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Anga

Anga (Sanskrit: Aṅga) was an ancient Indo-Aryan tribe of eastern South Asia whose existence is attested during the Iron Age. The members of the Aṅga tribe were called the Āṅgeyas.[1]

Aṅga
Unknown (~1100 BCE)–c. 530 BCE
Aṅga and other kingdoms of the late Vedic period
Aṅga and other Mahajanapadas in the Post Vedic period
Aṅga is the easternmost, south of Vajji and east of Magadha
CapitalChampapuri (near modern Bhagalpur) and Malini (near modern Munger), Bihar
Religion
Historical Vedic religion
Buddhism
Jainism
GovernmentMonarchy
• 
Brahmadatta
Raja (King or Chief) 
Historical eraIron Age
• Established
Unknown (~1100 BCE)
• Disestablished
c. 530 BCE

Counted among the "sixteen great nations" in Buddhist texts like the Anguttara Nikaya, Aṅga also finds mention in the Jain Vyakhyaprajnapti's list of ancient janapadas.

Location

Aṅga proper was located between the Champā river to the west and the Rajmahal hills to the east. However, at times, its territories did extend to the sea in the south, or included Magadha in the west.[1]

The capital of Aṅga, named Campā, was located at the confluence of the Campā and Gaṅgā rivers, and corresponds to the modern-day villages of Campāpurī and Champanagar in the eastern part of the Indian state of Bihār. According to the Jātakas, Campā was also called Kāla-Campā, while Puranic texts claim its ancient name was Mālinī.[1]

The other important cities within the Aṅga kingdom included Assapura (Sanskrit: Aśvapura) and Bhaddiya (Sanskrit: Bhadrika).[1]

Etymology

According to the Mahabharata (I.104.53-54) and Puranic literature, Aṅga was named after Prince Anga, the founder of the kingdom, and the son of Vali, who had no sons. So, he requested the sage, Dirghatamas, to bless him with sons. The sage is said to have begotten five sons through his wife, the queen Sudesna.[2] The princes were named Aṅga, Vaṅga, Kaliṅga, Sumha and Pundra.[3]

The Ramayana (1.23.14) narrates the origin of name Aṅga as the place where Kamadeva was burnt to death by Siva and where his body parts (aṅgas) are scattered.[4]

History

Kingdom

Aṅga was first mentioned in the Atharvaveda, where it was connected to the Gāndhārīs, Mūjavats, and Māgadhīs. The founder of Aṅga might have been the king Aṅga Vairocana, who is mentioned in the Aitareya Brāhmaṇa as a ruler who had been consecrated by the Aryan ritual of Aindra mahābhiśeka.[1]

Vedic literature such as the Baudhāyana Dharmasūtra nevertheless listed the Āṅgeyas with peoples described as being of "mixed origin."[1]

Aṅga was a powerful kingdom at the time of the Aitareya Brāhmaṇa, which mentions the "world conquest" of one of the Āṅgeya kings, to whom the girls of aristocratic families were brought as prizes. The Āṅgeya capital of Campā itself was counted until the time of the Buddha's death among the six most prominent cities of northern South Asia, along with Rājagaha, Sāvatthī, Sāketa, Kosāmbī, and Vārāṇasī.[1]

During the Iron Age, Aṅga expanded to include Vaṅga within its borders, with the capital city of Campā being a wealthy commercial centre from where traders sailed to Suvarṇabhūmi. According to the Kathā-sarit-sāgara, the Āṅgeya city of Viṭaṅkapura was located on the shores of the sea.[1]

During the 6th century BCE, the king of Aṅga was Dadhivāhana,[1] who was married to the Licchavika princess Padmāvatī, who was herself the daughter of the consul of the Licchavika republic, Ceṭaka.[5] Ceṭaka's sister Trisalā was the mother 24th Jain Tīrthaṅkara, Mahāvīra, thus making Ceṭaka his uncle and Padmāvatī his cousin; Ceṭaka himself had become an adept of the teachings of Mahāvīra and made the Licchavika capital of Vesālī a bastion of Jainism, and the marriages of his daughters contributed to the spreading of Jainism across northern South Asia.[6] The daughter of Dadhivāhana and Padmāvatī, Candanā or Candrabālā, became the first woman convert to Jainism shortly after Mahāvīra attained Kevala.[1]

Under Dadhivāhana's rule, Aṅga had conquered its western neighbour, the state of Magadha, hence why the Vidhura Paṇḍita Jātaka described the Māgadhī capital of Rājagaha as a city of Aṅga.[1] This conquest brought Aṅga in direct contact with Magadha's western neighbour Vatsa, whose king Śatānīka attacked the Āṅgeya capital of Campā out of fear of Dadhivāhana's expansionism. Dadhivāhana instead sought friendly relations with Vatsa, and he gave his daughter in marriage to Śatānīka's son, Udayana.[1] After Śatānīka's death from dysentery at the same time as a campaign against Vatsa was being carried out by the king Pradyota of Avanti, the latter became the overlord of Vatsa, and Udayana lived as a captive at the court of Pradyota, in Ujjenī.[7]

During Udayana's captivity, the state of Kaliṅga attacked Aṅga and took Dadhivāhana captive. It was once Pradyota had restored Udayana to his throne, after the latter's marriage to his daughter Vāsavadattā, that Udayana was able to defeat Kaliṅga and restore Dadhivāhana on the Āṅgeya throne, and Dadhivāhana's daughter Priyadarśikā was married to Udayana; according to the later play Priyadarśikā, which itself rests on historical records,[8] the Āṅgeya chamberlain took brought her into the refuge of the forest-king Vindhyaketu, from where she was captured by Udayana's army and, given the name Āraṇyikā ("she who is from the forest") after being assumed to be Vindhyaketu's daughter, was brought to Vatsa to become servant of Vāsavadattā, and later married Udayana after the Āṅgeya chamberlain recognised her as once Udayana had defeated Kaliṅga.[9]

Aṅga's prosperity ended when, in the middle of the 6th century BCE, the Māgadhī crown prince Bimbisāra Śreṇika avenged his father's defeat against Aṅga by defeating and killing the Āṅgeya king Brahmadatta, after which Aṅga became part of the Māgadhī empire, and Campā became the seat of a Māgadhī viceroy. [1][10]

Later history

During his pilgrimage there in the end of the 4th century, the Chinese monk Faxian noted the numerous Buddhist temples that still existed in Campā, transliterated Chanpo in Chinese (瞻波 pinyin: Zhānbō; Wade–Giles: Chanpo)[N.B. 1]. The kingdom of Aṅga by then had long ceased to exist; it had been known as Yāngjiā (鴦伽) in Chinese.[N.B. 2]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Raychaudhuri 1953, p. 106-110.
  2. ^ Devendrakumar Rajaram Patil (1946). Cultural History from the Vāyu Purāna. Motilal Banarsidass Pub. p. 46. ISBN 9788120820852.
  3. ^ Gaṅgā Rām Garg (1992). Encyclopaedia of the Hindu World, Volume 1. Concept Publishing Company. ISBN 9788170223740. The prince Vaṅga founded Vaṅga kingdom, in the current day region of southern Bangladesh and the eastern part of southern West Bengal. The prince Kalinga founded the kingdom of Kalinga, in the current day region of coastal Orissa, including the North Sircars. Also the price Pundra founded Pundra consisting of the northern regions of West Bengal and Bangladesh. The prince Suhma founded Suhma Kingdom in the western part of southern West Bengal.
  4. ^ Balakanda Book I, Chapter 23
  5. ^ Deo, Shantaram Bhalchandra (1956). History of Jaina Monachism from Inscriptions and Literature. Pune, India: Deccan College Post-Graduate and Research Institute. p. 71. ISBN 978-9-333-68377-7.
  6. ^ Jain, Kailash Chand (1974). Lord Mahāvīra and His Times. Delhi, India: Motilal Banarsidass. p. 67. ISBN 978-8-120-80805-8.
  7. ^ Smith, R. Morton (1957). "On the Ancient Chronology of India (II)". Journal of the American Oriental Society. 77 (4): 266–280. doi:10.2307/596129. JSTOR 596129.
  8. ^ Raychaudhuri 1953, p. 203.
  9. ^ Davane, G. V. (1957). "The Legend of Udayana". Bulletin of the Deccan College Post-Graduate and Research Institute. 18: 344–373. JSTOR 42930814.
  10. ^ Raychaudhuri 1953, p. 117.
  11. ^ a b 佛光電子大辭典 (Buddha's Light Electronic Dictionary). Taiwan: Buddha's Light Publishing (Fo Guang Shan)
  1. ^ Campā (Indian, not Vietnamese) was also transliterated, besides 瞻波, in the records as Zhanbopo (瞻博婆) and Zhanpo (瞻婆、瞻匐、瞻蔔、詹波、闡蔔、閻波、占波)[11]
  2. ^ Anga was also transliterated, besides 鴦伽, in the records as 鴦迦 (different radical for jiā), 泱伽 (same pronunciation), Yāngjué (鴦掘), Àng'é (盎誐). Sometimes by metonymy, the kingdom would be called the 'State of Champa'‘’, i.e., 瞻波國.[11]

References

anga, this, article, about, historical, kingdom, other, uses, disambiguation, sanskrit, aṅga, ancient, indo, aryan, tribe, eastern, south, asia, whose, existence, attested, during, iron, members, aṅga, tribe, were, called, Āṅgeyas, aṅgaunknown, 1100, bceaṅga, . This article is about the historical kingdom For other uses see Anga disambiguation Anga Sanskrit Aṅga was an ancient Indo Aryan tribe of eastern South Asia whose existence is attested during the Iron Age The members of the Aṅga tribe were called the Aṅgeyas 1 AṅgaUnknown 1100 BCE c 530 BCEAṅga and other kingdoms of the late Vedic periodAṅga and other Mahajanapadas in the Post Vedic periodAṅga is the easternmost south of Vajji and east of MagadhaCapitalChampapuri near modern Bhagalpur and Malini near modern Munger BiharReligionHistorical Vedic religionBuddhismJainismGovernmentMonarchy BrahmadattaRaja King or Chief Historical eraIron Age EstablishedUnknown 1100 BCE Disestablishedc 530 BCECounted among the sixteen great nations in Buddhist texts like the Anguttara Nikaya Aṅga also finds mention in the Jain Vyakhyaprajnapti s list of ancient janapadas Contents 1 Location 2 Etymology 3 History 3 1 Kingdom 3 2 Later history 4 See also 5 Notes 6 ReferencesLocation EditAṅga proper was located between the Champa river to the west and the Rajmahal hills to the east However at times its territories did extend to the sea in the south or included Magadha in the west 1 The capital of Aṅga named Campa was located at the confluence of the Campa and Gaṅga rivers and corresponds to the modern day villages of Campapuri and Champanagar in the eastern part of the Indian state of Bihar According to the Jataka s Campa was also called Kala Campa while Puranic texts claim its ancient name was Malini 1 The other important cities within the Aṅga kingdom included Assapura Sanskrit Asvapura and Bhaddiya Sanskrit Bhadrika 1 Etymology EditAccording to the Mahabharata I 104 53 54 and Puranic literature Aṅga was named after Prince Anga the founder of the kingdom and the son of Vali who had no sons So he requested the sage Dirghatamas to bless him with sons The sage is said to have begotten five sons through his wife the queen Sudesna 2 The princes were named Aṅga Vaṅga Kaliṅga Sumha and Pundra 3 The Ramayana 1 23 14 narrates the origin of name Aṅga as the place where Kamadeva was burnt to death by Siva and where his body parts aṅgas are scattered 4 History EditKingdom Edit Aṅga was first mentioned in the Atharvaveda where it was connected to the Gandharis Mujavats and Magadhis The founder of Aṅga might have been the king Aṅga Vairocana who is mentioned in the Aitareya Brahmaṇa as a ruler who had been consecrated by the Aryan ritual of Aindra mahabhiseka 1 Vedic literature such as the Baudhayana Dharmasutra nevertheless listed the Aṅgeyas with peoples described as being of mixed origin 1 Aṅga was a powerful kingdom at the time of the Aitareya Brahmaṇa which mentions the world conquest of one of the Aṅgeya kings to whom the girls of aristocratic families were brought as prizes The Aṅgeya capital of Campa itself was counted until the time of the Buddha s death among the six most prominent cities of northern South Asia along with Rajagaha Savatthi Saketa Kosambi and Varaṇasi 1 During the Iron Age Aṅga expanded to include Vaṅga within its borders with the capital city of Campa being a wealthy commercial centre from where traders sailed to Suvarṇabhumi According to the Katha sarit sagara the Aṅgeya city of Viṭaṅkapura was located on the shores of the sea 1 During the 6th century BCE the king of Aṅga was Dadhivahana 1 who was married to the Licchavika princess Padmavati who was herself the daughter of the consul of the Licchavika republic Ceṭaka 5 Ceṭaka s sister Trisala was the mother 24th Jain Tirthaṅkara Mahavira thus making Ceṭaka his uncle and Padmavati his cousin Ceṭaka himself had become an adept of the teachings of Mahavira and made the Licchavika capital of Vesali a bastion of Jainism and the marriages of his daughters contributed to the spreading of Jainism across northern South Asia 6 The daughter of Dadhivahana and Padmavati Candana or Candrabala became the first woman convert to Jainism shortly after Mahavira attained Kevala 1 Under Dadhivahana s rule Aṅga had conquered its western neighbour the state of Magadha hence why the Vidhura Paṇḍita Jataka described the Magadhi capital of Rajagaha as a city of Aṅga 1 This conquest brought Aṅga in direct contact with Magadha s western neighbour Vatsa whose king Satanika attacked the Aṅgeya capital of Campa out of fear of Dadhivahana s expansionism Dadhivahana instead sought friendly relations with Vatsa and he gave his daughter in marriage to Satanika s son Udayana 1 After Satanika s death from dysentery at the same time as a campaign against Vatsa was being carried out by the king Pradyota of Avanti the latter became the overlord of Vatsa and Udayana lived as a captive at the court of Pradyota in Ujjeni 7 During Udayana s captivity the state of Kaliṅga attacked Aṅga and took Dadhivahana captive It was once Pradyota had restored Udayana to his throne after the latter s marriage to his daughter Vasavadatta that Udayana was able to defeat Kaliṅga and restore Dadhivahana on the Aṅgeya throne and Dadhivahana s daughter Priyadarsika was married to Udayana according to the later play Priyadarsika which itself rests on historical records 8 the Aṅgeya chamberlain took brought her into the refuge of the forest king Vindhyaketu from where she was captured by Udayana s army and given the name Araṇyika she who is from the forest after being assumed to be Vindhyaketu s daughter was brought to Vatsa to become servant of Vasavadatta and later married Udayana after the Aṅgeya chamberlain recognised her as once Udayana had defeated Kaliṅga 9 Aṅga s prosperity ended when in the middle of the 6th century BCE the Magadhi crown prince Bimbisara Sreṇika avenged his father s defeat against Aṅga by defeating and killing the Aṅgeya king Brahmadatta after which Aṅga became part of the Magadhi empire and Campa became the seat of a Magadhi viceroy 1 10 Later history Edit During his pilgrimage there in the end of the 4th century the Chinese monk Faxian noted the numerous Buddhist temples that still existed in Campa transliterated Chanpo in Chinese 瞻波 pinyin Zhanbō Wade Giles Chanpo N B 1 The kingdom of Aṅga by then had long ceased to exist it had been known as Yangjia 鴦伽 in Chinese N B 2 See also EditMagadha Anga Lipi Mahajanapadas Magadha Anga war History of India History of HinduismNotes Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m Raychaudhuri 1953 p 106 110 Devendrakumar Rajaram Patil 1946 Cultural History from the Vayu Purana Motilal Banarsidass Pub p 46 ISBN 9788120820852 Gaṅga Ram Garg 1992 Encyclopaedia of the Hindu World Volume 1 Concept Publishing Company ISBN 9788170223740 The prince Vaṅga founded Vaṅga kingdom in the current day region of southern Bangladesh and the eastern part of southern West Bengal The prince Kalinga founded the kingdom of Kalinga in the current day region of coastal Orissa including the North Sircars Also the price Pundra founded Pundra consisting of the northern regions of West Bengal and Bangladesh The prince Suhma founded Suhma Kingdom in the western part of southern West Bengal Balakanda Book I Chapter 23 Deo Shantaram Bhalchandra 1956 History of Jaina Monachism from Inscriptions and Literature Pune India Deccan College Post Graduate and Research Institute p 71 ISBN 978 9 333 68377 7 Jain Kailash Chand 1974 Lord Mahavira and His Times Delhi India Motilal Banarsidass p 67 ISBN 978 8 120 80805 8 Smith R Morton 1957 On the Ancient Chronology of India II Journal of the American Oriental Society 77 4 266 280 doi 10 2307 596129 JSTOR 596129 Raychaudhuri 1953 p 203 Davane G V 1957 The Legend of Udayana Bulletin of the Deccan College Post Graduate and Research Institute 18 344 373 JSTOR 42930814 Raychaudhuri 1953 p 117 a b 佛光電子大辭典 Buddha s Light Electronic Dictionary Taiwan Buddha s Light Publishing Fo Guang Shan Campa Indian not Vietnamese was also transliterated besides 瞻波 in the records as Zhanbopo 瞻博婆 and Zhanpo 瞻婆 瞻匐 瞻蔔 詹波 闡蔔 閻波 占波 11 Anga was also transliterated besides 鴦伽 in the records as 鴦迦 different radical for jia 泱伽 same pronunciation Yangjue 鴦掘 Ang e 盎誐 Sometimes by metonymy the kingdom would be called the State of Champa i e 瞻波國 11 References EditJha D N 1999 Ancient India in historical outline New Delhi Manohar Publishers amp Distributors ISBN 9788173042850 Malalasekera G P 2003 1937 Dictionary of Pali Proper Names Asian Educational Services ISBN 9788120618237 Raychaudhuri Hemchandra 1953 Political History of Ancient India From the Accession of Parikshit to the Extinction of Gupta Dynasty University of Calcutta Singh Upinder 2008 A history of ancient and early medieval India from the Stone Age to the 12th century New Delhi Pearson Longman ISBN 9788131716779 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Anga amp oldid 1131991073, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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