrl No. 1079 (kha), p. 34.
The date next in order is to be found in a manuscript of the same work, col-
lected by Mahamahopadhyaya Hara Prasada Sastri, for the Asiatic Society of
Bengal. The reading of the colophon as revised by the late Dr. Theodor Bloch runs
as follows:
Deyadharmmeyam pravaraniahayanayayinah Tddivadi-Mahavihanya avasthi-
tena ^dkyacarya-sthavira-Sadhugnptasya yad = atra puny an = tad = bhavatv
= deary = opddhyaya-mdtd-pitr-purangamam krtvd sakala-satva-rdier = anu-
ttara-jndna phal = dvdptaya iti. Paramabhattdraka-Mahdrdjadhirdja-Para-
meSvara-Paramasaugata ^rlmad- Vigrahapdladeva-pdddnudhydta Parama-
bhattdraka-Mahdrdjddhifdja-Parame^vara-Paramasaugata ^riman=Mahipd-
ladeva-pravarddhamdna-Kalydnavijayardjye sastha-sa-mbatsare abhilikhya-
mdne yatrdnke samvat 6 KdrtUka-Krsna-trayoda^ydn = tithau
mangala-
vdrena bhattdrikd-nispdditam = iti ||
$n Ndlanddvasthita-Kalydnamitra-Cin-
tdmamkasya likhita iti}
This colophon proves that in the sixth year of Mahipala Nalanda was in his
possession, and thus a part at least of Magadha was included in his dominions. Next
in order comes an inscription incised on the pedestal of an image of Buddha, in the
attitude of touching the earth {BJmmisparSa mudrd). This image is now being wor-
shipped as one of the five Pandus, in a small shrine just in front of the entrance of
the great temple at Bodh-Gaya. The inscription consists of three lines, in an imper-
fect state of preservation, the first part of each line having lost a number of letters.
It is dated in the eleventh year of the reign of Mahipala, presumably the first, as the
letters stiU show signs of acute angles at their lower extremities. It has been re-
ferred to by Cunningham.'^ The text runs :
The name of the donor of the two temples {Gandha-Kutidvaya) and the image is
inscription of the same year which has been placed next in order. This inscrip-
tion was discovered by Broadley among the ruins of the great Vihara at Nalanda
where it was found on a door-jamb. According to this inscription the great temple
at Nalanda was restored after being burnt down by a man
I Proc. A.S.B., 1899, p. 69. 2 Cunningham, Arch. Surv. Rep,, Vol. Ill, p. 122, No. 9, pi. XXXVII, No. 5.
3 J.A.S.B., Vol. IV, p. 106 No. IV, pi. VI.
—
76 R. D. BANERJI ON
The conquest Northern Bengal must have taken place some years earlier. In
of
his ninth year Mahlpala granted the village of Kuratapallika, with the exception of
CutapaUika, in the Gokalika man data, Kotivarsa visaya of the Paundravarddhana
bhukti to a Brahmana named Krsnadityasarman. It has been proved by another
inscription, the Manahali grant of Madanapala, that the Kotivarsa visaya was
situated in Northern Bengal, as both inscriptions have been discovered- in the Dinaj-
pur district.^ An inscription incised on the pedestal of a colossal image of Bud-
dha, still in situ, at Tetrawan, an ancient site six miles from Bihar in the Patna
District of Bengal, contains the name of Mahipala, the rest having become illegible.''
Most probably it was dedicated during the reign of Mahipaladeva. The images
discovered at Imadpur in the Muzaffarpur district of Bengal in 1881 were most pro-
bably dedicated in the 48th year of Mahipala I,^ as Mahipala II had a very short
reign. The 48th year of Mahipala I must have fallen before 1020 a.d., as in that
year the Cedi Emperor Gahgeyadeva was in possession of Tirabhukti or Tirhut. The
last inscription of Mahipala is the Samath inscription of the Vikrama year 1083.
This inscription was either posthumous, or incised when the city of Benares had passed
from the hands of the Palas to those of the Cedis. The repair of the Wheel of lyaw
and the building of the temple seem to have begun some time before and the work
was completed either after Mahipala' s death or in his last year, when he had lost
Benares and Tirhut. Mahipala was succeeded by his son Nayapala, called Nyayapala
by Mahamahopadhya^'^a Hara Prasada Sastri, on some unknown authority. His minis-
ter's name was Vamanabhatta, who is the Diitaka of the Bangarh grant of this king
called the Dinajpur grant by Dr. Kielhorn.
Nayapala succeeded the throne of the Palas some time between 1025 30 a.d. —
At that time the extent of the Pala Empire had been considerably diminished by the
loss of Benares and Tirabhukti. Gahgeyadeva was succeeded by his son Karna,
who with the help of some Southerners overran the whole
Nayapala Ace. 1025-J0
^^ Northern India. The Nagpur prasasti of Udayaditya of
Malava speaks of him as one who, joined by the Karnatakas,
had swept over the earth like a mighty ocean :
i Ind. Ant., Vol. XIV, p. 105, note 17. * Epi. Ind , Vol. II, p. 185.
s Ibid., p. 1 1.
,
invades Magadha.
the Tirthika, king of Karnya of the West, the latter made
war upon Magadha. Failing to capture the city, his troops sacked some of the sacred
Buddhist institutions and killed altogether five (men) Afterwards when
victory turned towards (Nayapala) and the troops of Karnya were being slaughtered
by the armies of Magadha, he took the king of Karnya and his men under his protec-
tion and sent them away Atisa caused a treaty to be concluded between
the two kings. With the exception of the articles of food that were destroyed at
the time of war, all other things which had fallen in the hands of the parties were
'
either restored or compensated for '
.*
Nayapala must have reigned at least fifteen years as two of his inscriptions were
incised in that year. The first is the Krsna-dvarika temple inscription, referred to
above, which records the erection of a temple of Visnu by a
^lonfand Ma'^Re^ords!'' ^^^^ ^^^^^ Brahmana named VisvSditya, the son of 'sudraka
and the grandson of Paritosa, in the fifteenth year of king
Nayapaladeva. The verses were composed by a veterinary named Sahadeva and the
engraving was done by the artisan Sattasoma, son of Adhipasoma. The second
inscription was discovered by Mr. Paramesvar Dayal, then Court of Wards Head
Clerk in Gaya,^ in 1884, inside the small temple of Narasiriiha in the Visnupada
compound. It was pointed out by him to Mr. Cakravartti,^ and to the late Dr.
1 Ind. Ant., Vol. XVIII, p. 217. 2 Jl. Bud. Text Soc, Vol. I, p. 9.
i J.A.S.B., 1900, pt. T, p. 192. 1-
Jl. Bud. Text Soc, Vol. I, p. 9, note.
6 J.A.S.B , 1900, pt. I, XD. 191, note i.
—
78 R. D. BANEKJI ON
Bloch in 1902.' But as this inscription has never been properly edited I am taking
this opportunity of transcribing it :
(2) S = eyam vrahmapurl Gay = eH jagati khyatd svayam vedhasa sthdtum brahmavi-
ddm pur = wa ghatitd moksasya saukhyasya ca vruinah kin = ca hhavanti yatra I
pitarah preta-
(3) -Iciydvdsinah pddasprsta-jala-pradana-vidhina ndk = angand-ndyakdh 11 AsydfH
vahhuva puri vakragati-dvijihva-samrdd~bhujanga-npur-acyuta-pddasev~i \
yo
(4) iidma visnuf-rathavad'^-dvijardjavaryah prltyd satdm ca Paritosa iti prasiddhahw
Tasmdd = vidher=iva vabhuva sanatkumdrah Sri Sudrako vimala-vuddir = ane-
kavidyah 1
(5) Bhuy-opi yen a vidMii = aiva krtd Gay = eyam vdhvor-valena suciram paripdlitd
ca \\ Tasmdd = ajdyata sutah sutavad=dvijdndm yo-bhut suvismaya-rasdvaha-
kartaka-}
(6) ^ = ca II
Vi^vdpakdraka-nirdkrtaye-vatirnnah Sri Viivarupa iti kirltita vi^varu-
pahwYam prdpya c= drthijana-vrndam-akalpa-ddnam = dptirbhavat * pulaka-
jdlam — ana-
(7) -nta-modam Sphlti-sphurad = dhana-krtdrthatayd durdpa-cintdmani-grahanakam
\
dvani-
(8) -y = uddhrt-eyam Srl-mad-Gayd-kali-mala-dvija-rdja-paksa-samksobha-kampita-
.
priydya vi-
J Proc. A.S.B., 1902, pp. 66-67. ' V' added afterwards. i>
Or — Kautaka
4 Read— manalpa-dauam = avirbbavat— » Read nisarga— 6 The last syllable of this line is superHuous.
—
son having covered a century. In the height of his power he had overrun the whole
of Northern India but in his old age he suffered many reverses. He was defeated by
the Candella Kirttivarman/ by Udayaditya of Malava/ by Bhimadeva I of Anahil-
vad, who is eulogised by the grammarian Hema-candra for having defeated Karna in
battle/ and by the Western Calukya Somesvara I, which is recorded by the poet
1 J.A.S.B., 1900, pt. I, p. 184. 2 Bendall's Cat. Skt. JISS. in the Univy. Liby., Cambridge , p. 175. No. it
I Vikramanka deva-carita, I, 102 3, XVIII, 93. 2 Mem. A.S.B., Vol. Ill, p. 22.
3 Ind. Ant., Vol. XXI, p. 97. * Ibid , Vol. XIV, p. 166.
mahesvara close by, in the fifth year of the reign of Vigrahapaladeva. As the record
has never been properly edited before I do so from the original stone :
—
(i) Om Om namah Sivaya Dayabhdndagdram niravadhi-jagad-dosa-vijayi \\
dvija-pada-sarojdka
(4) -ma premnd parama-paritosasya janandd = abhud = dhanyah ^rlmdn si khahi
Paritos-dhvaya iti Tasmdd = abhuj = jalanidh(r=iva SUaraSmih $n $u-
\\
=
drako vimalakdntir ananta-laksml [/i]
(5) kantha-sravabhirdmam^dnanditdniya^asd bhuvan-dntarani Asddy = dmara- ||
dmala-patra-bhangdn svairam
(8) -lekhanlbhih \
Adydpi yasya sura-kinnara-glyamdndm devyah Sildsti, vijaya-
stutim - dlikhanti ||
Dharmmen = otsvasitam mudd. vihasitam samloka maryd-
dayd trayyd visphuritam
(9) -ttribhir-jjrmbhitam yasmin-dsvdmini sarvvatah samudaye tepy-arthinah sdhasam
|
-gambhlr-dmbhasi majja
(12) -pi samvodhita ||
Yad=durggamam saratt durataram durdpam yac = cetasa
I yam lavdha ta. . . . dsit \
sahasra .... sramavirdhana caturdasydm-
drambha-rdma iti yah sphutatdm=upetah ||
Asydm bhu
(13) -pd dharmmena maryddayd rajya-^ribhir-alamkrtdh punar-aml bhog-aikadd .
pa ,
.
82 R. D. BANERJI ON
. . . .tatah sadhitah \
Uddhrtarthi-nisargga-dharmma-nirato yo
(16) siddhim-anayat-tam-eva kirttim punah \\ Kim vrumah yasy-
dsddhu-gunasya nasti mahatah kinna
(17) rMih suviSrtavayo yen-dkasmika-vismayena mukhar-dlokah karttur-agri
.... nivasanah sphtirad-dharagaram visrja
(18) -vydmvara-samcara-trptir-vvahu-manoja |
praSamanam sura-bhandani
jaladah \\
kanakeivara jaladah .... $n ViSvarup-dvaro
(19) tya sadacarau suviditah ^rl-satkula . . . .sarvva^ah satkuladrto' ksayavato devo
VateS-ahvayah || Ity-adyah sumanonurupa-racana-ratnd
(20) -jnam ca yah |
Yen-aty-adhhuta-vikramena tarasa Sn-mad-Gaya-mandale
asamsayam-udagra-dharmma-vijaya-stambha iv-ffropitah \\
Ten-d i
The original stone has suffered very much from the effects of weather so that it
is almost impossible to decipher the central portions of the lines at the middle of the
inscription. The only other known inscription of this king is the Bihar inscription
of the twelfth year noticed for the first time by Cunningham. ' He states that it is
Janata samasta i
Trailokya dlpam tam-ananta-murttim-avyahatahham.
Saranam prayata (i). \\
(2) S-eyam vrahmapuri Gay-eti jagati khyata svayain vedhasa sthatum vrahma-
vidam piir-lva ghatita moksasya saiikhyasya ca \
This inscription has been referred to the reign of Vigrahapaladeva because its
Succe?isors and
relations.
The Ramacarita mentions two uncles of Rimapala, Mahana
^^ Mathanadeva and his brother Savarnadeva, who belonged
_
Ristrakuta family. So Vigrahapila must have
to the
.jo
married another lady of the Rastrakuta family whose name has not come down to
us. Ramapala was the sjn of the Rastrakuta princess and not of the Cedi princess
Yauvanasri.
—
CHAPTER V.
After the death of Vigrahapala III, his eldest son Mahipala II ascended the
throne of his ancestors. According to the author of Ramacarita, untoward things
began to happen in this reign.' He did not act according to the advice of his
ministers and was not well disposed towards his remaining brothers Surapala and
Ramapala. He was told by the people that Ramapala was an
Accession of Mahipala II, , t,
,
.
,, j , , . • •
j. .
imprisonment of the Princes ^^^^ Prmce, as well as a popular and Vigorous admmistrator,
Ramapala and Surapila. and that he would kill him and take away his kingdom. So,
'^ °^ '^'^"
Bencal
^
^^ ^°^ cunning, he tried to kill him, and at last succeeded in
confining him in a prison.* It appears that Mahipala's
younger brother Surapala was sent to prison at the same time as his youngest brother
Ramapala: Aparena bhratira Su:apalena saha kastagaram kara^yfham mahattava-
nam raksanam yatra.^ This Surapala was older than Ramapala, because the author
of the Ramacarita states, that Ramapala 's son succeeded to the throne, though Sura-
pala was Ramapala' s elder.* The brothers were reduced to very great straits while
in prison.^ The author adds in another place that both brothers were sent to prison
because Mahipala had apprehensions of being dethroned by them.'' About this time
Divvoka, a former servant, by cunning, took away a part of Ramapala' s paternal
kingdom Varendri.'^ Mahipala went to fight against the confederate rebel's with the
small force at his command and fell in battle. This hap-
1 Comm. on V 31, p. 29, Mem. A.S.B., Vol. III. 2 Comm. on V 37, SC. L.C, p. 31.
'i Comtn. on V 33, L.C. p. 29. * Comm. on V 28, I/.C, p. 28. 8 Comm on V 35, I/.C, p. 28.
6 Comm. on V 36, L.C, p. 36. 1 Comm. on V 38, L.C, p. 31. 3 Comm. on V 31, L.C, p. 29.
9 Comm. on V 29, L.C., p. 28. 10 Comm. on V41, L.C, p. 32.
—
similar reason we do not find the name of Rajyapala, the eldest son of Ramapala, who
could not have reigned as he died in his father's lifetime :
Vigrahapala III
.__l
Gopala III.
The mention of Surapala's accession to the throne or the recognition of his chief-
ship in the Pala dominions, may have been omitted by Sandhyakaranandi, either
through carelessness, or as not being relevant to his subject. It may also be possible
that Surapala was Ramapala's rival for the throne, and though he had succeeded
temporarily he was overthrown in the long run and perhaps murdered at the instiga-
tion of his younger brother. Nothing is known about the extent of Surapala's reign
or his death. But it is quite certain that he was succeeded by his younger brother
Ramapala. In the course of time Diwoka had died and was succeeded by his brother
Rudoka. Rudoka was succeeded by his son Bhima, who on his succession, began to
harass the people, living in the tract of land, which was stiU left in the possession of
the Palas.^ At that time Ramapala was in great straits and thought himself to be
without friends.^ But his son and his advisors sought him, and urged him to take
the necessary steps, and he regained courage.* The author
Ramapala is urged by his of the Ramacarita states in another place that he became
Sivaraja crosses the Ganges either to reconnoitre the enemy s position or as a sort of
and enters the enemy's counter raid. Sivaraja so impetuously attacked Varendri
^°^^ ^^'
that the visayas and gramas in Bhima' s country became
distressed. Sivaraja began to enquire about the ownership of the lands so that the
properties of the gods and the Brahmanas might be protected.' He succeeded
in driving away Bhima' s followers from Varendri proper^ and
then came back to
1 Comm. on V 39, L.C, p. 31. ^ Coram, oa V 40, L C, p. 31- ^ Comm. ou V 26, L.C., p. 27.
* Comm. on V 43, L-C, p. 32. » Comm. on V 43, L.C, p. 32. « Comm. on V 44.
7 Comm. on V 47, L.C, p. 33. « Comm. on V 48, L.C, p. 34- * Comm. on V 40, L.C.
—
86 R. D. BANERJI ON
Devaraksita at first, he had subsequently, owing to some unknown reason, given his
daughter Sahkaradevi in marriage to him.* The probable reason is that either Deva-
raksita succeeded in defeating Mathana and a peace was concluded after the marriage,
or that Sahkaradevi was given to Devaraksita in order to draw him to the party of
Mathana and Ramapala. Whatever may be the fact of the case, we are sure that
1 Comm. on V 50, L.C. ' Annual Rep. of A.S. of India, 1907-S, p. 76. S Ep. Ind., Vol. IX, 324-26.
Devaraksita did not continue to be the ruler of Pithi for a long time, as we find
another king in that country when Ramapala led his expedition into Northern
Bengal. The relationship between the Palas, the Gahadavalas, the Rastrakutas of
Magadha and the rulers of PithI are shown in the table on following page.
by Dr. Sten Konow with the modern Pithapuram in
Pithi has been identified
the Madras Presidency.'- But this is perhaps wide of the mark. It is mentioned
as a separate principality, the ruler of which makes war upon the Pala Kings of Bengal,
and later on during the war between the Palas and the Kaivartta King of Bengal,
another prince of Pithi is mentioned as a feudatory or as an ally of the Pala King.
It was hardly possible for the Pala Kings after Nayapala
and Vigrahapala III to wage war with the princes of Pitha-
'
I
Ibid. -^
J.A.S.B. 1904, Pt. I, p. 17S, note i. = V. A. Smith Cat. of Coins. Ind. Mus, Vol. I, p. 263.
defeated the troops of a king of Kanyakubja, whose name has not been discovered
as yet. The position of Pithi is also indicated by this reference. It seems
to have been a buffer state between those of Kanyakubja and Gauda. The
Pratihara dynasty was falling, and the kingdom of the proud Gahadavala
was
rising on its ruins. It is quite possible that Bhimayasas of Pithi assisted Candra-
deva, the Gahadavala, to obtain the city of Kanyakubja and to overthrow the last
Gurjara-Pratihara King. The next prince in the order adopted by Sandhyakara-
nandi is Viraguna of the forest of Kota, who is also styled ''the over-lord of the
Southern thrones." But nothing is known about this king.
Viraguna of the South.
Dr. Kielhorn's lists of Northern and South Indian Inscrip-
tions do not contain any record which mentions this king of the South. Jaya
Siihha, the I,ord of Dandabhukti, seems to have been a man of great importance.
The position of Dandabhukti has already been indicated.^ It is represented at
the present day by the District of Midnapur. So Jaya
^''^^'^ °^ °^- ^"
^'"^^^ ^^^ ^^^ march-lord of the South. The commentary
bhflkti.
very appropriately mentions the defeat of the King Karna-
kesari of Utkala by this prince. It is more natural for the King of Orissa to fight
with a prince, whose land lay on his border, than with one, whose possessions
were separated from his by a belt of mountains and forests. The position of
Devagrama in Vala-valabhi , the king of which, Vikrama
Kesari. comes next in order, is far less certain. The com-
grS'^invflfvalabh?''"
mentary adds '
' Devagrama-prativaddha-vasudha-cakravala-
'
valavalabhi-tarahga-vahala-galahasta-prasasta hastavikramo. The explanation '
^
sura is said to be the Madhusudana of another Mandara and is described as the head
of all Forest feudatories " Samast-atavika-samanta-cakracudamanih." * The Mandara
mentioned here seems to be the hill of that name at present in the Bhagalpur district
of Bihar. Mandara hill commands the surrounding and
hilly
Laksmisura of Mandara.
^^^^^^ country to a great distance, and it may be that its king
90 R. D. BANERJI ON
lorded over the Saontals of the Forest. The name of the next prince is suggestive.
A_ , ,
Surapala is mentioned as being the chief of Kuiabati. The
burapala of Kujabati. . . , . ^.^ , _, .^
Tirumalai mscriptions mention a feudatory of Mahipala I,
named Dharmmapala, who ruled over Dandabhukti.' Perhaps these princes belonged
to theminor branches of the Imperial Pala Dynasty. Rudrasikhara of Tailakampa is
mentioned as a great warrior. Perhaps Mahamahopadhyaya Hara Prasada Sastrl's
Tailakampa with the modern TelkupiMn
identification' of
Rudrasikhara of Taila-
^^^ Manbhum district is correct, but there is no proof in
kampa. .
.
mentions five princes, and among the names of places over which they ruled only two
can be identified:
(i) Narasiriiharjjuna, the king of the Kayahgala mandala;
(2) Candarjjuna of Sahkatagrama
(3) Vijayaraja of Mdravala;
(4) Dorapavarddhana of Kausambi ; and
(5) Soma of Paduvanva.
Dorapavarddhana of Kausambi seems to have been a landlord of Varendri.
Kausambi seems to be the ancient name of the modern Pargana of Kusumba in the
Rajshahi District of Bengal. I am indebted to Prof. Jadunath Sarkar of the Patna
^^"'^fousinr''
family, and his eldest son Rajyapala, who died in his life-
« Mem. A.S.B., Vol. Ill, p. 14. 6 Comm. on V. 8, Mem. A.S.B., Vol. Ill, p. 38.
THE P5LAS OF BENGAL. 91
enemy's capital.
to be the capital of the enemy. Bhima remained a captive
and was placed in charge of a certain Vittapala.' The scattered forces of BhIma
were rallied by one of his friends named Hari. In the ensuing battle Ramapala' s son
contested every inch of ground and at last succeeded in defeating the Kaivarttas.
Hari was, at last, deprived of his forces, captured and executed with BhIma. Damara
seems to have continued its existence after its sack by
RSmapala,_ and even to this day a village named Damara-
\t?ture\tfciutfof '
to a fiscal division , and one of the circles in the Sirkar of Dakhnauti was named
Ramauti '°
in Ramauti is
Akbar's time. an exact transliteration of Ramavati as
Dakhnauti is of Laksmanavaii, and the identity of Ramauti with Ramavati has been
made certain by the discoveries of Babu Haridas Palit in the Maldah District. This
gentleman has industriously searched the environments of Ramavati and has traced
' Comm. on V. 10, p. 38.
L. C. 2 Comm. on V. 16, L.C., p. 40. ^ Comin on V. 20, L.C. p. .^i.
* Comm. on V. 27, Chap. I, ly.C, p. 27. 6 L.C, p. 14; V. 36, Ch. II, p. 45. 6 v. 38. Mem. A.S B., Vol. III. p. 46
1 V. 10, Ch. Ill, L.C, p. 47. 8 V. 2, Ch. Ill, L.C. f
J..-^ S.B., 1900, pt. I.
This king seems to be one of the Yadavas of Eastern Bengal. Two different
powers may have caused him to throw himself under the protection of Ramapala :
power. Samantasena was most probably getting very powerful at this time, and it
was he who seems to have caused the Yadava prince to seek the shelter afforded by
Ramapala.
In his later years Ramapala returned to Ramavati, leaving the cares of the
managementof the state to his eldest son Raj yapala.^ About this time Mathanadeva,
the king's maternal uncle, died. The king was residing at Mudgiri {Mtidgagiri or
Mungir) at this time ,^ and on hearing of his benefactor's
^^'^
and Ramapala. death distributed much wealth to the Brahmanas and
entered the sacred river Ganges. Mathanadeva must have
become a centenarian at the time of his death, and Ramapala himself had become a
very old man at the time of his death after forty-six years of reign.
Taranatha states that Ramapala reigned for forty-six years.' This is not
impossible as the Candimau image was dedicated in the 42nd year of the king. We
know the names of three of the sons of Ramapala, two of
Successors."
whom succeeded him on the throne. His eldest son, Rajya-
was an able man, and assisted his father in gaining the
pala,
throne, in the wars in Varendrl, and hnally in administering the kingdom in his father's
old age. He seems to have died during the Hfetime of his father, as we find that
Kumarapala succeeded after Ramapala's death. His third son, Madanapala, ascended
the throne after the death or dethronement of his brother Kumarapala' s son
Gopala III. We know nothing about the other relations of Ramapala except his
maternal uncles, Mathanadeva or Mahanadeva and Suvarnadeva and their sons Kahnu-
radeva and Sivarajadeva. Sandhyakaranandi's father, Praja-
^^'^ ^^^'
patinandi , was the principal minister of peace and war '
tion of an image of Tara by a certain Bhatta Icchara, in the 2nd year of the King's
reign. This image was discovered by the late Mr. A. M. Broadley, who read the
king's name as Ramapati.* Cunningham published it in one
^"'^aud'MS.' rSS*'"'''
of l^is reports.^ The inscription was finally pubhshed by
Babu Nilmani Chackravartti with a good ink impression in
1908.' It consists of two lines partly damaged, and is at present in the Indian
Museum.
The next record in order is a manuscript of the Astasahasrika Prajiiaparamita
written at Nalanda in the Magadha visaya. The manuscript was purchased by Dr.
A. F R. Hoernle from Nepal, during his stay in India,*' and afterwards acquired by
the Bodleian Library.'^ It was written in the 15th year of the king and its final
colophon runs as follows:
J — yanuttara jnandvdptaya iti, Mahardjddhiraja Parame$vara-Paramabhattdraka-
Paramasaugata ^rimad = Rdmapdladeva-pravarddhamana-vijayardjye fancada&ame
samvatsare ahhilikhyamdne yatramkenapi samvat 15, V aisaksadme krsnasaptamydm 7
Asti Magadhavisaye, $n N
alanddvasthita lekhaka Grahan akundena Bhattdrikdpra-
Late in the king's reign an image of the Bodhisatva Padmapani was dedicated,
at or near the modern village of Chandimau in the Bihar Sub-division of the Patna
District by an inhabitant of Rajagiiha. This inscribed image was discovered by
Cuunin'^ham in 1877 or 1878,^ but he did not attempt to read it. No attempt has
hitherto been made by anybody else to read this inscription. The image was found
lying number of broken ones in the outskirt of the village of Chandimau
among the
in August igii and was removed to Indian Museum. A part of the inscription
was broken owing to careless packing, but fortunately two inked impressions of
the inscription were taken while in situ, otherwise it would have become quite
impossible to read the date, as the part bearing the numerals for the year have
disappeared. This is the most interesting part of the epigraph as it proves conclu-
sively that Ramapaladeva reigned for a considerable length
The date of the Chandimau of time, at least 42 years, which made Taranatha's state-
ment about his length of reign acceptable. Cunningham read
the date as 12, but it certainly was 42. The inscription itself runs as follows :—
(i). Ye dharmmd hetu prabhavd hetu [m) tesdm hy = avadat [t) esdm {m) yo nirod-
1 L.C. p. 5S, v. 3. 2 Epi. lud., Vol. II, p. 348. s J.A.S.B. 1872, Pt. I, p. 282.
* Cimmngham's Aich. Survey Rep., Vol. Ill, p. 124. «
J. and P.A.S.B., Vol. IV, p. 109, pi. vii.
6 J.A.S B., 1900, pt. I, p. 100. ^ Cat. Bodleian Liby., Cambridge, Vol. II, p. 250, No. 1428.
» Cunningham Arch. Survey Rep., Vol. XI, p. 169.
— .
94 R. D. T5ANER.TI ON
this unique manuscript, by the discoverer himself, in the introduction to his edi-
tion of the Ramacarita, but I have since its publication learnt on enquiry from him
that the manuscript was purchased in Nepal in 1897 The Tiianuscript itself
consists of two different parts: (i) The text, which is complete, and (2) the
commentary, which is incomplete but older than the text. It runs up to the thirtj'--
fifth verse of the second chapter of the text. The text of the work is written
in Bengali characters of the 12th or 13th centuries on strips of palrnleaf. It is,
The
, , „
text ol the Ramacarita.
.
....._
Mahamahopadhyaj^a Hara Prasada
m nmitation of the Raghava-Pandavlya, in double entendre.*
Sastri observes, written
reigns of his successors, Kumarapala, Gopala III, and Madanapala. If the second
had no meaning The author had great facihties for the collection
to other persons.
of information as his father was Ramapala's Sandhivigrahika. The comparison of
Ramapala with Rama, the hero of the Ramayana, seems to have been habitual with
the courtiers of the nth century a.d. A verse of the Kamauli grant of Vaidyadeva
mentions the conquest of Mithila and a king named Bhima, and at the same time
compares Ramapala with Rama :
verse 4.'
Sudraka. The family was a very important one during the reigns of Nayapala
Vigrahapila and his sons. The following inscriptions of the family have been dis-
covered at Gaya :
(i) Inscription on the gate of the modern Ktsna-Dvarika temple, recording the
erection of a temple of Visnu by a low class Brahmana named Visvaditya in the 15th
year of Nayapaladeva.^
(2) Inscription inside the small temple dedicated to Narasiihha in the court-
yard Visnupida temple recording the erection of a temple to Gadadhara and
of the
—
several other minor shrines by one Visvarupa of the same lineage as Visvaditya
in No. I.'
(3) Inscription broken into two parts in the wall of small shrine under the
Aksayavata at Gaya, recording the erection of two temples of Siva Vatesa and —
—
Prapitamahesvara by the same Visvaditya.^
(4) Inscription under tlae image of Gadadhara at Gaya begins with an invoca- —
tion to the Sun-god and mentioning Paritosa, the grandfather of Visvaditya.^
I Epi. Ind., Vol II. p. 351. 2 lud. .4.nt,, Vol. XXXVIII, j). 243. ^ Ibid., Vol. XVI, p. 64.
* See ante, p, 79. 6 J.A.S.B, 1900, pt. I, pp. 192-93. » See ante, p. 78.
96 R. D. RANERJI ON
tion. The inscription was eventually found hidden behind a door inside a small
temple, on the side of a paved tank, called the Sitala temple, close to the river
Phalgu, and just behind the Gaya Zilla School. Dr. Kielhorn' s edition is transcribed
below, with the exception of the last word which he could not read from the rub-
bings :
1. Om namah
Suryaya Visaya-madhutkara-purnnamPrani-nikdy-aliviSva-Sata
||
The charactersof this inscription cannot be said to belong to the 12th century
A.D., as theform of the test letters are much earlier than those of Ramapai^a. Most
probably Yaksapala assumed independence during the troublesome times of the
reigns of Vigrahapala III, Mahlpala II and Surapala II. Perhaps he was contem-
porary of Ramapala during the earlier part of the latter's reign. He is not men-
tioned in the Ramacarita, and most probably he was subdued by Ramapala's
maternal uncle, Mathanadeva, who is styled Magadhddhipa in the commentary.
He might have continued to reign either as a subordinate prince, or as an indepen-
dent one, because no evidence is forthcoming to prove that any of the Pala
Emperors after Ramapala held any part of Western Magadha or South- Western
Behar. Ramapala's inscriptions have been discovered in Eastern Magadha, but
no Pala record after the time of Vigrahapala III have been found in the Gaya or
Shahabad District, except the two inscriptirms of Govindapaladeva. Another power-
ful dynasty of kings, who founded their monarchy on the ruins of the second Pala
noticed by Babu Nagendra Natha Basu in Vahgera Jdtiya Itihdsa, " Vol. II, p. 215
and plate. This copperplate grant was seen and examined by the author several
years ago. was obtained from the late Mr. Hari Nath De, and was photographed
It
with the permission of the owner. Very little can be made out of the grant at
present.
98 R. D. BANERJI ON
man, was, as we have seen, the contemporary of Vigrahapala III, who defeated the
Cedi King Karnna in Ahga, and obtained the hand of his daughter Vira-^ri,
conquered Kamarupa and Govarddhana, and acquired paramount power. His son
was Samalavarman, about whom we do not know much. The accounts of Samala-
varman as found in the genealogical works are wholly imaginary. He was succeeded
by his son Bhojavarman. The characters of the new grant show that Harivarman and
his father Jyotirvarman cannot either be placed before Vajravarman or taken to be
his descendants, because most probably Samantasena made an end of the Yadava
kingdom of Eastern Bengal shortly afterwards. So it appears probable that the two
dynasties were to some extent contemporaneous.
The first inscription has indeed been published by the late Dr. Kielhorn, but no
facsimile was published at that time. A complete analysis of the characters of
these three records or an attempt to fix the date of Harivarman would be out of
place here. I intend very shortly to publish another paper on the inscription and the
chronology of the Varman kings. It might suffice here to say that the copperplate
of Harivarmmadeva, though in a very bad state of preservation, gives us the name
of the king and his father. The last line of the first side and the first line of the
second contained the following sentences :
MaharajMhiraja-Smnad-Jyotirvarmmadeva-pdAoMitdhyata Paramavaisnava-Param-
etvara-Paramahhattdj'aka-Maharajadhiraja Srimad-Harivarmmadeva hi&ali.
The grant itself was issued from the victorious camp Vikramapura, and from
of
it we learn that part at least of Eastern Bengal belonged to Harivarmmadeva and
that he was preceded by his father Jyotirvarmmadeva on the throne. The charac-
ters of the records of those dynasties show that Harivarman cannot be placed in the
1 2th century a.d. Consequently it must be admitted that his father Jyotirvarmman
has to be placed in the earlier decades of the nth centur5^ The dynasty seems to
have continued for three or four generations. We learn from Bhuvanesvara in-
scription that Bhavadeva I received the village of Hastinibhitta from the King of
Gauda. His son was Rathahga, whose son was Atyahga, and from him was descen-
ded Adideva, who was the minister of peace and war {Sandhivigrahika) of the king
of Vahga. It is stated in verse 3 that the family settled in the village of Siddhala in
Radha. x\dideva's son was Govarddhana who was renowned as a warrior and most
probably served under Jyotirvarmmadeva. His son Bhavadeva II was the minister
of Harivarmmadeva and of his son also.
The newly discovered Belabo plate records the grant of 9 dronas of land in the
village of Upyalika, in the sub-division of Kausamvi-Astagaccha in the Mandala or
District of Adhahpattana, in the Division or Bhukti of Paundravarddhana, to a
Brahmana of the Yajur-deva, named Ramadevasarman, son
Visvarupadevasarman,
of
V alavalahhi-hhuj aiiga
Valavalabhi ismentioned as the name of a country in the Ramacarita of Sandhya-
karanandi. Vikramaraja of Devagrama in Valavalabhi had fought with Ramapala,
in the war, in Varendra.^ Mahamahopadhyaya Haraprasad
had identified Sastri
Valavalabhi with Bdgdi. He translates the passage of the commentary as follows :
" Vikramaraja, the Raja of Devagrama and the surrounding country, washed by
the waves of the rivers of Vala-Valabhi or Bagdi, one of the five provinces into which
Bengal was divided." The identification stands without any support. From the
description given in the commentary on the Ramacarita it appears that Valavalabhi
was pre-eminentl}^ a land of rivers, and must be identified either with Eastern or
Southern Bengal. The mention of Vikramapura in the copperplate grant of
Harivarman does not help us in fixing the chronology of the Varmans. It may be
that both dynasties occupied different parts of East Bengal at the same time and
may have laid claim to the ownership of the city of Vikramapur. So far we have no,
positive evidence to prove that Jyotirvarman and Harivarman were descended from
the Yadava Vajravarman, and we can only assume that they belong to co-lateral
branches of the same family.
The invasion of the great southern conqueror Rajendra Cola I seems to have left
some permanent marks in Bengal. We learn from the Sitahati grant of Vallalasena,
that the ancestors of Samantasena, the grandfather of Vijayasena, lived in the
country of Radha.'^ All Sena inscriptions agree in stating that the Sena kings were
descended from a family of Karnata Ksatriyas, i.e. from a family which originally
came from the Kanarese-speaking districts of Southern India. Though the Calukya
King, Vikramaditya VI of Kalyana, is said to have invaded Bengal during the
lifetime of his father Somesvara I,^ it cannot be said that the Calukya Kings effected
any perpianent conquest in Eastern India. But, on the other hand, Vilhanadeva's
remarks should be taken with great reservation, as none of the records of the Cedis
of Tripuri or Ratnapura mention any Calukya invasion of Northern India in the
middle of the nth century a.d. On the other hand, Rajendra Cola I defeated the
Calukya King, Jayasimha II, at Muyahgi or Musahgi, and though Calukyan poets
state that the Calukyas defeated the Colas, the definite terms of the Melpadi inscrip-
tion leave no doubt about the fact that the defeat of the Calukya Kings was decisive,
and Rajendra Cola I obtained a large amount of treasure from him.* Some obscure
Karnata Chief seems to have followed Rajendra Cola I and settled in Western
Bengal after the defeat of his Chief on the banks of the Ganges. From him was
descended Samantasena, who is generally taken to be the founder of the Sena
Dynasty. He seems to have succeeded in carving out a small principality for himself
in Western Bengal. In the Deopara pra^asti of his grandson, Vijayasena, it is
stated that he, Samantasena, defeated his enemies after being surrounded by them.'
None of the Sena Princes are mentioned in the list of Ratnapala's feudatories, and
most probably their relations with the Imperial Palas were not cordial. Samanta-
sena, probably, came to power during the disturbances, in the earlier part of the reign
of Vigrahapala III. We know nothing about his son, Hemantasena, who was most
probably a very tame vassal of the Emperor Ramapaladeva.
Ramapala's minister was Bodhideva, the son Yogadeva^ who was the piime
of
minister of his father Vigrahapala III. His minister for peace
Oincdrs
and war (Sandhi-vigrahika) was Prajapatinandi, the father
of vSandhyakaranandi. Mayana, one of his principal generals, conquered Assam for '
CHAPTER VI.
About this time Anantavarmman Codaganga invaded Western Bengal and over-
ran the countr}'- up to the banks of the Ganges:
Grhnati-sma karani hhumer-ganga-gotama-gaiigayoh 1 Madhye pa^yatsu viresu
praudhah praudha-striya iva. v. 22.^
Ramapaladeva conquered Utkala and Kaliuga during the reign of either Raja-
Raja I or his son Anantavarmman. It appears that Anan-
War wgh tiie King of
tavarmman invaded the territories of the P51a Kings imme-
diately after the death of Ramapala. It may be mentioned
in this connection that Vaidyadeva is said to have obtained a naval victory in
Southern Bengal, and it is quite possible that this victory was obtained over the
naval forces of Anantavarmman:
Yasy-anuttara-vahga-sahgara-jaye nauvata-hihirava-trastair-ddik-kayibhi^-ca yan-na
calitam cen-nasti tad- gamy a-bhuh Kin-c-otpdtukake-nipata-patana-protsarpitaih
Sikarair-aka^e sthirata krta yadi bhavet-sydn-niskalankah iasl. v. 11.*
1 Mem. A.S.B , Vol. Ill, p. 51. 2 Epi Ind., Vol. II., p. 351.
102 R. D. BANERJI ON
Nothing is known about the extent of Kumarapala's reign or the date of his
death. But he does not appear to have reigned more than two or three years. He
was succeeded by his infant son Gopaladeva (Gopala III) III:
Pratyarthi-pramada-kadamvaka-iirah-sindura4opakrama-kncla-patala-pm su-
suve Gopalani-urvvi'bhiij am i
Dhatri-palana-jrmbhmnana-mahima-karpuva-pam-
i-iltkarair-devah klrttim-a-yonijam vitanute yah SaiSave knditam} v. 17.
The infant king seems to have been murdered very soon after his accession :
The murder of the infant king and the subsequent accession of his uncle
Madanapala seems to point to a parallel of the murder of the infant King Edward V
by his uncle Richard III. iVbout this time some dispute seems to have arisen about
the succession, and ultimately Madanapala' s party seems to
His murder by Uadana- ^^^^ triumphed. Vaidyadeva ignores Madanapala completely
in the Kamauli copper-plate grant issued in the fourth year
of his reign, and so it must be admitted that Vaidyadeva declared his independence
after the murder of Gopala III. Till the reign of Madanapala the Pala Kingdom
I
J.A.S.B., 1900, Pt. I, p. 71. ' Mem, A.S.B., Vol. Ill, p. 51.
— —
^^^ ^'
' dha after this. Mjayasena did not remain content with
\'arendra. He despatched a flotilla of armed boats for the conquest of the Western
regions.
But the expedition does not seem to have been very successful, as otherwise the
incident would surely have been mentioned in Sena inscriptions. Madanpaladeva
was greatly assisted in his war against Vijayasena by Candradeva, the founder of
the Gahadavala Dynasty of Kanauj The author of the Ramacarita has gratefully
.
Madanapala seems to have beeu defeated by Vijayasena some time after the
year 1108 a.d., which is the probable date of his ManahaU inscription, when
Candradeva was dead. Candradeva must have died before 1104 a.d., as in that
year the Basahi Plates of his grandson Govinda-Candra were issued, and that prince
is styled " Maharajaputra " so it must be admitted that Candradeva had ceased to
,
reign at that time, and his son Madanpala sat on the throne.^
I
J.AS.B., 1900, Pt. I, p. 93. 2 Epi. IndL, Vol. I, p. 306. - Ibid., p. 307.
i Mem. A S.B., Vol. Ill, p. 307. 6 lad. Ant., Vol. XIV, p. 103.
104 R. D. BANERJI ON
Nothing is known about Madanapala save that he continued to reign for about
eleven years longer. Nothing is known about his sons or successors, their extent of
reigns or dominion. About fifty years after Madanapala's death, another prince of
the Pala Dynasty seems to have reigned in Magadha, but about this we shall have to
speak later on.
Four inscriptions of Madanapala have been discovered up to date, of which three
are votive inscriptions, incised on the pedestals of images, while the remaining one
is on a copper-plate. The earliest inscription is the " Mana-
nscnp ions.
hali " Grant,
which records the grant of a village, perhaps
named Kasthagirij in the Kotivarsa-Visaya of the Paundravardhana Bhukti, to a
Brahmana named Vatesvarasvami-sarmman an inhabitant of Campahitti, as daksina ,
for having read the Mahabharata to the great queen (Patta-Mahadevi) Citramatika,
on the 15th day of the month of Caitra, in the 8th year of the King's reign. The
order confirming the grant was issued from the city of Ramavati, which had been
founded by Ramapala.' An image of Sasthi dedicated in the same year was
discovered by Cunningham on Bihar Hill, but it cannot be traced at present.''
Another image dedicated on the 30th Asvina of the 19th year of the King was also
discovered by Cunningham at Jayanagar, near Ivakhisarai, in the Monghyr District;^
but this image also is missing at present.
new capital on the northern
After conquering Varendra, Vijayasena founded a
bank of the Ganges and named it after himself. The new capital was situated close
to Ramavati and its ruins have recently been discovered by
Vi]ayasena.
the Varendra Research vSociety.* He built a new temple
of Siva named " Pradyumnesvara " on the bank of a large tank, the site of which
also has been identified by the Varendra Archaeological Society. This temple was
situated in the village of Devapara or Deopara, which is about six miles distant
from Vijaypur Milik, the site of Vijayapur, the capital founded by Vijayasena.
Vijaypur Milik itself is situated on the banks of the river Ganges, about ten miles
due east from the town of Rampur-Boalia.
After defeating the King of Gauda, Madanapala, who has been identified with
Vijayasena attacked Mithila and conquered several Kings, viz., Raghava, Vardhana
and Vira.'' He led an expedition to Kamarupa and most
IS conques .
1 J.A.S.B., 1900, Pt. i, p. 71. s A.S.R., Vol. Ill, p. 124, No. 16. Epi. Ind., Vol V. App. p. 87, Note 4.
S Ibid„ p. 125, No. 17, Vol. XV, p. 174 ; Epi. Ind., Vol. V, App. p. 87, No. 645. 4 Gaiularajauiala, p. 65.
6 Epi. Ind., Vol. I, p. 309. 6 Ibid.
THE PALAS OF BENGAL. 105
Bengal formed a part of his kingdom, and also that the Varmman Dynasty had
ceased to reign. The kingdom was bounded on the East by that of Nanyadeva
in Mithila and that of Madanapala in Magadha. Vijayasena must have reigned for at
Length of reign: Sue- ^^^^^ forty years, as his newly-discovered copper-plate grant
cessors and relations: In-
was issued in the 37th year of his reign. He was succeeded
by his son Vallalasena, and the name of his wife Vilasadevi
is known to us both from his own copper-plate grant and that of his son. Only two
inscriptions of Vijayasena have been discovered up to date. The most important
one is the Deopara prasasti, recording the erection of the temple of Pradyumnesvara,
which must form the basis of all new accounts of the Sena Dynasty, for some years
to come. The other inscription is the newly-discovered copper-plate grant, which
was brought to me for decipherment by a friend several years ago, but which I am
unable to trace at present. This plate records the grant of a village to a Brahmana
of ^andilya Gotra as the daksina of the Tulapiirusa ceremony performed by the
Queen Vilasadevi, and was issued from Vikrampura in the 37th year of the King.
Vijayasena's death seems to have taken place about the year 1108 a.d. Vijayasena
was succeeded by his son Vallalasenadeva, who seems to have been an aged man
when he came to the tlirone. His name is well known throughout Bengal as the
founder of Kulinism. But as neither his own copper-plates nor those of his son
lyaksmanasena contain any references to Kulinism, even when referring to Brahmanas
to whom land was granted, the legend about its origin should be accepted with great
caution. The whole system may be of much later origin and of no historical impor-
tance at all. Vallalasena's dates, as found in some works on Law and Astronomy,
the autliorship of which are ascribed to him, are misleading. These dates are found
in some verses in the Danasagara, a work on L,aw, and in the AdbhUtasagara, a work
on Astronomy. I have pointed out elsewhere that these verses are not to be found
in all manuscripts of these two works, and should, therefore be taken as later addi-
tions.^ According to these verses, the Danasagara was compiled by Vallalasena in
s. 1091 =
1169 A.D."* and the Adbhutasagara was begun by him in s. 1090 1168 a.d.^ =
Mr. Manomohan Chakravartti has discovered another verse in the Danasagara accord- ,
ing to which Vallalasena ascended the throne in S. 1081 = 1159 a.d.*, but these verses
are hardly of an historical importance, as they appear to be later additions. If, on
later enquiry, these verses can be found in all the manuscripts discovered, even then
they cannot be accepted as basis for the construction of a chronology, so long as they
are to be found in modern manuscripts. If they can be found in manuscript records
of the I2th and 13th century a.d., then only these dates can be accepted as correct.
I have tried to show elsewhere that the Bodh-Gaya inscriptions of Asokacalla ^ prove
that L,aksmanasena died before 1070 a.d.," consequently, unless some contemporary
5 Bhandarkar's Report ou the Seardi for Sanskrit MSS. during 1887—88 and 1S90—91, p. Ixxxv.
record can be cited as evidence, it cannot be said, on the basis of the verses in the
Dan asagara and the Adbhutasagara, that Vallalasena came to the throne in 1159 a.d.
and wrote a book on I^aw ten years later. Only one inscription of this King has been
discovered up to date This is a copper-plate grant dis-
Inscription
covered in January, 1911, at Sitahati, near Katwa, in the
Burdwan District of Bengal. It records the grant of the village of Vallahitta in the
Uttara Radha Mandala of the Varddhamana bhnkti to a Brahmana named Ovasudeva-
Sarmman as the Daksina of the Hema^va-Mahadilna (the gift of a golden horse), per-
formed by the Queen Vilasadevi, the King's mother, on the i6th Vaisakha in the iith
year of his reign.' The Dutaka of this grant was the King's minister of peace and
war, Hari-ghosa, who is the only officer of Vallalasena whose name has come down to
us. Vallalasena married Ramadevi of the Calukya family and was succeeded by his
son Laksmanasena. As the initial year of the I^aksmanasena era is 1119-20 a.d.,
so I^aksmanasena must have ascended the throne in that year, conseqviently, Vallala-
sena cannot be taken to have reigned more than 12 or 13 j'^ears. He seems to have
been a peaceably inclined, weak, old man, studious in his habits, and a patron of
Brahmanism. Both he and his father seem to have belonged to the Saiva sect, as
their inscriptions begin with an invocation to Siva.
Step by step, the Gahadavala Kings of Kanauj advanced towards the East.
Govindacandra seems to have conquered the whole of Maga-
^^^of Magldh^''"'' dha in the earlier part of his reign (1114 54 a.d.). In 1127 =
he was in a position to grant a village in the Patna Dis-
trict to a Brahmana. An unpublished grant, a photograph of which has been kindly
lent to me by Prof. Jadunath Sircar, M.A., of the Patna College, records the dona-
tion of the village of Padoli, together with the village of Gunave in the Maniari Pattala,
to a Brahmana of the Kasyapa Gotra named Ganesvara-Sarman, after bathing in the
Ganges at Kanyakubja, on Sunday, the nth of the dark
half of Jyaistha of the Vikrama year 1183 = 1127 a.d. I
'^^'?and'r?^^?s.1?8T''"^^^
have been given to understand by Prof. Sircar that this new
inscription will shortly be published in the Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal.
The invasion Magadha by the Gahadavala King seems to have led to hostilities
of
between Govindacandra and I^aksmanasena. In the Madanapada Grant of Visvaria.
pasena and Edilpur Grant of Kesavasena, Laksmanasena is said to have erected
pillars of victory at Benares [Varanasi] and at Allahabad [Triveni).
Belayam daksinavdher-mmuiala-dhafa gadapani samvasavedydm Tlrotsange triven-
yah kamalahhava-makharamhha nirvvyajapiite yen-occair-yajna-yupaih saha
samara-jayastamhhamala nyadhayi. v.*
conquest of Bihar and Bengal. Govindacandra advanced as far as Monghyr in the year
'
1146 A.D. and granted the village of Tatacavada in the Pandala Pattala, in Govisa-
loka, that belonged to Dudhah in Saruvara, to a Brahmana named Thakkura ^rldhara,
after bathing in the Ganges at Mudgagiri (Monghyr) on the occasion of the Aksayatr-
tiya, on Monday the 3rd of the bright half of the
VaiSakha of the Vikrania year 1202,
the I5tli April, 1146 a.d.'^ Govindacandra was most probably leading an expedi-
tion into Bengal when he bathed in the Ganges at Monghyr,
Govindracandra iiwades j ,1 -n .,• m. i-^- ^ ,
short rock inscription near tlie Tutrahi Falls in the Shahabad District, the date of
which corresponds to 19th April, 1158 a.d.' According to an unpubhshed inscrip-
tion at Rohtasgadli, tlie King set up some monuments on the 27th March, 1169 a.d.^
108 R. D. BANERJI ON
The relations and the Gahadavala Kings of Kanauj has been made
between this chief
clear by the Tarachandi inscription of the same prince. This inscription was
edited by Dr. Fitz-Edward Hall in i860.' According to this inscription, in Sam-
vat 1225 on Wednesday, the 3rd day of the dark half of Jyaistha, = i6th April,
1169 A.D., Pratapadhavala announces that a certain copper-plate recording the grant
of the villages of Kalahandl and Badapila has been obtained by several Brahmanas by
biibing one, Deu, the slave of King Vijayacandra of Kanyakubja. The inscription
finally adds that the proprietary share of the rent should be collected yearly as before.
This inscription shows very clearly that though Pratapadhavala was semi-indepen-
dent, he was obhged to recognize the suzerainty of the Gahadav.ala King of Kanauj.
The villages stated above within his territories could be granted by the King of
Kanyakubja to anybod}^ he liked.
After the death of I^aksmanasena three of his sons seem to have come to the
throne :
— (i) Madhavasena, (2) Visvarupasena and (3) Kesavasena. Nothing is known
about the order of succession of these princes and their dates. Elsewhere I have
tried toprove that Madhavasena precedes the other sons of I^aksmanasena, Visvarupa,
and he in his turn preceded Kesavasena. One copper-plate inscription of each of
these princes have been discovered, viz., those of Visvarupa and Kesavasena. A
copper-plate of Madhavasena has been preserved in a monasterj^ in the Tehri State.
Visvarupsena is known from his now lost Madanapada Grant of the year 14 ^
of his reign. It records the grant of certain lands in the village Pinjakasthi in the
Vikramapura division (bhaga) of Eastern Bengal (Vanga) of the Paundravarddhana
bhukti to a Brahmana named Visvarupadeva-sarmman. His brother Kesavasena is
also known from his Edilpur Grant* of the year 3, which records the grant of
certain lands in the province (pradeia) of Eastern Bengal, the division (bhaga) of
Vikramapura and the bhukti of Paundravarddhana to Isvaradeva-^armman, a
brother of the A^isvarupadeva Sarmman of the Madanapada Grant. The Sena
The Fall of the Senas
Dynasty came to an end with the Muhammadan occupation
of East Bengal, and the last kings are not known.
In 1161 A.D. we find a king named Govindapaladeva
Magadha. His existence in
{s proved from a stone inscription and six manuscript records. But we are not yet
„ _, in a position to state clearly whether he belonged to the
Govindapala.
. ,
_°
Imperial Pala Dynasty or not. Yet the affix Pala and the
Buddhist titles (e.g. Parama-saugata) would lead us to believe that he was descended
from them. He seems to have come to the throne in 1161 a.d.,'" as the Gaya Stone
Inscription distinctly mentions that his fourteenth regnal year fell in y.s. 1232 =
1175 A.D. A manuscript of the Astasahasrikci Prajnaparamita discovered by Hodgson
at Nepal, which was copied in the fourth year of the King's reign, mentions the
pala-
11. -na-karinah 1 A-candra.rkam-imam dharmmam palayisyanti ye sukham 1
pratyavdam te-
15. Om ^
Some^varo-tra saksasti Padmandbho Gayadvija Devarupasya purato datta
c-aite Kaparddaka 1
.
The only peculiarity noticeable in this inscription is the use of the word gate. The
words giving the regnal year may be taken
(i) to mean that the Vikari Samvatsara and v.s. 1232 fell in the 15th regnal
(2) to mean that Govindapala himself was dead, but this was the 14th year from
the date of his consecration;
Vol. VIII, p. 3-
MSS. in the Royal Asiatic Society's Collection— J. R.A.S. (N.S.),
5 Cunningham's Arch. Survey Report, Vol. Ill, p. 125, pi. XXXVIII,
No. 18.
110 R. D. BANERJI ON
(3) to mean that Govitidapala was alive, but that part of the country which
once belonged to him, had then ceased to do so.
ant-dstena rakt-ddy-arthen-d
3. -nartha-bhedakdh \
Pada-sanjnakdmisu yusmad-asmat-tinavyayam Par am 11
(4) Colophone of a MS. of the Guhy avail vivriti in the collection of the University
of Cambridge ^ :
I
J.A.S.B (N.S.), Vol, VII, p. 757. 5 J. A S.B., 1900, Pt. I, p. ico, no.
25.
s Bendall's Catalogue of Buddhist Sanskrit MSS. in the University Library, Cambridge, p. iSS.
. — —
Colophone of a MS.
(5) of the Pancakara in the collection of the University of
Cambridge :
1 pancakdr-atmakam
sarvvam trailokyam sacaracaramyady-api rajyam nirvvika- \
syuh panca-
4. Kaulikah Kani panc-dvarandni jneyani kle&as-tatha
\
janma-karmma-sainin-
anam-aj nanan-ca tath-aiva-ca pancavarandni 1
$rimad-Govinda-pala-
devanam vina^ta-rdjye asta-trimiat-samvatsare 5
7. bhilikhyamanc Jyai^tha-Krsn-astmyam tithau Yatra sam
.
38 Jyaisthadine 8
likhitam-idam pustakam Ka ^rl-Gaydkaren-eti
(7) A MS.
Astasdhasnkd Prajndpdramitd examined by Mahamahopadhyaya
of the
Hara Prasada Sastrl in 1893. "The work is on palm-leaves pressed between two
wooden boards, with through holes in place of strings. One of the
sticks inserted
boards is besmeared with sandal paste, which has accumulated there for ages. The
MS. was evidently an object of worship, and as Prajiiaparamita is also called Raksha-
Bhagavati, it appears to have been regarded as a charm for protection against evils.
The MS. was copied in the 38th year of Govindapala, who is styled Gauresvara, i.e.
the year 1198 a.d.''
i Bendall's Catalogue of Buddhist Sanskrit MSS. in the University Library, Cambridge, p 190.
s J.A.S.B., 1893. Pt. I, p. 253.
—
112 R. D. BANERJI ON
It will be observed that out of these eight records only two mention the King
as Hving. In No. 8 we find the usual titles and no peculiarity, consequently it can be
admitted that Govindapala reigned for at least four years. In No. 4 though titles
have been omitted yet the absence of such formulae as Parameivaretyadi Rdjdvali- '
'
purvvavat" at the beginning, and such phrases as " gatarajye," " atltarajye" and
" vinasta-rajye " make it certain that the King Govindapala was alive in the 37th
year from the date of his consecration, 1197 a.d. This being admitted, we find
i.e.
that the phrases gata and atita are used in other records in a pecuhar sense, signifying
that the reign of the Prince was at an end, in that particular locaUty, but that it was
still continuing at some other place. Thus in the Gaya Inscription of the Vikrama year
1232 the use- of the word gata means that Govindapala's reign had ceased at Gaya,
but was continuing somewhere else. The use of the word Atita in the MS. discovered
by Mahamahopadhyaya Hara Prasada Sastri, which was copied in 38th year of his
reign, signifies that his reign was at an end at the place where the MS, was copied.
Only the use of the special word Vinasta in No. 6 signifies that the remnants of his
authority was destroyed in that year, as has been correctly interpreted by Bendall,*
by the Muhammdans under Bakhtyar-Khilji. It appears
EJxtent of Kingdom.
^^^^ Govindapila ruled lower part of Eastern Magadha
close toNalanda and yet bore the title of Gaudeivara. He was recognized as the real
King by Buddhists in all parts of the country. He managed to continue his reign till
1199, when Cauhan, Gaharwar, Pala and Sena were all swept away by the whirlwind
of Muhammadan invasion.
Postscript.
" The year 13, the 14th day of Marggasirsa, of the reign of the illustrious Vigraha-
paladeva. The religious gift of the goldsmith Deheka, son of Sahe."
1 J.R.AS. (N.S.), Vol. VIII {1876), p. 3 ; Astashasrika-Prajnaparamita (Bib. Ind., Calcutta, iSS8), Preface, p. xxii,
Note.
•2
Catalogue of Buddhist Sanskrit MSS. in the University Library, Cambridge, Introduction, p. iii.
I have since been informed by Pandit Rajani Kanta Chakravartti of Maldah and
Babu Aksaya Kumar Maitreya of Rajshalii that Babu Haridas Paht's identification
of Amarti with Ramanti is not correct. I am also informed that there are no villages
called Jagdala or Damrol near Amarti in the Maldah District.
R. D. Banerji.
20 7-1914.
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INDEX .
A Page Page
Adbhutasagara, work on astronomy as- Bhavadeva I . . . . . 98
cribed to Vallalasena . . 105, 106 Bhavadeva II, minister of Harivarmma-
Adideva, Sandhivigrahika of the king of deva . . . . . 98
Vanga . . . . .
98 Bhima, Rudoka's son, 85 execution ; of 91
Adityasena, independent king of Magadha 43 Bhimadeva I of Anahilvad . . .
79
Adivaraha, see Bhoja I. Bhimayasas, prince of Pithi and Magadha 87, 89
Adwand Bihar, see Uddandapura. Bhoja (N.-E. Rajputana) . . . 51
"Amarakosa " .. .. .. no I, expedition against Bengal of .
58, 59
Amoghavarsa T . . 49, 51, 52, 56, 59, 65, 66 I, Gurjara king 52, 55, 58, 59, 64, 65.
Anantavarmman, king of Orissa . . loi II, son of Mahendrapala and De-
Andhra country . . . . 62 hanaga . . . . . 65, 66
Afiga . . 56, 59 Bhojavarman . . . . .
97
Asoka, XIII rock edict of . . .
69 Bihar . . . . 43, 45, 71
" Astasahasrika Prajfiaparamita " Boar incarnation . . . 86
65,74. 93. 97. 108, no, III Bodhisatva Padmapani, Chandimau im-
Atisa, the life of age of . . . . .
93
. . .
77
Avanivarman I . . . . . 52 Brahmanas, descent of . . .
57
" Brhat Saihhita "
II . . . . .
52 . . .
47
Avanti (Malwa) . . . .
50, 51 Buddhist Vihara, built by Ramapala at
Ramavatl . . . . .
91
8
C
Baladitya, temple at Nalanda burnt by 75
Cakrayudha . . . 48, 49, 50, 51, 52-
Balavarman . . . . .
52
Cambay plates of Govinda III .
48
Benares occupied by Mahipala . .
70
Canda-kausika, a drama by Arya Ksemi-
Bengal, invasions of
svara . . .
73
From Assam, from Kanauj, 43 by
43 ; ;
Cedis . .
59, 70, 99
tribes, by Krsna II, 66 by Goviu-
63 ; ;
Chahamana Guvaka I . .
53
dacandra, 107 by Vikramaditya VI, ;
race of . . . . . 50 I
Dayitavisnu, grandfather of Gopala I . . 45,
...
..
. " ..
. ... .. .... — .
... .......
.. ......
INDEX.
Page Page
T)eddadevi, the wife of Gopala I 47 Grants
Dekkariya (Dhekura, Dhekuri ?) 90 Amgachi 47.70
Deposition of Indrayudha .
51 Amoghavarsa I, grant of 49.52
Devagupta Bangarh 80
43
Devakhadga, Jatakhadga's sou 67 Baroda 52
Devapaladeva 47, 53, 55, 56, 57, 62, 69 Belabo 97
Devapara, see Inscriptions —Deopara. Benares 65
Devaraksita of PithI, wars of Ramapala Bhagalpur .
47. 48, 50, 57. 60, 62
with . . . . 86, 87 Dinajpur 47, 70, 76
" Dharmmamangala . . . 46 Edilpur 106
Dharmmamitra, Buddhist elder . 62 Harivarmmadeva 97
Dharmmapala (Dharmmapaladeva) Kamauli 45. 94. 95
46, 47, 48, 49, 50, 51, 52, 53, 56, 62 Khalimpur . .. 45.47.51.53,54
, a feudatory of Mahipala . 90 Madanapada 106, 108
Dhruvaraja, father of Govinda III Manahali 47.57.62,76,84,91, 103,104
44> 49. 50, 51, 52 Monghyr 53. 56, 57
II of Gujarat . . 65 Mungir 47
Divvoka, " rebel " Govinda-candra 106
. 84, 85, 87 Patna grant of
Dorapavarddhana of Kausambi .
90 Radhanpur . 44. 50, 52
Dravidas ( = Rastrakutas) .. .. 56 Sitahati grant of Vallalasena • 72,99
Tarpandighi 107
Una grant of Mahendrapala 52
Wani grant by king Govinda III . • 44, 50
Eastern Bengal, independent kingdom in 67
" Guhyavali vivriti " no
Empire, the Second Pala . . . 68, 69
Guj arat branch of the Rastrakuta family 52
Guravamisra, Kedaramisra's son 56, 62, 69
G Gurjara family . 49. 58, 60, 63, 64, 89
Gadadhara, temple at Gaya 78, 79, 95 Pratihara Empire . 66, 67, 69
Gahadavala . 87, 88, 89, 106, 107, 108 Gurjaras, 45, 50, 51, 52, 55, 56, 58, 66, 70, 77
Gandhara (N.-W. Frontier Provinces) . 51
Ganges and Yamuna, confluence of . 66 H
-, bridge of boats on the . . 90, 91 Haihaya king of Tripuri . . 58
Gangeyadeva, king of Cedis 70, 74, 76 Hari, Bhima's friend, execution of . 91
Garga, Dharmmapala's minister 62 Harivaiiisa-purana (Jaina) . . 48, 50
Gauda, 43, 44, 45> 56, 59. 77' 89 ;
occupied Harivarmman . . . . 98
by Mongols 63 " Harsacarita " .. .. 44
, Kamboja kings of 69 Harsadeva . . . • •
43
Gaya, city of . . 58, 59. 60, 61 Harsavarddhana . 43. 44
Ghanarama, author of Dharmmamangala 46 Hastipala . . . .
95
Gopala (Gopaladeva) I • • 45. 47. 48, 62, 84 Himalayas . . . . .
55
II . • 65, 66, 69, 70 Hunas, humbled by Devapala .
56, 76
Ill . . . 84, 85, 92, 94, 102
Gopaladeva's election . .
45 I
INDEX.
Page
Inscriptions
Adityaseiia's . .
43
Aksaj-avata . 80, 83, 95
Asni inscription of Mahipala . 64
Badal pillar inscription. . 55, 56, 57, 63, 68
Banka's
...... .....
.. ...
..
. ... ... .....
INDEX,
Pag,' Page
Kokkala I, Cedi emperor N
Kosala (Orissa hill tracts) .
43, 71 Nagabhata II . 45, 49, 50, 51, 52, 5.?
Krsna II, Rastrakuta king 66
.
Nagavaloka, defeated by Karkaraja . 53
Ill 66 Nagavariisa, Utkala returned to . 92
Ksitipala, see MahTpala
Nalanda . 56, 65, 70, 75, 109, 112
Kuliuism, Vallalasena the founder of 105
.
Nanyadeva, king of Mithila . - 103
Kumarapala . 84, 85, 92, 94, lor, 102 60
Narasiihha, victorious chief of Indra III..
Kufigas, subdued by Karnnadeva .
77 Narasimhadeva II, king of Orissa . 72
Kuru (Eastern Punjab) . . 51 Narasirhharjjuna of Kayafigala . 90
Narayana, Umapati's grandson, author of
Parisistaprakasa . • 5S
Laijadevi, the wife of Vigrahapala I Naiayanapala 47, 48, 50, 56, 57, 58, 59, 61, 62^
. 58
Ivaksmanasena, Vallalasena's sou 105, 106, 107 63, 69
79. 87, 95
IVI
Northern Bengal campaign of Ramapala 87
Madanapala, 47, 57, 84, 85, 88, 92, 94, 102, 103, India, conquered by Dharmmapala 50
104 Indian politics in the 8th and 9th
Madhavagupta . . .
43 centuries . . . 48
Madhavasena . . . 108
Magadha 43, 56, 58, 59, 60, 63, 64, 69, 77, 97, O
103, 104, 112 Odra, see Orissa.
recovered by the Palas 65, 66, 70
Mahana, king of Aiiga . . . 86, 87
Mahasamanta, see Karkaraja II
Mahendrapala 52,.
59, 63, 64, 65, 66
Mahindrapala (Mahendrapala) . 64
Mahlpala I, 47, 57, 59, 63, 66, 69, 70, 72, 73, 74,
75. 7&. 90
II . 61, 76, 83, 84, 85, 97
Mahmud of Ghazni . .
70
Mahodaya, see Kanauj.
Malava . . . . 56, 59
Mandara, Laksmisura, king of .
89
Mathanadeva, uncle of Ramapala, 83, 90, 92, 93, 97
Matsya (N.-E. Rajputana) . . 51
Mayana, conqueror of Assam . . 92, loi
Mithila (see Tirabhukti) conquered by
Mahipala, 70, 73, 74, 95 ;
attacked by
Vijayasena .. .. .. 104
Monghyr = Mudgagiri)
( . . 107
Mongolian tribe, invasion of North Ben-
gal . . 63, 68, 69
Mudgagiri, siege of .
39, 60, 62
Muhammadan occupation . . 68, 108, no, 112
Muralas, subdued by Karnnadeva .
77
Mythical accounts of the origin of the
Palas .. .. • 45
... ...... ....
.
INDEX.
Page
Rajyapala, Devapala's son .
56, 57, 60
Narayanapala's son, marriage of,
" Ramacarita"
45, 46, 48, 71, 84, 86, 89, 94, 103
Ramadevi, Vallalasena's wife 106 .
Ramapala 57, 71, 83, 84, 85, 85, 87, 88, 90, 91,
s
Sakambhan . . . .
53
Samalavarman, son of Jatavarman .
98
Samantasena, founder of Sena dynasty 98, 99, 100
Sandhyakara-nandi, author of " Rama-
carita" . . . . 45, 48
Sankaradevi, Mathana's daughter, married
to Devaraksita of Pithi
....
.. ...
. ..... ...
....
INDEX.
Page Page
Vijayasena . .
103, 104, 107
Vikramaditya VI, Calukya king Y
.
99
Vikrama KesarT, king of Devagrama in Yadavas . . . . .
92, 98
Vala-Valabhi . . .
gg Yadu (Sindh) 1 . . . . . 51
Vikramapura .
Yaksapala of Gaya
.
gg . . •
95> 97
Vikramaraj a . .
.
gg Yasovarmmadeva of Kanauj .
43
Vikramasila . . . . . .
65
Yasovarmmapura Vihara . . . 5^
Vindhya hills . . . .
55
Yauvanasri, Karnadeva's daughter, mar-
Vira-SrI, daughter ofKarnadeva 98
Visnu temple erected by Nayapala ried to Vigrahapala III . . . 80, 83
.
79
Visnugupta Yavana (Western Punjab) . . . 51
. . .
43
Visvaditya Yogadeva, minister of Ramapala . loi
.
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