Kan Sastri



Mahendravarman I (600–630 CE) was a Pallava king who ruled the Southern portion of present day Andhra region and Northern regions of what forms present-day Tamil Nadu in India in the early 7th century. Kallidaikurichi Aiyah Nilakanta Sastri (12 August 1892 – 15 June 1975) was an Indian historian who wrote on South Indian history. Many of his books form the standard reference works on the subject. Sastri was acclaimed for his scholarship and mastery of sources and was a recipient of the third highest Indian civilian honour of Padma Bhushan.

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Vrindavan Ka Kan Kan Bole - His Holiness Mridul Krishna Shastri. Durdhara was the first queen of the Maurya Empire and wife of Chandragupta Maurya, the founder of the 4th-century BCE Maurya Empire of ancient India, according to the 12th century CE Jain text. 1.South India and her Mohammedan Invaders: written by KAN Sastri who was a pioneering historian of South India. South India & Her Mohammedan Invaders. Early Muslim expansion in South India: Early Muslim Expansion in South India. Sources of Vijayanagar History. Sources of Vijayanagar history. 4.Vijayanagar Sexcentenary Commeration Volume.

Mahendravarman I
The rock-cut temples at Mahabalipuram. Construction of these started in the reign of Mahendravarma I[1]
Pallava king
Reign600–630 CE
PredecessorSimhavishnu
SuccessorNarasimhavarman I
IssueNarasimhavarman I
HousePallava
FatherSimhavishnu
Pallava Kings (200s–800s)
Virakurcha
Vishnugopa II
Simhavarman III
Simhavishnu
Mahendravarman I(600-630)
Narasimhavarman I(630–668)
Mahendravarman II(668–670)
Paramesvaravarman I(670–695)
Narasimhavarman II(700-728)
Paramesvaravarman II(728–731)
Nandivarman II(731–795)
Dantivarman(795–846)
Nandivarman III(846-869)
Nrpatungavarman(869-880)
Aparajitavarman(880-897)

Mahendravarman I (600–630 CE)[2][3] was a Pallava king who ruled the Southern portion of present day Andhra region and Northern regions of what forms present-day Tamil Nadu in India in the early 7th century. He was a scholar, painter, architect, musician. He was the son of Simhavishnu, who defeated the Kalabhras and re-established the Pallava kingdom.

During his reign, the Chalukya king Pulakeshin II attacked the Pallava kingdom. The Pallavas fought a series of wars in the northern Vengi region, before Mahendravarma decimated his chief enemies at Pullalur (according to Pallava grants at Kuram, kasakudi and tadantottam). Although Mahendravarma saved his capital, he lost the northern provinces to Pulakeshin.[4] Tamil literature flourished under his rule, with the rise in popularity of Tevaram written by Appar and Sambandhar. Mahendravarman I was the author of the play Mattavilasa Prahasana which is a sanskrit satire and another play called Bhagavadajjuka.

Kan Sastri A History Of South India

Mahendravarma was succeeded to the throne by his more famous son Narasimhavarman I in 630 CE.[2]who defeated Pulakeshin II of Chalukya dynasty and ransacked the Chalukyan capital city of Vatapi (also known as Badami).

Tribute

Patronage of arts and architecture[edit]

Mahendrravarma was a great patron of letters and architecture. He constructed a Lighthouse in Mahabalipuram and also constructed Kanchi University where vedas, Buddhism, Jainism, Painting, Music & Dance was taught. He was the pioneer of Rock-cut Architecture amongst the Pallavas.[5] The inscription at the rock-cut Mandagapattu Tirumurti Temple hails him as Vichitrachitta and claims that the temple was built without wood, brick, mortar or metal. The five-celled cave temple at Pallavaram was also built during his reign as was the Kokarneswarar Temple, Thirukokarnam of Pudukottai, Tamil Nadu.[6]He made Kudimiya malai Inscription. His paintings are found in Sittanavasal Cave (Tamil Nadu).

Fine examples of his rock-cut temples can be witnessed at Mahabalipuram, (Satyagirinathar and Satyagirishwarar twin temples), Siyamangalam (the Siva temple Avanibhajana Pallaveswaram) in North Arcot district and the upper rock-cut temple at Trichy. Apart from the Siva temples, Mahendravarma also excavated a few Vishnu cave temples, the Mahendravishnugrha at Mahendravadi, and the Ranganatha Temple at Singavaram in present-day Gingee (then North Arcot district).[7]

He was also the author of the play Mattavilasa Prahasana, a farce concerning Buddhist and Saiva ascetics. He is also claimed to be the author of another play called Bhagavadajjuka,. This is evident by the inscriptions found at Mamandur cave shrines (near Kanchipuram - this place is mentioned as Dusi Mamandur to avoid confusions with other places by the same name). However, there is an alternate view that attributes this play to Bodhayana.[8]

Kansas Tricare

Religion[edit]

Mahendrravarma was initially a patron of the Jainism,[9] but he converted into the Saiva faith under the influence of the Saiva saint Appar. According to Dhivyacharitam a Sanskrit work on life of Alwars written in 12th century, Yatotkara perumal (mahavishnu), enshrined in Kancheepuram left the city along with his great devotee Thirumalisai Alvar, because the Vaishnava Alwar faced tough persecution and exilement from the king who had at least temporarily come under the influence of Jainism.[10][11]

In literature and popular culture[edit]

Mahendravarman I is a prominent characters in Tamilhistorical fiction novel Sivagamiyin Sapatham by Kalki Krishnamurthy, that talks about the first Vatapi invasion into the Pallava Kingdom, Mahendravarman's heroic deeds in the war and securing the Kanchi fort from the imminent invasion of the huge Vatapi army, his loss to the Vapai Pulikesi and eventual death.

Notes[edit]

Kansas Tribute

  1. ^Sen, Sailendra (2013). A Textbook of Medieval Indian History. Primus Books. p. 41. ISBN978-9-38060-734-4.
  2. ^ abHall, John Whitney, ed. (2005) [1988]. 'India'. History of the World: Earliest Times to the Present Day. John Grayson Kirk. 455 Somerset Avenue, North Dighton, MA 02764, USA: World Publications Group. p. 246. ISBN1-57215-421-7.CS1 maint: location (link)
  3. ^Seventeen, Volume (1885). Indian kingdoms by royal asiatic society of great britain. Royal asiatic society of great Britain.
  4. ^KAN Sastri, A History of South India, p136
  5. ^Gopal, Madan (1990). K.S. Gautam (ed.). India through the ages. Publication Division, Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Government of India. p. 217.
  6. ^KAN Sastri, A History of South India, p412
  7. ^KAN Sastri, A History of South India, p413
  8. ^KAN Sastri, A History of South India, p313
  9. ^Somasundaram, O; Tejus Murthy, AG; Raghavan, DV (2016), 'Jainism - Its relevance to psychiatric practice; with special reference to the practice of Sallekhana', Indian J Psychiatry, 58 (4): 471–474, doi:10.4103/0019-5545.196702, PMC5270277, PMID28197009
  10. ^KAN Sastri, A History of South India, p 382–383
  11. ^Stein, p 122

References[edit]

  • Prasad, Durga (1988). History of the Andhras up to 1565 A. D. Guntur, India: P. G. Publishers.
  • Sastri, K A N (2008). A History of South India (4th ed.). New Delhi, India: Oxford University Press.
  • Stein, Burton (1998). A history of India. Cambridge, MA: Blackwell Publishers. ISBN0-631-20546-2.
Preceded by
Simhavishnu
Pallava dynasty
600–630
Succeeded by
Narasimhavarman I

Kansas Tribes

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