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Chalukya dynasty

The Chalukya dynasty ([tʃaːɭukjə]) was a Classical Indian dynasty that ruled large parts of southern and central India between the 6th and the 12th centuries. During this period, they ruled as three related yet individual dynasties. The earliest dynasty, known as the "Badami Chalukyas", ruled from Vatapi (modern Badami) from the middle of the 6th century. The Badami Chalukyas began to assert their independence at the decline of the Kadamba kingdom of Banavasi and rapidly rose to prominence during the reign of Pulakeshin II. After the death of Pulakeshin II, the Eastern Chalukyas became an independent kingdom in the eastern Deccan. They ruled from Vengi until about the 11th century. In the western Deccan, the rise of the Rashtrakutas in the middle of the 8th century eclipsed the Chalukyas of Badami before being revived by their descendants, the Western Chalukyas, in the late 10th century. These Western Chalukyas ruled from Kalyani (modern Basavakalyan) until the end of the 12th century.

Chalukya dynasty
543–753
Extent of Badami Chalukya Empire, 636 AD, 740 AD.[1]
CapitalBadami
Common languagesKannada
Sanskrit
Religion
Hinduism
Buddhism[2]
Jainism
GovernmentMonarchy
Maharaja 
• 543–566
Pulakeshin I
• 746–753
Kirtivarman II
History 
• Earliest records
543
• Established
543
• Disestablished
753
Today part ofIndia

The rule of the Chalukyas marks an important milestone in the history of South India and a golden age in the history of Karnataka. The political atmosphere in South India shifted from smaller kingdoms to large empires with the ascendancy of Badami Chalukyas. A Southern India-based kingdom took control and consolidated the entire region between the Kaveri and the Narmada rivers. The rise of this empire saw the birth of efficient administration, overseas trade and commerce and the development of new style of architecture called "Chalukyan architecture". Kannada literature, which had enjoyed royal support in the 9th century Rashtrakuta court found eager patronage from the Western Chalukyas in the Jain and Veerashaiva traditions. The 11th century saw the patronage of Telugu literature under the Eastern Chalukyas.

Origins edit

Natives of Karnataka edit

 
Old Kannada inscription of Chalukya King Mangalesha dated 578 AD at Badami cave temple no.3
 
Old Kannada inscription on victory pillar, Virupaksha Temple, Pattadakal, 733–745 AD

While opinions vary regarding the early origins of the Chalukyas, the consensus among noted historians such as John Keay, D.C. Sircar, Hans Raj, S. Sen, Kamath, K. V. Ramesh and Karmarkar is that the founders of the empire at Badami were native to the modern Karnataka region.[3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13]

A theory that they were descendants of a 2nd-century chieftain called Kandachaliki Remmanaka, a feudatory of the Andhra Ikshvaku (from an Ikshvaku inscription of the 2nd century) was put forward. This according to Kamath has failed to explain the difference in lineage. The Kandachaliki feudatory call themselves Vashisthiputras of the Hiranyakagotra. The Chalukyas, however, address themselves as Harithiputras of Manavyasagotra in their inscriptions, which is the same lineage as their early overlords, the Kadambas of Banavasi. This makes them descendants of the Kadambas. The Chalukyas took control of the territory formerly ruled by the Kadambas.[14]

A later record of Eastern Chalukyas mentions the northern origin theory and claims one ruler of Ayodhya came south, defeated the Pallavas and married a Pallava princess. She had a child called Vijayaditya who is claimed to be the Pulakeshin I's father. However, according to the historians K. V. Ramesh, Chopra and Sastri, there are Badami Chalukya inscriptions that confirm Jayasimha was Pulakeshin I's grandfather and Ranaraga, his father.[15][16][17][18] Kamath and Moraes claim it was a popular practice in the 11th century to link South Indian royal family lineage to a Northern kingdom. The Badami Chalukya records themselves are silent with regards to the Ayodhya origin.[19][20]

While the northern origin theory has been dismissed by many historians, the epigraphist K. V. Ramesh has suggested that an earlier southern migration is a distinct possibility which needs examination.[21] According to him, the complete absence of any inscriptional reference of their family connections to Ayodhya, and their subsequent Kannadiga identity may have been due to their earlier migration into present day Karnataka region where they achieved success as chieftains and kings. Hence, the place of origin of their ancestors may have been of no significance to the kings of the empire who may have considered themselves natives of the Kannada speaking region.[13] The writing of 12th century Kashmiri poet Bilhana suggests the Chalukya family belonged to the Shudra while other sources claim they were born in the arms of Brahma, and hence were Kshatriya caste.[22] According to Xuanzang, the Chalukya king Pulakeshin II was war-like and loved "military arts", because he was a Kshatriya by birth.[23]

The historians Jan Houben and Kamath, and the epigraphist D.C. Sircar note the Badami Chalukya inscriptions are in Kannada and Sanskrit.[24][25][26] According to the historian N. L. Rao, their inscriptions call them Karnatas and their names use indigenous Kannada titles such as Priyagallam and Noduttagelvom. The names of some Chalukya princes end with the pure Kannada term arasa (meaning "king" or "chief").[27][28] The Rashtrakuta inscriptions call the Chalukyas of Badami Karnatakabala ("Power of Karnataka").[29] It has been proposed by the historian S. C. Nandinath that the word "Chalukya" originated from Salki or Chalki which is a Kannada word for an agricultural implement.[30][31][32] According to some historians, the Chalukyas originated from agriculturists.[32][30]

The Chalukyas and Kadambas belonged to the "Manavya" gotra as being the descendants of the original ancestress Hariti.[33] The 12th-century work Karmandala Satakam states that the Velirs of Karmandalam (Karnataka) belong to the same "Manavya" Gotra.[34] The Chalukya kings were called Velpularasar and Velkulattarasar by some communities, that is kings over Vel country (pula means region or country).[35][36] Later day references to them in Choļa inscriptions puts the Chalukyas under the Velir community ruling in Deccan.[37][38][39][40]

Historical sources edit

Inscriptions in Sanskrit and Kannada are the main source of information about Badami Chalukya history. Among them, the Badami cave inscriptions of Mangalesha (578), Kappe Arabhatta record of c. 700, Peddavaduguru inscription of Pulakeshin II, the Kanchi Kailasanatha Temple inscription and Pattadakal Virupaksha Temple inscription of Vikramaditya II (all in Kannada language) provide more evidence of the Chalukya language.[41][42] The Badami cliff inscription of Pulakeshin I (543), the Mahakuta Pillar inscription of Mangalesha (595) and the Aihole inscription of Pulakeshin II (634) are examples of important Sanskrit inscriptions written in old Kannada script.[43][44][45] The reign of the Chalukyas saw the arrival of Kannada as the predominant language of inscriptions along with Sanskrit, in areas of the Indian peninsula outside what is known as Tamilakam (Tamil country).[46] Several coins of the Badami Chalukyas with Kannada legends have been found. All this indicates that Kannada language flourished during this period.[47]

 
Coinage of the Chalukyas of Badami. Uncertain ruler. c. 597-757 AD. Boar and Temple type.

Travelogues of contemporary foreign travellers have provided useful information about the Chalukyan empire. The Chinese traveller Xuanzang had visited the court of Pulakeshin II. At the time of this visit, as mentioned in the Aihole record, Pulakeshin II had divided his empire into three Maharashtrakas or great provinces comprising 99,000 villages each. This empire possibly covered present day Karnataka, Maharashtra and coastal Konkan.[48][49] Xuanzang, impressed with the governance of the empire observed that the benefits of the king's efficient administration was felt far and wide. Later, Persian emperor Khosrau II exchanged ambassadors with Pulakeshin II.[50][51][52]

Legends edit

Court poets of the Western Chalukya dynasty of Kalyani narrate:

"Once when Brahma, the creator, was engaged in the performance of the sandhya (twilight) rituals, Indra approached and beseeched him to create a hero who could put to an end the increasing evil on earth. On being thus requested, Brahma looked steadily into the Chuluka-jala (the water of oblation in his palm) and out sprang thence a great warrior, the progenitor of the Chalukyas".[53] The Chalukyas claimed to have been nursed by the Sapta Matrikas ("seven divine mothers") and were worshippers of many gods including Siva, Vishnu, Chamundi, Surya, Kubera, Parvati, Vinayaka and Kartikeya.

Some scholars connect the Chalukyas with the Chaulukyas (Solankis) of Gujarat.[54] According to a myth mentioned in latter manuscripts of Prithviraj Raso, Chaulukyas were born out of fire-pit (Agnikund) at Mount Abu. However it has been reported that the story of Agnikula is not mentioned at all in the original version of the Prithviraj Raso preserved in the Fort Library at Bikaner.[55]

According to the Nilagunda inscription of King Vikramaditya VI (11th century or later), the Chalukyas originally hailed from Ayodhya where fifty-nine kings ruled, and later, sixteen more of this family ruled from South India where they had migrated. This is repeated by his court poet Bilhana, who claims that the first member of the family, "Chalukya", was so named as he was born in the "hollow of the hands" of God Brahma.[56][57] Some genealogical accounts point to an Ayodhya origin and claim that the Chalukyas belonged to the Solar dynasty.[58][59][60]

According to a theory put forward by Lewis, the Chalukya were descendants of the "Seleukia" tribe of Iraq and that their conflict with the Pallava of Kanchi was, but a continuation of the conflict between ancient Seleukia and "Parthians", the proposed ancestors of Pallavas. However, this theory has been rejected by Kamath as it seeks to build lineages based simply on similar-sounding clan names.[61]

Periods in Chalukya history edit

The Chalukyas ruled over the Deccan plateau in India for over 600 years. During this period, they ruled as three closely related, but individual dynasties. These are the "Chalukyas of Badami" (also called "Early Chalukyas"), who ruled between the 6th and the 8th century, and the two sibling dynasties, the "Chalukyas of Kalyani" (also called Western Chalukyas or "Later Chalukyas") and the "Chalukyas of Vengi" (also called Eastern Chalukyas).

Chalukyas of Badami edit

 
Bhutanatha temple complex, at Badami

In the 6th century, with the decline of the Gupta dynasty and their immediate successors in northern India, major changes began to happen in the area south of the Vindhyas – the Deccan and Tamilakam. The age of small kingdoms had given way to large empires in this region.[62] The Chalukya dynasty was established by Pulakeshin I in 543.[63][64][65] Pulakeshin I took Vatapi (modern Badami in Bagalkot district, Karnataka) under his control and made it his capital. Pulakeshin I and his descendants are referred to as "Chalukyas of Badami". They ruled over an empire that comprised the entire state of Karnataka and most of Andhra Pradesh in the Deccan.

Pulakeshin II, whose pre-coronation name was Ereya,[66] commanded control over the entire Deccan and is perhaps the most well-known emperor of the Badami dynasty.[67][68] He is considered one of the notable kings in Indian history.[69][70][71] His queens were princess from the Alupa Dynasty of South Canara and the Western Ganga Dynasty of Talakad, clans with whom the Chalukyas maintained close family and marital relationships.[72][73] Pulakeshin II extended the Chalukya Empire up to the northern extents of the Pallava kingdom and halted the southward march of Harsha by defeating him on the banks of the river Narmada. He then defeated the Vishnukundins in the south-eastern Deccan.[74][75][76][77] Pallava Narasimhavarman however reversed this victory in 642 by attacking and occupying Badami temporarily. It is presumed Pulakeshin II, "the great hero", died fighting.[51][78]

The Badami Chalukya dynasty went into a brief decline following the death of Pulakeshin II due to internal feuds when Badami was occupied by the Pallavas for a period of thirteen years.[79][80] It recovered during the reign of Vikramaditya I, who succeeded in pushing the Pallavas out of Badami and restoring order to the empire. Vikramaditya I took the title "Rajamalla" (lit "Sovereign of the Mallas" or Pallavas).[81] The thirty-seven year rule of Vijayaditya (696–733) was a prosperous one and is known for prolific temple building activity.[82][83]

The empire was its peak again during the rule of the illustrious Vikramaditya II (733–744) who is known not only for his repeated invasions of the territory of Tondaimandalam and his subsequent victories over Pallava Nandivarman II, but also for his benevolence towards the people and the monuments of Kanchipuram, the Pallava capital.[82][84][85] He thus avenged the earlier humiliation of the Chalukyas by the Pallavas and engraved a Kannada inscription on the victory pillar at the Kailasanatha Temple.[84][86][87] During his reign Arab intruders of the Caliphal province of Sind invaded southern Gujarat which was under Chalukya rule, but the Arabs were defeated and driven out by Avanijanashraya Pulakeshin, the governor of the Chalukya branch of Navsari.[88] Vikramaditya II later overran the other traditional kingdoms of Tamil country, the Pandyas, the Cholas and the Cheras in addition to subduing a Kalabhra ruler.[89] The last Chalukya king, Kirtivarman II, was overthrown by the Rashtrakuta King Dantidurga in 753.[90] At their peak, the Chalukyas ruled a vast empire stretching from the Kaveri in the south to the Narmada in the north.

Chalukyas of Kalyani edit

The Chalukyas revived their fortunes in 973 after over 200 years of dormancy when much of the Deccan was under the rule of the Rashtrakutas. The genealogy of the kings of this empire is still debated. One theory, based on contemporary literary and inscriptional evidence plus the finding that the Western Chalukyas employed titles and names commonly used by the early Chalukyas, suggests that the Western Chalukya kings belonged to the same family line as the illustrious Badami Chalukya dynasty of the 6th century[91][92] while other Western Chalukya inscriptional evidence indicates they were a distinct line unrelated to the Early Chalukyas.[93]

Tailapa II, a Rashtrakuta feudatory ruling from Tardavadi – 1000 (Bijapur district) overthrew Karka II, re-established the Chalukya rule in the western Deccan and recovered most of the Chalukya empire.[94][95] The Western Chalukyas ruled for over 200 years and were in constant conflict with the Cholas, and with their cousins, the Eastern Chalukyas of Vengi. Vikramaditya VI is widely considered the most notable ruler of the dynasty.[96][97] Starting from the very beginning of his reign, which lasted fifty years, he abolished the original Saka era and established the Vikrama Era. Most subsequent Chalukya inscriptions are dated in this new era.[98][99] Vikramaditya VI was an ambitious and skilled military leader. Under his leadership the Western Chalukyas were able to end the Chola influence over Vengi (coastal Andhra) and become the dominant power in the Deccan.[100][101] The Western Chalukya period was an important age in the development of Kannada literature and Sanskrit literature.[102][103] They went into their final dissolution towards the end of the 12th century with the rise of the Hoysala Empire, the Pandyas, the Kakatiya and the Seuna Yadavas of Devagiri.[104]

Chalukyas of Vengi edit

Pulakeshin II conquered the eastern Deccan, corresponding to the coastal districts of modern Andhra Pradesh in 616, defeating the remnants of the Vishnukundina kingdom. He appointed his brother Kubja Vishnuvardhana as Viceroy in 621.[105][106] Thus the Eastern Chalukyas were originally of Kannada stock.[107] After the death of Pulakeshin II, the Vengi Viceroyalty developed into an independent kingdom and included the region between Nellore and Visakhapatnam.[106][108]

After the decline of the Badami Chalukya empire in the mid-8th century, territorial disputes flared up between the Rashtrakutas, the new rulers of the western deccan, and the Eastern Chalukyas. For much of the next two centuries, the Eastern Chalukyas had to accept subordination towards the Rashtrakutas.[109] Apart from a rare military success, such as the one by Vijayaditya II(c.808–847), it was only during the rule of Bhima I (c.892–921) that these Chalukyas were able to celebrate a measure of independence. After the death of Bhima I, the Andhra region once again saw succession disputes and interference in Vengi affairs by the Rashtrakutas.[109]

The fortunes of the Eastern Chalukyas took a turn around 1000. Danarnava, their king, was killed in battle in 973 by the Telugu Choda King Bhima who then imposed his rule over the region for twenty-seven years. During this time, Danarnava's two sons took refuge in the Chola kingdom. Choda Bhima's invasion of Tondaimandalam, a Chola territory, and his subsequent death on the battlefield opened up a new era in Chola–Chalukya relations. Saktivarman I, the elder son of Danarnava was crowned as the ruler of Vengi in 1000, though under the control of king Rajaraja Chola I.[110] This new relationship between the Cholas and the coastal Andhra kingdom was unacceptable to the Western Chalukyas, who had by then replaced the Rashtrakutas as the main power in the western Deccan. The Western Chalukyas sought to brook the growing Chola influence in the Vengi region but were unsuccessful.[109][111]

Initially, the Eastern Chalukyas had encouraged Kannada language and literature, though, after a period of time, local factors took over and they gave importance to Telugu language.[112][113] Telugu literature owes its growth to the Eastern Chalukyas.[114]

Architecture edit

 
Virupaksha temple in Dravidian style at Pattadakal, built 740 CE

The Badami Chalukya era was an important period in the development of South Indian architecture. The kings of this dynasty were called Umapati Varlabdh and built many temples for the Hindu god Shiva.[115] Their style of architecture is called "Chalukyan architecture" or "Karnata Dravida architecture".[116][117] Nearly a hundred monuments built by them, rock cut (cave) and structural, are found in the Malaprabha river basin in modern Bagalkot district of northern Karnataka.[118] The building material they used was a reddish-golden Sandstone found locally. These cave temples are basically excavations, cut out of the living rock sites they occupy. They were not built as their structural counterparts were, rather created by a special technique known as "subtraction" and are basically sculptural.[119] Though they ruled a vast empire, the Chalukyan workshops concentrated most of their temple building activity in a relatively small area within the Chalukyan heartland – Aihole, Badami, Pattadakal and Mahakuta in modern Karnataka state.[120]

Their temple building activity can be categorised into three phases. The early phase began in the last quarter of the 6th century and resulted in many cave temples, prominent among which are three elementary cave temples at Aihole (one Vedic, one Jain and one Buddhist which is incomplete), followed by four developed cave temples at Badami (of which cave 3, a Vaishnava temple, is dated accurately to 578 CE).[121] These cave temples at Badami are similar, in that, each has a plain exterior but an exceptionally well finished interior consisting of a pillared verandah, a columned hall (mantapa) and a cella (shrine, cut deep into rock) which contains the deity of worship.[122] In Badami, three caves temples are Vedic and one in Jain. The Vedic temples contain large well sculpted images of Harihara, Mahishasuramardhini, Varaha, Narasimha, Trivikrama, Vishnu seated on Anantha (the snake) and Nataraja (dancing Shiva).[123]

The second phase of temple building was at Aihole (where some seventy structures exist and has been called "one of the cradles of Indian temple architecture"[124]) and Badami. Though the exact dating of these temples has been debated, there is consensus that the beginnings of these constructions are from c. 600.[125][126][127] These are the Lad Khan Temple (dated by some to c. 450 but more accurately to 620) with its interesting perforated stone windows and sculptures of river goddesses; the Meguti Jain Temple (634) which shows progress in structural design; the Durga Temple with its northern Indian style tower (8th century) and experiments to adapt a Buddhist Chaitya design to a brahminical one (its stylistic framework is overall a hybrid of north and south Indian styles.[115]); the Huccimalli Gudi Temple with a new inclusion, a vestibule, connecting the sanctum to the hall.[128] Other dravida style temples from this period are the Naganatha Temple at Nagaral; the Banantigudi Temple, the Mahakutesvara Temple and the Mallikarjuna Temple at Mahakuta; and the Lower Sivalaya Temple, the Malegitti Sivalaya Temple (upper) and the Jambulingesvara Temple at Badami.[126] Located outside the Chalukyan architectural heartland, 140 km south-east of Badami, with a structure related to the Early Chalukya style is the unusual Parvati Temple at Sanduru which dates to the late 7th century. It is medium-sized, 48 ft long and 37 ft wide. It has a nagara (north Indian) style vimana (tower) and dravida (south Indian) style parts, has no mantapa (hall) and consists of an antarala (vestibule) crowned with a barrel-vaulted tower (sukhanasi). The "staggered" base plan of the temple became popular much later, in the 11th century.[129][130]

The structural temples at Pattadakal, built in the 8th century and now a UNESCO World Heritage Site, marks the culmination and mature phase of Badami Chalukyan architecture. The Bhutanatha group of temples at Badami are also from this period. There are ten temples at Pattadakal, six in southern dravida style and four in the northern nagara style. Well known among these are the Sangamesvara Temple (725), the Virupaksha Temple (740–745) and the Mallikarjuna Temple (740–745) in the southern style. The Papanatha temple (680) and Galaganatha Temple (740) are early attempts in the nagara – dravida fusion style.[131] Inscriptional evidence suggests that the Virupaksha and the Mallikarjuna Temples were commissioned by the two queens of King Vikramaditya II after his military success over the Pallavas of Kanchipuram.[126] Some well known names of Chalukyan architects are Revadi Ovajja, Narasobba and Anivarita Gunda.[132]

The reign of Western Chalukyas was an important period in the development of Deccan architecture. Their architecture served as a conceptual link between the Badami Chalukya architecture of the 8th century and the Hoysala architecture popularised in the 13th century.[133][134] The centre of their cultural and temple-building activity lay in the Tungabhadra region of modern Karnataka state, encompassing the present-day Dharwad district; it included areas of present-day Haveri and Gadag districts.[135][136] Here, large medieval workshops built numerous monuments.[137] These monuments, regional variants of pre-existing dravida temples, defined the Karnata dravida tradition.[138]

The most notable of the many buildings dating from this period are the Mahadeva Temple at Itagi in the Koppal district,[139][140] the Kasivisvesvara Temple at Lakkundi in the Gadag district,[141][142] the Mallikarjuna Temple at Kuruvatti,[142] and the Kallesvara Temple at Bagali,[143] both in the Davangere district.[144] Other notable constructions are the Dodda Basappa Temple at Dambal (Gadag district),[145][146] the Siddhesvara Temple at Haveri (Haveri district),[147][148] and the Amrtesvara Temple at Annigeri (Dharwad district).[149][150] The Eastern Chalukyas built some fine temples at Alampur, in modern eastern Andhra Pradesh.[121][151]

Literature edit

 
Poetry on stone at the Meguti temple (Aihole inscription) dated 634 AD, in Sanskrit language and old Kannada script, with a Kannada language endorsement of about the same date at the bottom.[24]

The Aihole inscription of Pulakeshin II (634) written by his court poet Ravikirti in Sanskrit language and Kannada script is considered as a classical piece of poetry.[43][152] A few verses of a poet named Vijayanaka who describes herself as the "dark Sarasvati" have been preserved. It is possible that she may have been a queen of prince Chandraditya (a son of Pulakeshin II).[153] Famous writers in Sanskrit from the Western Chalukya period are Vijnaneshwara who achieved fame by writing Mitakshara, a book on Hindu law, and King Someshvara III, a noted scholar, who compiled an encyclopedia of all arts and sciences called Manasollasa.[154]

From the period of the Badami Chalukyas, references are made to the existence of Kannada literature, though not much has survived.[155] Inscriptions however refer to Kannada as the "natural language".[156] The Kappe Arabhatta record of c. 700 in tripadi (three line) metre is the earliest available work in Kannada poetics.[157][158] Karnateshwara Katha, which was quoted later by Jayakirti, is believed to be a eulogy of Pulakeshin II and to have belonged to this period.[158] Other probable Kannada writers, whose works are not extant now but titles of which are known from independent references[159] are Syamakundacharya (650), who is said to have authored the Prabhrita, and Srivaradhadeva (also called Tumubuluracharya, 650 or earlier), the possible author of the Chudamani ("Crest Jewel"), a lengthy commentary on logic.[155][160][161][162]

The rule of the Western and Eastern Chalukyas, however, is a major event in the history of Kannada and Telugu literatures respectively. By the 9th–10th centuries, Kannada language had already seen some of its most notable writers. The "three gems" of Kannada literature, Adikavi Pampa, Sri Ponna and Ranna belonged to this period.[163][164] In the 11th century, Telugu literature was born under the patronage of the Eastern Chalukyas with Nannaya Bhatta as its first writer.[164][165]

Badami Chalukya country edit

Army edit

The army was well organised and this was the reason for Pulakeshin II's success beyond the Vindyas.[166] It consisted of an infantry, a cavalry, an elephant corps and a powerful navy. The Chinese traveller Hiuen-Tsiang wrote that the Chalukyan army had hundreds of elephants which were intoxicated with liquor prior to battle.[51][167] It was with their navy that they conquered Revatidvipa (Goa), and Puri on east coast of India. Rashtrakuta inscriptions use the term Karnatakabala when referring to the powerful Chalukya armies.[168][169]

Land governance edit

The government, at higher levels, was closely modelled after the Magadhan and Satavahana administrative machinery.[51] The empire was divided into Maharashtrakas (provinces), then into smaller Rashtrakas (Mandala), Vishaya (district), Bhoga (group of 10 villages) which is similar to the Dasagrama unit used by the Kadambas. At the lower levels of administration, the Kadamba style prevailed fully. The Sanjan plates of Vikramaditya I even mentions a land unit called Dasagrama.[170] In addition to imperial provinces, there were autonomous regions ruled by feudatories such as the Alupas, the Gangas, the Banas and the Sendrakas.[171] Local assemblies and guilds looked after local issues. Groups of mahajanas (learned brahmins) looked after agraharas (called ghatika or "place of higher learning") such as at Badami which was served by 2000 mahajans and Aihole which was served by 500 mahajanas. Taxes were levied and were called the herjunka – tax on loads, the kirukula – tax on retail goods in transit, the bilkode – sales tax, the pannaya – betel tax, siddaya – land tax and the vaddaravula – tax levied to support royalty.[171]

Coinage edit

The Badami Chalukyas minted coins that were of a different standard compared to the coins of the northern kingdoms.[172] The coins had Nagari and Kannada legends.[25] The coins of Mangalesha had the symbol of a temple on the obverse and a 'sceptre between lamps' or a temple on the reverse. Pulakeshin II's coins had a caparisoned lion facing right on the obverse and a temple on the reverse. The coins weighed 4 grams and were called, in old-Kannada, hun (or honnu) and had fractions such as fana (or fanam) and the quarter fana (the modern day Kannada equivalent being hana – which literally means "money").[173] A gold coin called gadyana is mentioned in a record at the Vijayeshwara Temple at Pattadakal, which later came to be known as varaha (their royal emblem).[172]

Religion edit

 
Vaishnava Cave temple No. 3 at Badami, 578 AD

Both Shaivism and Vaishnavism flourished during the Badami Chalukya period, though it seems the former was more popular.[174] Famous temples were built in places such as Pattadakal, Aihole and Mahakuta, and priests (archakas) were invited from northern India. Vedic sacrifices, religious vows (vrata) and the giving of gifts (dana) was important.[175] The Badami kings were followers of Vedic Hinduism and dedicated temples to popular Hindu deities in Aihole. Sculptures of deities testify to the popularity of Hindu Gods such as Vishnu, Shiva, Kartikeya, Ganapathi, Shakti, Surya and Sapta Matrikas ("seven mothers"). The Badami kings also performed the Ashwamedha ("horse sacrifice").[176] The worship of Lajja Gauri, a fertility goddess is known. Jainism too was a prominent religion during this period. The kings of the dynasty were however secular and actively encouraged Jainism. One of the Badami Cave temples is dedicated to the Jain faith. Jain temples were also erected in the Aihole complex, the temple at Maguti being one such example.[177] Ravikirti, the court poet of Pulakeshin II was a Jain. Queen Vinayavati consecrated a temple for the Trimurti ("Hindu trinity") at Badami. Sculptures of the Trimurti, Harihara (half Vishnu, half Shiva) and Ardhanarishwara (half Shiva, half woman) provide ample evidence of their tolerance.[176] Buddhism was on a decline, having made its ingress into Southeast Asia. This is confirmed by the writings of Hiuen-Tsiang. Badami, Aihole, Kurtukoti and Puligere (modern Lakshmeshwar in the Gadag district) were primary places of learning.

Society edit

The Hindu caste system was present and devadasis were recognised by the government. Some kings had concubines (ganikas) who were given much respect,[178] and Sati was perhaps absent since widows like Vinayavathi and Vijayanka are mentioned in records. Devadasis were however present in temples. Sage Bharata's Natyashastra, the precursor to Bharatanatyam, the classical dance of South India, was popular and is seen in many sculptures and is mentioned in inscriptions.[179] Some women from the royal family enjoyed political power in administration. Queen Vijayanka was a noted Sanskrit poet,[153] Kumkumadevi, the younger sister of Vijayaditya (and queen of Alupa King Chitravahana) made several grants and had a Jain basadi called Anesajjebasadi constructed at Puligere,[180] and the queens of Vikramaditya II, Lokamahadevi and Trailokyamahadevi made grants and possibly consecrated the Lokesvara Temple (now called Virupaksha temple) but also and the Mallikarjuna temple respectively at Pattadakal.[181]

In popular culture edit

The Chalukya era may be seen as the beginning of the fusion of cultures of northern and southern India, making way for the transmission of ideas between the two regions. This is seen clearly in the field of architecture. The Chalukyas spawned the Vesara style of architecture which includes elements of the northern nagara and southern dravida styles. During this period, the expanding Sanskritic culture mingled with local Dravidian vernaculars which were already popular.[62] Dravidian languages maintain these influences even today. This influence helped to enrich literature in these languages.[182] The Hindu legal system owes much to the Sanskrit work Mitakshara by Vijnaneshwara in the court of Western Chalukya King Vikramaditya VI. Perhaps the greatest work in legal literature, Mitakshara is a commentary on Yajnavalkya and is a treatise on law based on earlier writings and has found acceptance in most parts of India. Englishman Henry Thomas Colebrooke later translated into English the section on inheritance, giving it currency in the British Indian court system.[183] It was during the Western Chalukya rule that the Bhakti movement gained momentum in South India, in the form of Ramanujacharya and Basavanna, later spreading into northern India.

A celebration called Chalukya utsava, a three-day festival of music and dance, organised by the Government of Karnataka, is held every year at Pattadakal, Badami and Aihole.[184] The event is a celebration of the achievements of the Chalukyas in the realm of art, craft, music and dance. The program, which starts at Pattadakal and ends in Aihole, is inaugurated by the Chief Minister of Karnataka. Singers, dancers, poets and other artists from all over the country take part in this event. In the 26 February 2006 celebration, 400 art troupes took part in the festivities. Colorful cutouts of the Varaha the Chalukya emblem, Satyashraya Pulakeshin (Pulakeshin II), famous sculptural masterpieces such as Durga, Mahishasuramardhini (Durga killing demon Mahishasura) were present everywhere. The program at Pattadakal is named Anivaritacharigund vedike after the famous architect of the Virupaksha temple, Gundan Anivaritachari. At Badami it is called Chalukya Vijayambika Vedike and at Aihole, Ravikirti Vedike after the famous poet and minister (Ravikirti) in the court of Pulakeshin II. Immadi Pulikeshi, a Kannada movie of the 1960s starring Dr. Rajkumar celebrates the life and times of the great king.[184]

See also edit

Notes and references edit

  1. ^ Schwartzberg, Joseph E. (1978). A Historical atlas of South Asia. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 146, map XIV.2 (c). ISBN 0226742210. from the original on 24 February 2021. Retrieved 25 March 2021.
  2. ^ An inscription dated 1095 AD of Vikramaditya VI mentions grants to a Vihara of Buddha and Arya-Taradevi (Cousens 1926, p11)
  3. ^ N. Laxminarayana Rao and Dr. S. C. Nandinath have claimed the Chalukyas were Kannadigas (Kannada speakers) and very much the natives of Karnataka (Kamath 2001, p. 57)
  4. ^ The Chalukyas were Kannadigas (D.C. Sircar in Mahajan V.D., 1960, Reprint 2007, Ancient India, Chand and Company, New Delhi, p. 690, ISBN 81-219-0887-6)
  5. ^ Natives of Karnataka (Hans Raj, 2007, Advanced history of India: From earliest times to present times, Part-1, Surgeet publications, New Delhi, p. 339)
  6. ^ The Chalukyas hailed from Karnataka (John Keay, 2000, p. 168)
  7. ^ Quote:"They belonged to Karnataka country and their mother tongue was Kannada" (Sen 1999, p. 360)
  8. ^ The Chalukyas of Badami seem to be of indigenous origin (Kamath 2001, p. 58)
  9. ^ Jayasimha and Ranaraga, the first members of the Chalukya family were possibly employees of the Kadambas in the northern part of the Kadamba Kingdom (Fleet [in Kanarese Dynasties, p. 343] in Moraes, 1931, pp. 51–52)
  10. ^ Pulakesi I must have been an administrative official of the northern Kadamba territory centered in Badami (Moraes 1931, pp. 51–52)
  11. ^ The Chalukya base was Badami and Aihole (Thapar 2003, p. 328)
  12. ^ Inscriptional evidence proves the Chalukyas were native Kannadigas (Karmarkar, 1947, p. 26)
  13. ^ a b Ramesh (1984), p. 20
  14. ^ Pulakesi I of Badami who was a feudatory of the Kadamba king Krishna Varman II, overpowered his overlord in c. 540 and took control of the Kadamba Kingdom (Kamath 2001, p. 35)
  15. ^ Jayasimha (Pulakesi I's grandfather) is known from the Kaira inscription of 472–473 CE. Both Jayasimha and Ranaraga (Pulakesi I's father) are known from Mahakuta inscription of 599 CE and Aihole record of 634 CE (Ramesh 1984, pp. 26–27, p. 30)
  16. ^ From the Badami Cliff inscription of Pulakesi I and from the Hyderabad record of Pulakesi II which states their family ancestry (Kamath 2001, pp. 56–58)
  17. ^ Sastri (1955), p. 154
  18. ^ Chopra (2003), p. 73, part 1
  19. ^ Kamath (2001), p. 56
  20. ^ Moraes (1931). pp. 10–11
  21. ^ Ramesh (1984), p. 19
  22. ^ Bilhana, in his Sanskrit work Vikramanakadevacharitam claims the Early Chalukya family were born from the feet of Hindu God Brahma, implying they were Shudras by caste, while other sources claim they were born in the arms of Brahma, and hence were Kshatriyas (Ramesh 1984, p. 15)
  23. ^ Jain, S. (2011). THE INDIA THEY SAW (VOL-1): THE INDIA THEY SAW (VOL-1) by SANDHYA JAIN: Perspectives on India. The India They Saw: Foreign Accounts. Ocean Books. p. 266. ISBN 978-81-8430-106-9. Retrieved 28 September 2023.
  24. ^ a b Sircar D.C. (1965), p. 48, Indian Epigraphy, Motilal Banarsidass Publishers, Delhi, ISBN 81-208-1166-6
  25. ^ a b Kamath (2001), p. 57
  26. ^ Houben (1996), p. 215
  27. ^ Professor N.L. Rao has pointed out that some of their family records in Sanskrit have also named the princes with "arasa", such as Kattiyarasa (Kirtivarman I), Bittarasa (Kubja Vishnuvardhana) and Mangalarasa (Mangalesha, Kamath 2001, pp. 57–60)
  28. ^ Historians Shafaat Ahmad Khan and S. Krishnasvami Aiyangar clarify that Arasa is Kannada word, equivalent to Sanskrit word Raja – Journal of Indian History p. 102, Published by Department of Modern Indian History, University of Allahabad
  29. ^ Dikshit, Durga Prasad (1968). POLITICAL HISTORY OF THE CHALUKYAS OF BADAMI. The Rashtrakuta inscriptions also praise the heroic nature of the Chalukyan army (Karṇāṭakabala, in their records)
  30. ^ a b Dr. Hoernle suggests a non-Sanskrit origin of the dynastic name. Dr. S.C. Nandinath feels the Chalukyas were of agricultural background and of Kannada origin who later took up a martial career. He feels the word Chalki found in some of their records must have originated from salki, an agricultural implement (Kamath 2001, p. 57)
  31. ^ The word Chalukya is derived from a Dravidian root (Kittel in Karmarkar 1947, p. 26)
  32. ^ a b Anirudh Kanisetti (2022). Lords of the Deccan: Southern India from the Chalukyas to the Cholas. India: Juggernaut. p. 35. ISBN 978-93-91165-0-55. there seems to have been some connection to the crowbar, chalke, pointing to very humble origins, likely as a leader of an agricultural group in the valley of the Malaprabha river, in the northern part of the modern state of Karnataka.
  33. ^ Krishnarao, B. V. (1939). "The Origin and the Original Home of the Calukyas". Proceedings of the Indian History Congress. Indian History Congress. 3: 386–410. ISSN 2249-1937. JSTOR 44252388. Retrieved 22 December 2022.
  34. ^ Vijayalakshmi, Usha R (2010). "Karmandala Satakam: Politico-Socio-Cultural Analysis of Medieval Tamil Literature on the Vellala Community of South Karnataka". "Karmandala Satakam: Politico-Socio-Cultural Analysis of Medieval Tamil Literature on the Vellala Community of South Karnataka. 71: 430. JSTOR 44147510.
  35. ^ Raj Kumar (2008). Encyclopaedia of Untouchables Ancient, Medieval and Modern. Gyan Publishing House. p. 179.
  36. ^ K. A. Nilakanta Sastri (1937). The Colas. Thompson & Co., Ltd., Printers, Madras. p. 11.
  37. ^ Kurukshetra University (1984). Prācī-jyoti: Digest of Indological Studies (in Latvian). Kurukshetra University. p. 115. Retrieved 28 September 2023.
  38. ^ Subramanian, K.R. (1989). Buddhist Remains in Andhra and the History of Andhra Between 225 and 610 A.D. Asian Educational Services. p. 127. ISBN 978-81-206-0444-5. Retrieved 28 September 2023.
  39. ^ The Andhra Pradesh Journal of Archaeology. Director of Archaeology and Museums, Government of Andhra Pradesh. 1979. p. 112. Retrieved 28 September 2023.
  40. ^ Cupramaṇiyan̲, T.N. (1953). South Indian temple inscriptions. Madras Government oriental series. Government Oriental Manuscripts Library. p. 693. Retrieved 28 September 2023.
  41. ^ Kamath (2001), p. 6, p. 10, p. 57, p. 59, p. 67
  42. ^ Ramesh (1984), p. 76, p. 159, pp. 161–162
  43. ^ a b Kamath (2001), p. 59
  44. ^ Azmathulla Shariff. . Deccan Herald, Spectrum, July 26, 2005. Archived from the original on 10 February 2007. Retrieved 10 November 2006.
  45. ^ Bolon, Carol Radcliffe (1 January 1979). "The Mahākuṭa Pillar and Its Temples". Artibus Asiae. 41 (2/3): 253–268. doi:10.2307/3249519. JSTOR 3249519.
  46. ^ Thapar, (2003), p. 326
  47. ^ Kamath (2001), pp. 12, 57, 67
  48. ^ Pulakesi II's Maharashtra extended from Nerbudda (Narmada river) in the north to Tungabhadra in the south (Vaidya 1924, p. 171)
  49. ^ Kamath (2001), p. 60
  50. ^ From the notes of Arab traveller Tabari (Kamath 2001, p. 60)
  51. ^ a b c d Chopra (2003), p. 75, part 1
  52. ^ The Buddhist Caves at Aurangabad: Transformations in Art and Religion, Pia Brancaccio, BRILL, 2010 p.82
  53. ^ Ramesh (1984), p. 14
  54. ^ Sen, Sailendra (2013). A Textbook of Medieval Indian History. Primus Books. p. 28. ISBN 978-93-80607-34-4.
  55. ^ S.R. Bakshi; S.G (2005). Early Aryans to Swaraj. Sarup & Sons. p. 325. ISBN 978-81-7625-537-0. It has been reported that the story of agnikula is mot mentioned at all in the original version of the Raso preserved in the Fort Library at Bikaner.
  56. ^ Kamath 2001, pp. 56
  57. ^ Quote:"Another unhistorical trend met with in the epigraphical records of the 11th and subsequent centuries is the attempt, on the part of the court poets, no doubt, again, with the consent of their masters, to invent mythical genealogies which seek to carry back the antiquity of the royal families not merely to the periods of the epics and the Vedas but to the very moment of their creation in the heavens. As far as the Chalukyas of Vatapi are concerned, the blame of engineering such travesties attaches, once again, to the Western Chalukyas of Kalyani and their Eastern Chalukya contemporaries. The Eastern Chalukyas, for instance, have concocted the following long list of fifty-two names commencing with no less a personage than the divine preserver"(Ramesh 1984, p. 16)
  58. ^ Kandavalli Balendu Sekaram. The Andhras through the ages. Sri Saraswati Book Depot, 1973. p. 188.
  59. ^ R.K. Pruthi. The Classical Age. Discovery Publishing House, 2004 – India – 288 pages. p. 106.
  60. ^ Satyavrata Ramdas Patel. The Soul of India. Munshiram Manoharlal Publishers, 1974 – India – 220 pages. p. 177.
  61. ^ Dr. Lewis's theory has not found acceptance because the Pallavas were in constant conflict with the Kadambas, prior to the rise of Chalukyas (Kamath 2001, p. 57)
  62. ^ a b Thapar (2003), p. 326
  63. ^ Popular theories regarding the name are: Puli – "tiger" in Kannada and Kesin – "haried" in Sanskrit; Pole – "lustrous" in Kannada, from his earliest Badami cliff inscription that literally spells Polekesi; Pole – from Tamil word Punai (to tie a knot; Ramesh 1984, pp. 31–32)
  64. ^ The name probably meant "the great lion" (Sastri 1955, p. 134)
  65. ^ The name probably meant "One endowed with the strength of a great lion" (Chopra 2003, p. 73, part 1)
  66. ^ Kamath (2001), pp. 58–59
  67. ^ Ramesh (1984), p. 76
  68. ^ Chopra 2003, p. 74, part 1
  69. ^ Quote:"His fame spread far and wide even beyond India" (Chopra 2003, p. 75 part 1)
  70. ^ Quote:"One of the great kings of India". He successfully defied the expansion of king Harshavardhana of Northern India into the deccan. The Aihole inscription by Ravikirti describes how King Harsha lost his Harsha or cheerful disposition after his defeat. The Chinese traveller Hiuen Tsiang also confirms Pulakesi II's victory over King Harsha in his travelogue. Pulakesi II took titles such as Prithvivallabha and Dakshinapatha Prithviswamy (Kamath 2001, pp. 58–60)
  71. ^ Quote:"Thus began one of the most colourful careers in Indian History" (Ramesh 1984, p. 76)
  72. ^ Vikramaditya I, who later revived the Chalukya fortunes was born to Pulakesi II and the daughter of Western Ganga monarch Durvinita (Chopra 2003, p. 74, part 1)
  73. ^ His other queen, an Alupa princess called Kadamba was the daughter of Aluka Maharaja (G.S. Gai in Kamath 2001, p. 94)
  74. ^ Quote:"The Aihole record gives an impressive list of his military conquests and other achievements. According to the record, he conquered the Kadambas, the Western Gangas, the north Konkan by naval victory, Harsha of Thanesar, the Latas, the Malwas, the Gurjaras (thereby obtaining sovereignty over the Maharashtras), Berar, Maharashtra and Kuntala (with their nine and ninety thousand villages), the Kalingas and the Kosalas, Pishtapura (Pishtapuram in eastern Andhra) and Kanchipuram, whose king had opposed the rise of his power" (Chopra 2003, p. 74 part 1)
  75. ^ Ramesh (1984), pp. 79–80, pp. 86–87
  76. ^ According to Dr. R. C. Majumdar, some principalities may have submitted to Pulakesi II out of fear of Harsha of Kanauj (Kamath 2001, p. 59)
  77. ^ Sastri (1955), pp. 135–136
  78. ^ Sastri (1955), p. 136
  79. ^ This is attested to by an inscription behind the Mallikarjuna temple in Badami (Sastri 1955, p. 136)
  80. ^ Chopra (2003), pp. 75–76, part 1
  81. ^ From the Gadval plates dated c. 674 of Vikramaditya I (Chopra 2003, p. 76, part 1)
  82. ^ a b Chopra (2003), p. 76, part 1
  83. ^ Sastri (1955), p. 138
  84. ^ a b From the Kannada inscription at the Kailasanatha temple in Kanchipuram (Sastri 1955, p. 140)
  85. ^ Kamath (2001), p. 63
  86. ^ Thapar (2003), p. 331
  87. ^ Ramesh (1984), pp. 159–160
  88. ^ Dikshit, Durga Prasad (1980), p. 166–167, Political History of the Chālukyas of Badami, Abhinav Publications, New Delhi, OCLC 831387906
  89. ^ Ramesh (1984), p. 159
  90. ^ Ramesh (1984), pp. 173–174
  91. ^ Kings of the Chalukya line of Vemulavada, who were certainly from the Badami Chalukya family line used the title "Malla" which is often used by the Western Chalukyas. Names such as "Satyashraya" which were used by the Badami Chalukya are also names of a Western Chalukya king, (Gopal B.R. in Kamath 2001, p. 100)
  92. ^ Unlike the Badami Chalukyas, the Kalyani Chalukyas did not claim to be Harithiputhras of Manavysya gotra in lineage. The use of titles like Tribhuvanamalla marked them as of a distinct line (Fleet, Bhandarkar and Altekar in Kamath 2001, p. 100)
  93. ^ Later legends and tradition hailed Tailapa as an incarnation of the God Krishna who fought 108 battles against the race of Ratta (Rashtrakuta) and captured 88 fortresses from them (Sastri 1955, p. 162)
  94. ^ From his c. 957 and c.965 records (Kamath 2001, p. 101
  95. ^ Vijnyaneshavara, the Sanskrit scholar in his court, eulogised him as "a king like none other" (Kamath 2001, p. 106)
  96. ^ The writing Vikramankadevacharita by Bilhana is a eulogy of the achievements of the king in 18 cantos (Sastri, 1955 p. 315)
  97. ^ Cousens 1926, p. 11
  98. ^ Vikrama–Chalukya era of 1075 CE (Thapar 2003, p. 469)
  99. ^ Chopra (2003), p. 139, part 1
  100. ^ Sastri (1955), p. 175
  101. ^ Kamath (2001), pp. 114–115
  102. ^ Narasimhacharya (1988), pp. 18–20
  103. ^ Sastri (1955), p. 192
  104. ^ Pulakesi II made Vishnuvardhana the Yuvaraja or crown prince. Later Vishnuvardhana become the founder of the Eastern Chalukya empire (Sastri 1955, pp. 134–136, p. 312)
  105. ^ a b Chopra (2003), p. 132, part 1
  106. ^ Kamath (2001), p. 8
  107. ^ Kamath 2001, p. 60
  108. ^ a b c Chopra (2003), p. 133
  109. ^ Sastri (1955), pp. 164–165
  110. ^ Sastri (1955), p. 165
  111. ^ Narasimhacharya (1988), p. 68
  112. ^ The Eastern Chalukya inscriptions show a gradual shift towards Telugu with the appearance of Telugu stanzas from the time of king Gunaga Vijayaditya (Vijayaditya III) in the middle of the 9th century, Dr. K.S.S. Seshan, University of Hyderabad. . Revenue Department (Gazetteers), Government of Andhra Pradesh. Tata Consultancy Services. Archived from the original on 6 December 2006. Retrieved 12 November 2006.
  113. ^ The first work of Telugu literature is a translation of Mahabharata by Nannaya during the rule of Eastern Chalukya king Rajaraja Narendra (1019–1061; Sastri 1955, p. 367)
  114. ^ a b by Tartakov, Gary Michael (1997), The Durga Temple at Aihole: A Historiographical Study, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-563372-6
  115. ^ Hardy (1995), p. 5
  116. ^ Quote"The Badami Chalukyas had introduced a glorious chapter, alike in heroism in battle and cultural magnificence in peace, in the western Deccan" (K.V. Sounder Rajan in Kamath 2001, p. 68)
  117. ^ Kamath 2001, p. 68
  118. ^ Tarr, Gary (1970), p.156, Chronology and Development of the Chāḷukya Cave Temples, Ars Orientalis, Vol. 8, pp. 155–184
  119. ^ Hardy (1995), p. 65
  120. ^ a b Hardy (1995), p. 66
  121. ^ Sastri (1955), p. 406
  122. ^ Quote:"The Chalukyas cut rock like titans but finished like jewellers"(Sheshadri in Kamath 2001, pp. 68–69)
  123. ^ Percy Brown in Kamath (2001), p. 68
  124. ^ Sastri (1955), p. 407
  125. ^ a b c Hardy (1995), p. 67
  126. ^ Foekema (2003), p. 11
  127. ^ Sastri (1955), pp. 407–408
  128. ^ Carol Radcliffe Bolon, (1980) pp. 303–326, The Pārvatī Temple, Sandur and Early Images of Agastya, Artibus Asiae Vol. 42, No. 4
  129. ^ Hardy (1995), p.342, p.278
  130. ^ Sastri (1955), p. 408
  131. ^ Kamath (2001), p. 69
  132. ^ Quote:"Their creations have the pride of place in Indian art tradition" (Kamath 2001, p. 115)
  133. ^ Sastri (1955), p. 427
  134. ^ Cousens (1926, p 17
  135. ^ Foekema (1996), p. 14
  136. ^ Hardy (1995), p. 156
  137. ^ Hardy (1995), pp. 6–7
  138. ^ Cousens (1926), pp. 100–102
  139. ^ Hardy (1995), p. 333
  140. ^ Cousens (1926), pp. 79–82
  141. ^ a b Hardy (1995), p. 336
  142. ^ Hardy (1995), p. 323
  143. ^ The Mahadeva Temple at Itagi has been called the finest in Kannada country after the Hoysaleswara temple at Halebidu (Cousens in Kamath 2001, p 117)
  144. ^ Cousens (1926), pp. 114–115
  145. ^ Hardy (1995), p. 326
  146. ^ Cousens (1926), pp. 85–87
  147. ^ Hardy (1995), p. 330
  148. ^ Foekema (2003), p. 52
  149. ^ Hardy (1995), p. 321
  150. ^ The Badami Chalukyas influenced the art of the rulers of Vengi and those of Gujarat (Kamath 2001, pp. 68, 69)
  151. ^ Quote:"He deemed himself the peer of Bharavi and Kalidasa". An earlier inscription in Mahakuta, in prose is comparable to the works of Bana (Sastri, 1955, p. 312)
  152. ^ a b Sastri, 1955, p. 312
  153. ^ The writing is on various topics including traditional medicine, music, precious stones, dance etc. (Kamath 2001, p. 106)
  154. ^ a b Sen (1999), p. 366
  155. ^ Thapar (2003), p. 345
  156. ^ Sahitya Akademi (1988), p. 1717
  157. ^ a b Chidananda Murthy in Kamath (2001), p. 67
  158. ^ Such as Indranandi's Srutavatara, Devachandra's Rajavalikathe (Narasimhacharya, 1934, pp. 4–5); Bhattakalanka's Sabdanusasana of 1604 (Sastri 1955, p. 355)
  159. ^ Sastri (1955), p. 355
  160. ^ Mugali (1975), p. 13
  161. ^ Narasimhacharya (1988), p. 4
  162. ^ Sastri 1955, p. 356
  163. ^ a b Chopra (2003), p. 196, part 1
  164. ^ Sastri (1955), p. 367
  165. ^ Chopra (2003), p. 77, part1
  166. ^ Kamath (2001), p. 64
  167. ^ Kamath 2001, pp. 57, 65
  168. ^ Dikshit, Durga Prasad (1968). POLITICAL HISTORY OF THE CHALUKYAS OF BADAMI. The Rashtrakuta inscriptions also praise the heroic nature of the Chalukyan army (Karṇāṭakabala, in their records)
  169. ^ The breakup of land into mandalas, vishaya existed in the Kadamba administrative machinery (Kamath 2001, pp. 36, 65, 66)
  170. ^ a b Kamath (2001), p. 65
  171. ^ a b However, they issued gold coins that weighed 120 grams, in imitation of the Gupta dynasty (A.V. Narasimha Murthy in Kamath 2001, p. 65)
  172. ^ Govindaraya Prabhu, S (1 November 2001). . Prabhu's Web Page On Indian Coinage. Archived from the original on 1 December 2008. Retrieved 6 August 2008.
  173. ^ Sastri (1955), p. 391
  174. ^ a b Kamath 2001, p. 66
  175. ^ Chopra (2003), p. 78, part 1
  176. ^ Vinopoti, a concubine of King Vijayaditya is mentioned with due respect in an inscription (Kamath 2001, p. 67)
  177. ^ One record mentions an artist called Achala who was well versed in Natyashastra (Kamath 2001, p. 67)
  178. ^ From the Shiggaon plates of c. 707 and Gudigeri inscription dated 1076 (Ramesh 1984, pp. 142, 144)
  179. ^ Cousens (1926), p. 59
  180. ^ Sastri (1955), p. 309
  181. ^ a b Staff correspondent. . NewIndia Press, Sunday February 26, 2006. NewIndia Press. Archived from the original on 29 September 2007. Retrieved 12 November 2006.

References edit

Books

  • Bolon, Carol Radcliffe (1 January 1979). "The Mahākuṭa Pillar and Its Temples". Artibus Asiae. 41 (2/3): 253–268. doi:10.2307/3249519. JSTOR 3249519.
  • Chopra, P.N.; Ravindran, T.K.; Subrahmanian, N (2003) [2003]. History of South India (Ancient, Medieval and Modern) Part 1. New Delhi: Chand Publications. ISBN 81-219-0153-7.
  • Cousens, Henry (1996) [1926]. The Chalukyan Architecture of Kanarese Districts. New Delhi: Archaeological Survey of India. OCLC 37526233.
  • Foekema, Gerard (1996). Complete Guide to Hoysala Temples. New Delhi: Abhinav. ISBN 81-7017-345-0.
  • Foekema, Gerard (2003) [2003]. Architecture decorated with architecture: Later medieval temples of Karnataka, 1000–1300 AD. New Delhi: Munshiram Manoharlal Publishers Pvt. Ltd. ISBN 81-215-1089-9.
  • Hardy, Adam (1995) [1995]. Indian Temple Architecture: Form and Transformation-The Karnata Dravida Tradition 7th to 13th Centuries. Abhinav Publications. ISBN 81-7017-312-4.
  • Houben, Jan E.M. (1996) [1996]. Ideology and Status of Sanskrit: Contributions to the History of the Sanskrit language. Brill. ISBN 90-04-10613-8.
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Web

  • . Archived from the original on 6 December 2006. Retrieved 12 November 2006.
  • "Architecture of Indian Subcontinent, Takeyo Kamiya, 20 September 1996, Published by Gerard da Cunha-Architecture Autonomous, Bardez, Goa, India". from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 12 November 2006.
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External links edit

  • "Chalukyan Art by Dr. Jyotsna Kamat, Kamat's Potpourri, 4 November 2006". Retrieved 10 November 2006.
  • . Archived from the original on 3 April 2005. Retrieved 12 November 2006.
  • "Aihole Temples, Photographs by Michael D. Gunther, 2002". Retrieved 10 November 2006.
  • "Badami Cave Temples, Photographs by Michael D. Gunther, 2002". Retrieved 10 November 2006.
  • "Pattadakal Temples, Photographs by Michael D. Gunther, 2002". Retrieved 10 November 2006.
  • Chalukyas of Kalyana (973–1198 CE) by Dr. Jyotsna Kamat
  • . Archived from the original on 15 August 2006. Retrieved 10 November 2006.

chalukya, dynasty, this, article, about, chalukyas, vatapi, other, dynasties, chalukya, disambiguation, tʃaːɭukjə, classical, indian, dynasty, that, ruled, large, parts, southern, central, india, between, 12th, centuries, during, this, period, they, ruled, thr. This article is about the Chalukyas of Vatapi For other dynasties see Chalukya disambiguation The Chalukya dynasty tʃaːɭukje was a Classical Indian dynasty that ruled large parts of southern and central India between the 6th and the 12th centuries During this period they ruled as three related yet individual dynasties The earliest dynasty known as the Badami Chalukyas ruled from Vatapi modern Badami from the middle of the 6th century The Badami Chalukyas began to assert their independence at the decline of the Kadamba kingdom of Banavasi and rapidly rose to prominence during the reign of Pulakeshin II After the death of Pulakeshin II the Eastern Chalukyas became an independent kingdom in the eastern Deccan They ruled from Vengi until about the 11th century In the western Deccan the rise of the Rashtrakutas in the middle of the 8th century eclipsed the Chalukyas of Badami before being revived by their descendants the Western Chalukyas in the late 10th century These Western Chalukyas ruled from Kalyani modern Basavakalyan until the end of the 12th century Chalukya dynasty543 753Extent of Badami Chalukya Empire 636 AD 740 AD 1 CapitalBadamiCommon languagesKannadaSanskritReligionHinduismBuddhism 2 JainismGovernmentMonarchyMaharaja 543 566Pulakeshin I 746 753Kirtivarman IIHistory Earliest records543 Established543 Disestablished753Preceded by Succeeded byKadamba dynastyVakataka dynasty Rashtrakuta dynastyEastern ChalukyasToday part ofIndiaThe rule of the Chalukyas marks an important milestone in the history of South India and a golden age in the history of Karnataka The political atmosphere in South India shifted from smaller kingdoms to large empires with the ascendancy of Badami Chalukyas A Southern India based kingdom took control and consolidated the entire region between the Kaveri and the Narmada rivers The rise of this empire saw the birth of efficient administration overseas trade and commerce and the development of new style of architecture called Chalukyan architecture Kannada literature which had enjoyed royal support in the 9th century Rashtrakuta court found eager patronage from the Western Chalukyas in the Jain and Veerashaiva traditions The 11th century saw the patronage of Telugu literature under the Eastern Chalukyas Contents 1 Origins 1 1 Natives of Karnataka 1 2 Historical sources 1 3 Legends 2 Periods in Chalukya history 2 1 Chalukyas of Badami 2 2 Chalukyas of Kalyani 2 3 Chalukyas of Vengi 3 Architecture 4 Literature 5 Badami Chalukya country 5 1 Army 5 2 Land governance 5 3 Coinage 5 4 Religion 5 5 Society 6 In popular culture 7 See also 8 Notes and references 9 References 10 External linksOrigins editNatives of Karnataka edit nbsp Old Kannada inscription of Chalukya King Mangalesha dated 578 AD at Badami cave temple no 3 nbsp Old Kannada inscription on victory pillar Virupaksha Temple Pattadakal 733 745 ADWhile opinions vary regarding the early origins of the Chalukyas the consensus among noted historians such as John Keay D C Sircar Hans Raj S Sen Kamath K V Ramesh and Karmarkar is that the founders of the empire at Badami were native to the modern Karnataka region 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 A theory that they were descendants of a 2nd century chieftain called Kandachaliki Remmanaka a feudatory of the Andhra Ikshvaku from an Ikshvaku inscription of the 2nd century was put forward This according to Kamath has failed to explain the difference in lineage The Kandachaliki feudatory call themselves Vashisthiputras of the Hiranyakagotra The Chalukyas however address themselves as Harithiputras of Manavyasagotra in their inscriptions which is the same lineage as their early overlords the Kadambas of Banavasi This makes them descendants of the Kadambas The Chalukyas took control of the territory formerly ruled by the Kadambas 14 A later record of Eastern Chalukyas mentions the northern origin theory and claims one ruler of Ayodhya came south defeated the Pallavas and married a Pallava princess She had a child called Vijayaditya who is claimed to be the Pulakeshin I s father However according to the historians K V Ramesh Chopra and Sastri there are Badami Chalukya inscriptions that confirm Jayasimha was Pulakeshin I s grandfather and Ranaraga his father 15 16 17 18 Kamath and Moraes claim it was a popular practice in the 11th century to link South Indian royal family lineage to a Northern kingdom The Badami Chalukya records themselves are silent with regards to the Ayodhya origin 19 20 While the northern origin theory has been dismissed by many historians the epigraphist K V Ramesh has suggested that an earlier southern migration is a distinct possibility which needs examination 21 According to him the complete absence of any inscriptional reference of their family connections to Ayodhya and their subsequent Kannadiga identity may have been due to their earlier migration into present day Karnataka region where they achieved success as chieftains and kings Hence the place of origin of their ancestors may have been of no significance to the kings of the empire who may have considered themselves natives of the Kannada speaking region 13 The writing of 12th century Kashmiri poet Bilhana suggests the Chalukya family belonged to the Shudra while other sources claim they were born in the arms of Brahma and hence were Kshatriya caste 22 According to Xuanzang the Chalukya king Pulakeshin II was war like and loved military arts because he was a Kshatriya by birth 23 The historians Jan Houben and Kamath and the epigraphist D C Sircar note the Badami Chalukya inscriptions are in Kannada and Sanskrit 24 25 26 According to the historian N L Rao their inscriptions call them Karnatas and their names use indigenous Kannada titles such as Priyagallam and Noduttagelvom The names of some Chalukya princes end with the pure Kannada term arasa meaning king or chief 27 28 The Rashtrakuta inscriptions call the Chalukyas of Badami Karnatakabala Power of Karnataka 29 It has been proposed by the historian S C Nandinath that the word Chalukya originated from Salki or Chalki which is a Kannada word for an agricultural implement 30 31 32 According to some historians the Chalukyas originated from agriculturists 32 30 The Chalukyas and Kadambas belonged to the Manavya gotra as being the descendants of the original ancestress Hariti 33 The 12th century work Karmandala Satakam states that the Velirs of Karmandalam Karnataka belong to the same Manavya Gotra 34 The Chalukya kings were called Velpularasar and Velkulattarasar by some communities that is kings over Vel country pula means region or country 35 36 Later day references to them in Chola inscriptions puts the Chalukyas under the Velir community ruling in Deccan 37 38 39 40 Historical sources edit Inscriptions in Sanskrit and Kannada are the main source of information about Badami Chalukya history Among them the Badami cave inscriptions of Mangalesha 578 Kappe Arabhatta record of c 700 Peddavaduguru inscription of Pulakeshin II the Kanchi Kailasanatha Temple inscription and Pattadakal Virupaksha Temple inscription of Vikramaditya II all in Kannada language provide more evidence of the Chalukya language 41 42 The Badami cliff inscription of Pulakeshin I 543 the Mahakuta Pillar inscription of Mangalesha 595 and the Aihole inscription of Pulakeshin II 634 are examples of important Sanskrit inscriptions written in old Kannada script 43 44 45 The reign of the Chalukyas saw the arrival of Kannada as the predominant language of inscriptions along with Sanskrit in areas of the Indian peninsula outside what is known as Tamilakam Tamil country 46 Several coins of the Badami Chalukyas with Kannada legends have been found All this indicates that Kannada language flourished during this period 47 nbsp Coinage of the Chalukyas of Badami Uncertain ruler c 597 757 AD Boar and Temple type Travelogues of contemporary foreign travellers have provided useful information about the Chalukyan empire The Chinese traveller Xuanzang had visited the court of Pulakeshin II At the time of this visit as mentioned in the Aihole record Pulakeshin II had divided his empire into three Maharashtrakas or great provinces comprising 99 000 villages each This empire possibly covered present day Karnataka Maharashtra and coastal Konkan 48 49 Xuanzang impressed with the governance of the empire observed that the benefits of the king s efficient administration was felt far and wide Later Persian emperor Khosrau II exchanged ambassadors with Pulakeshin II 50 51 52 Legends edit Court poets of the Western Chalukya dynasty of Kalyani narrate Once when Brahma the creator was engaged in the performance of the sandhya twilight rituals Indra approached and beseeched him to create a hero who could put to an end the increasing evil on earth On being thus requested Brahma looked steadily into the Chuluka jala the water of oblation in his palm and out sprang thence a great warrior the progenitor of the Chalukyas 53 The Chalukyas claimed to have been nursed by the Sapta Matrikas seven divine mothers and were worshippers of many gods including Siva Vishnu Chamundi Surya Kubera Parvati Vinayaka and Kartikeya Some scholars connect the Chalukyas with the Chaulukyas Solankis of Gujarat 54 According to a myth mentioned in latter manuscripts of Prithviraj Raso Chaulukyas were born out of fire pit Agnikund at Mount Abu However it has been reported that the story of Agnikula is not mentioned at all in the original version of the Prithviraj Raso preserved in the Fort Library at Bikaner 55 According to the Nilagunda inscription of King Vikramaditya VI 11th century or later the Chalukyas originally hailed from Ayodhya where fifty nine kings ruled and later sixteen more of this family ruled from South India where they had migrated This is repeated by his court poet Bilhana who claims that the first member of the family Chalukya was so named as he was born in the hollow of the hands of God Brahma 56 57 Some genealogical accounts point to an Ayodhya origin and claim that the Chalukyas belonged to the Solar dynasty 58 59 60 According to a theory put forward by Lewis the Chalukya were descendants of the Seleukia tribe of Iraq and that their conflict with the Pallava of Kanchi was but a continuation of the conflict between ancient Seleukia and Parthians the proposed ancestors of Pallavas However this theory has been rejected by Kamath as it seeks to build lineages based simply on similar sounding clan names 61 Periods in Chalukya history editThe Chalukyas ruled over the Deccan plateau in India for over 600 years During this period they ruled as three closely related but individual dynasties These are the Chalukyas of Badami also called Early Chalukyas who ruled between the 6th and the 8th century and the two sibling dynasties the Chalukyas of Kalyani also called Western Chalukyas or Later Chalukyas and the Chalukyas of Vengi also called Eastern Chalukyas Chalukyas of Badami edit nbsp Bhutanatha temple complex at BadamiIn the 6th century with the decline of the Gupta dynasty and their immediate successors in northern India major changes began to happen in the area south of the Vindhyas the Deccan and Tamilakam The age of small kingdoms had given way to large empires in this region 62 The Chalukya dynasty was established by Pulakeshin I in 543 63 64 65 Pulakeshin I took Vatapi modern Badami in Bagalkot district Karnataka under his control and made it his capital Pulakeshin I and his descendants are referred to as Chalukyas of Badami They ruled over an empire that comprised the entire state of Karnataka and most of Andhra Pradesh in the Deccan Pulakeshin II whose pre coronation name was Ereya 66 commanded control over the entire Deccan and is perhaps the most well known emperor of the Badami dynasty 67 68 He is considered one of the notable kings in Indian history 69 70 71 His queens were princess from the Alupa Dynasty of South Canara and the Western Ganga Dynasty of Talakad clans with whom the Chalukyas maintained close family and marital relationships 72 73 Pulakeshin II extended the Chalukya Empire up to the northern extents of the Pallava kingdom and halted the southward march of Harsha by defeating him on the banks of the river Narmada He then defeated the Vishnukundins in the south eastern Deccan 74 75 76 77 Pallava Narasimhavarman however reversed this victory in 642 by attacking and occupying Badami temporarily It is presumed Pulakeshin II the great hero died fighting 51 78 The Badami Chalukya dynasty went into a brief decline following the death of Pulakeshin II due to internal feuds when Badami was occupied by the Pallavas for a period of thirteen years 79 80 It recovered during the reign of Vikramaditya I who succeeded in pushing the Pallavas out of Badami and restoring order to the empire Vikramaditya I took the title Rajamalla lit Sovereign of the Mallas or Pallavas 81 The thirty seven year rule of Vijayaditya 696 733 was a prosperous one and is known for prolific temple building activity 82 83 The empire was its peak again during the rule of the illustrious Vikramaditya II 733 744 who is known not only for his repeated invasions of the territory of Tondaimandalam and his subsequent victories over Pallava Nandivarman II but also for his benevolence towards the people and the monuments of Kanchipuram the Pallava capital 82 84 85 He thus avenged the earlier humiliation of the Chalukyas by the Pallavas and engraved a Kannada inscription on the victory pillar at the Kailasanatha Temple 84 86 87 During his reign Arab intruders of the Caliphal province of Sind invaded southern Gujarat which was under Chalukya rule but the Arabs were defeated and driven out by Avanijanashraya Pulakeshin the governor of the Chalukya branch of Navsari 88 Vikramaditya II later overran the other traditional kingdoms of Tamil country the Pandyas the Cholas and the Cheras in addition to subduing a Kalabhra ruler 89 The last Chalukya king Kirtivarman II was overthrown by the Rashtrakuta King Dantidurga in 753 90 At their peak the Chalukyas ruled a vast empire stretching from the Kaveri in the south to the Narmada in the north Chalukyas of Kalyani edit Main article Western Chalukya Empire nbsp KyrgyzsCHAM PA576CHENLAFIRST TURKIC KHAGANATESASANIANEMPIREALCHONHUNSCHALU KYASLATERGUPTASNORTH ZHOUNORTH QIZHANGZHUNGCHENBYZANTINEEMPIREAVARKHAGANATETUYUHUNKhitansPaleo SiberiansTungusGOGU RYEOTOCHA RIANS class notpageimage The Chalukyas and contemporary polities c 576 The Chalukyas revived their fortunes in 973 after over 200 years of dormancy when much of the Deccan was under the rule of the Rashtrakutas The genealogy of the kings of this empire is still debated One theory based on contemporary literary and inscriptional evidence plus the finding that the Western Chalukyas employed titles and names commonly used by the early Chalukyas suggests that the Western Chalukya kings belonged to the same family line as the illustrious Badami Chalukya dynasty of the 6th century 91 92 while other Western Chalukya inscriptional evidence indicates they were a distinct line unrelated to the Early Chalukyas 93 Tailapa II a Rashtrakuta feudatory ruling from Tardavadi 1000 Bijapur district overthrew Karka II re established the Chalukya rule in the western Deccan and recovered most of the Chalukya empire 94 95 The Western Chalukyas ruled for over 200 years and were in constant conflict with the Cholas and with their cousins the Eastern Chalukyas of Vengi Vikramaditya VI is widely considered the most notable ruler of the dynasty 96 97 Starting from the very beginning of his reign which lasted fifty years he abolished the original Saka era and established the Vikrama Era Most subsequent Chalukya inscriptions are dated in this new era 98 99 Vikramaditya VI was an ambitious and skilled military leader Under his leadership the Western Chalukyas were able to end the Chola influence over Vengi coastal Andhra and become the dominant power in the Deccan 100 101 The Western Chalukya period was an important age in the development of Kannada literature and Sanskrit literature 102 103 They went into their final dissolution towards the end of the 12th century with the rise of the Hoysala Empire the Pandyas the Kakatiya and the Seuna Yadavas of Devagiri 104 Chalukyas of Vengi edit Main article Eastern Chalukyas Pulakeshin II conquered the eastern Deccan corresponding to the coastal districts of modern Andhra Pradesh in 616 defeating the remnants of the Vishnukundina kingdom He appointed his brother Kubja Vishnuvardhana as Viceroy in 621 105 106 Thus the Eastern Chalukyas were originally of Kannada stock 107 After the death of Pulakeshin II the Vengi Viceroyalty developed into an independent kingdom and included the region between Nellore and Visakhapatnam 106 108 After the decline of the Badami Chalukya empire in the mid 8th century territorial disputes flared up between the Rashtrakutas the new rulers of the western deccan and the Eastern Chalukyas For much of the next two centuries the Eastern Chalukyas had to accept subordination towards the Rashtrakutas 109 Apart from a rare military success such as the one by Vijayaditya II c 808 847 it was only during the rule of Bhima I c 892 921 that these Chalukyas were able to celebrate a measure of independence After the death of Bhima I the Andhra region once again saw succession disputes and interference in Vengi affairs by the Rashtrakutas 109 The fortunes of the Eastern Chalukyas took a turn around 1000 Danarnava their king was killed in battle in 973 by the Telugu Choda King Bhima who then imposed his rule over the region for twenty seven years During this time Danarnava s two sons took refuge in the Chola kingdom Choda Bhima s invasion of Tondaimandalam a Chola territory and his subsequent death on the battlefield opened up a new era in Chola Chalukya relations Saktivarman I the elder son of Danarnava was crowned as the ruler of Vengi in 1000 though under the control of king Rajaraja Chola I 110 This new relationship between the Cholas and the coastal Andhra kingdom was unacceptable to the Western Chalukyas who had by then replaced the Rashtrakutas as the main power in the western Deccan The Western Chalukyas sought to brook the growing Chola influence in the Vengi region but were unsuccessful 109 111 Initially the Eastern Chalukyas had encouraged Kannada language and literature though after a period of time local factors took over and they gave importance to Telugu language 112 113 Telugu literature owes its growth to the Eastern Chalukyas 114 Architecture editSee also Badami Chalukya Architecture Western Chalukya architecture Pattadakal Badami Cave Temples and Aihole nbsp Virupaksha temple in Dravidian style at Pattadakal built 740 CEThe Badami Chalukya era was an important period in the development of South Indian architecture The kings of this dynasty were called Umapati Varlabdh and built many temples for the Hindu god Shiva 115 Their style of architecture is called Chalukyan architecture or Karnata Dravida architecture 116 117 Nearly a hundred monuments built by them rock cut cave and structural are found in the Malaprabha river basin in modern Bagalkot district of northern Karnataka 118 The building material they used was a reddish golden Sandstone found locally These cave temples are basically excavations cut out of the living rock sites they occupy They were not built as their structural counterparts were rather created by a special technique known as subtraction and are basically sculptural 119 Though they ruled a vast empire the Chalukyan workshops concentrated most of their temple building activity in a relatively small area within the Chalukyan heartland Aihole Badami Pattadakal and Mahakuta in modern Karnataka state 120 Their temple building activity can be categorised into three phases The early phase began in the last quarter of the 6th century and resulted in many cave temples prominent among which are three elementary cave temples at Aihole one Vedic one Jain and one Buddhist which is incomplete followed by four developed cave temples at Badami of which cave 3 a Vaishnava temple is dated accurately to 578 CE 121 These cave temples at Badami are similar in that each has a plain exterior but an exceptionally well finished interior consisting of a pillared verandah a columned hall mantapa and a cella shrine cut deep into rock which contains the deity of worship 122 In Badami three caves temples are Vedic and one in Jain The Vedic temples contain large well sculpted images of Harihara Mahishasuramardhini Varaha Narasimha Trivikrama Vishnu seated on Anantha the snake and Nataraja dancing Shiva 123 The second phase of temple building was at Aihole where some seventy structures exist and has been called one of the cradles of Indian temple architecture 124 and Badami Though the exact dating of these temples has been debated there is consensus that the beginnings of these constructions are from c 600 125 126 127 These are the Lad Khan Temple dated by some to c 450 but more accurately to 620 with its interesting perforated stone windows and sculptures of river goddesses the Meguti Jain Temple 634 which shows progress in structural design the Durga Temple with its northern Indian style tower 8th century and experiments to adapt a Buddhist Chaitya design to a brahminical one its stylistic framework is overall a hybrid of north and south Indian styles 115 the Huccimalli Gudi Temple with a new inclusion a vestibule connecting the sanctum to the hall 128 Other dravida style temples from this period are the Naganatha Temple at Nagaral the Banantigudi Temple the Mahakutesvara Temple and the Mallikarjuna Temple at Mahakuta and the Lower Sivalaya Temple the Malegitti Sivalaya Temple upper and the Jambulingesvara Temple at Badami 126 Located outside the Chalukyan architectural heartland 140 km south east of Badami with a structure related to the Early Chalukya style is the unusual Parvati Temple at Sanduru which dates to the late 7th century It is medium sized 48 ft long and 37 ft wide It has a nagara north Indian style vimana tower and dravida south Indian style parts has no mantapa hall and consists of an antarala vestibule crowned with a barrel vaulted tower sukhanasi The staggered base plan of the temple became popular much later in the 11th century 129 130 The structural temples at Pattadakal built in the 8th century and now a UNESCO World Heritage Site marks the culmination and mature phase of Badami Chalukyan architecture The Bhutanatha group of temples at Badami are also from this period There are ten temples at Pattadakal six in southern dravida style and four in the northern nagara style Well known among these are the Sangamesvara Temple 725 the Virupaksha Temple 740 745 and the Mallikarjuna Temple 740 745 in the southern style The Papanatha temple 680 and Galaganatha Temple 740 are early attempts in the nagara dravida fusion style 131 Inscriptional evidence suggests that the Virupaksha and the Mallikarjuna Temples were commissioned by the two queens of King Vikramaditya II after his military success over the Pallavas of Kanchipuram 126 Some well known names of Chalukyan architects are Revadi Ovajja Narasobba and Anivarita Gunda 132 The reign of Western Chalukyas was an important period in the development of Deccan architecture Their architecture served as a conceptual link between the Badami Chalukya architecture of the 8th century and the Hoysala architecture popularised in the 13th century 133 134 The centre of their cultural and temple building activity lay in the Tungabhadra region of modern Karnataka state encompassing the present day Dharwad district it included areas of present day Haveri and Gadag districts 135 136 Here large medieval workshops built numerous monuments 137 These monuments regional variants of pre existing dravida temples defined the Karnata dravida tradition 138 The most notable of the many buildings dating from this period are the Mahadeva Temple at Itagi in the Koppal district 139 140 the Kasivisvesvara Temple at Lakkundi in the Gadag district 141 142 the Mallikarjuna Temple at Kuruvatti 142 and the Kallesvara Temple at Bagali 143 both in the Davangere district 144 Other notable constructions are the Dodda Basappa Temple at Dambal Gadag district 145 146 the Siddhesvara Temple at Haveri Haveri district 147 148 and the Amrtesvara Temple at Annigeri Dharwad district 149 150 The Eastern Chalukyas built some fine temples at Alampur in modern eastern Andhra Pradesh 121 151 nbsp Bahubali at Jain Cave temple No 4 at Badami 6th century nbsp Vishnu image in Cave temple No 3 nbsp Bhutanatha group of temples facing the Badami tank nbsp The Parvati Temple located about 140 km southeast to the Badami nbsp Aihole Durga Temple Front View nbsp Aihole Meguti Jain Temple nbsp Mallikarjuna temple in dravidian style and Kashi Vishwanatha temple in nagara style at Pattadakal built 740 CE nbsp Dancing Shiva in cave no 1 in Badami nbsp Papanatha temple at Pattadakal fusion of southern and northern Indian styles 680 CELiterature editSee also Western Chalukya literature nbsp Poetry on stone at the Meguti temple Aihole inscription dated 634 AD in Sanskrit language and old Kannada script with a Kannada language endorsement of about the same date at the bottom 24 The Aihole inscription of Pulakeshin II 634 written by his court poet Ravikirti in Sanskrit language and Kannada script is considered as a classical piece of poetry 43 152 A few verses of a poet named Vijayanaka who describes herself as the dark Sarasvati have been preserved It is possible that she may have been a queen of prince Chandraditya a son of Pulakeshin II 153 Famous writers in Sanskrit from the Western Chalukya period are Vijnaneshwara who achieved fame by writing Mitakshara a book on Hindu law and King Someshvara III a noted scholar who compiled an encyclopedia of all arts and sciences called Manasollasa 154 From the period of the Badami Chalukyas references are made to the existence of Kannada literature though not much has survived 155 Inscriptions however refer to Kannada as the natural language 156 The Kappe Arabhatta record of c 700 in tripadi three line metre is the earliest available work in Kannada poetics 157 158 Karnateshwara Katha which was quoted later by Jayakirti is believed to be a eulogy of Pulakeshin II and to have belonged to this period 158 Other probable Kannada writers whose works are not extant now but titles of which are known from independent references 159 are Syamakundacharya 650 who is said to have authored the Prabhrita and Srivaradhadeva also called Tumubuluracharya 650 or earlier the possible author of the Chudamani Crest Jewel a lengthy commentary on logic 155 160 161 162 The rule of the Western and Eastern Chalukyas however is a major event in the history of Kannada and Telugu literatures respectively By the 9th 10th centuries Kannada language had already seen some of its most notable writers The three gems of Kannada literature Adikavi Pampa Sri Ponna and Ranna belonged to this period 163 164 In the 11th century Telugu literature was born under the patronage of the Eastern Chalukyas with Nannaya Bhatta as its first writer 164 165 Badami Chalukya country editArmy edit The army was well organised and this was the reason for Pulakeshin II s success beyond the Vindyas 166 It consisted of an infantry a cavalry an elephant corps and a powerful navy The Chinese traveller Hiuen Tsiang wrote that the Chalukyan army had hundreds of elephants which were intoxicated with liquor prior to battle 51 167 It was with their navy that they conquered Revatidvipa Goa and Puri on east coast of India Rashtrakuta inscriptions use the term Karnatakabala when referring to the powerful Chalukya armies 168 169 Land governance edit The government at higher levels was closely modelled after the Magadhan and Satavahana administrative machinery 51 The empire was divided into Maharashtrakas provinces then into smaller Rashtrakas Mandala Vishaya district Bhoga group of 10 villages which is similar to the Dasagrama unit used by the Kadambas At the lower levels of administration the Kadamba style prevailed fully The Sanjan plates of Vikramaditya I even mentions a land unit called Dasagrama 170 In addition to imperial provinces there were autonomous regions ruled by feudatories such as the Alupas the Gangas the Banas and the Sendrakas 171 Local assemblies and guilds looked after local issues Groups of mahajanas learned brahmins looked after agraharas called ghatika or place of higher learning such as at Badami which was served by 2000 mahajans and Aihole which was served by 500 mahajanas Taxes were levied and were called the herjunka tax on loads the kirukula tax on retail goods in transit the bilkode sales tax the pannaya betel tax siddaya land tax and the vaddaravula tax levied to support royalty 171 Coinage edit The Badami Chalukyas minted coins that were of a different standard compared to the coins of the northern kingdoms 172 The coins had Nagari and Kannada legends 25 The coins of Mangalesha had the symbol of a temple on the obverse and a sceptre between lamps or a temple on the reverse Pulakeshin II s coins had a caparisoned lion facing right on the obverse and a temple on the reverse The coins weighed 4 grams and were called in old Kannada hun or honnu and had fractions such as fana or fanam and the quarter fana the modern day Kannada equivalent being hana which literally means money 173 A gold coin called gadyana is mentioned in a record at the Vijayeshwara Temple at Pattadakal which later came to be known as varaha their royal emblem 172 Religion edit nbsp Vaishnava Cave temple No 3 at Badami 578 ADBoth Shaivism and Vaishnavism flourished during the Badami Chalukya period though it seems the former was more popular 174 Famous temples were built in places such as Pattadakal Aihole and Mahakuta and priests archakas were invited from northern India Vedic sacrifices religious vows vrata and the giving of gifts dana was important 175 The Badami kings were followers of Vedic Hinduism and dedicated temples to popular Hindu deities in Aihole Sculptures of deities testify to the popularity of Hindu Gods such as Vishnu Shiva Kartikeya Ganapathi Shakti Surya and Sapta Matrikas seven mothers The Badami kings also performed the Ashwamedha horse sacrifice 176 The worship of Lajja Gauri a fertility goddess is known Jainism too was a prominent religion during this period The kings of the dynasty were however secular and actively encouraged Jainism One of the Badami Cave temples is dedicated to the Jain faith Jain temples were also erected in the Aihole complex the temple at Maguti being one such example 177 Ravikirti the court poet of Pulakeshin II was a Jain Queen Vinayavati consecrated a temple for the Trimurti Hindu trinity at Badami Sculptures of the Trimurti Harihara half Vishnu half Shiva and Ardhanarishwara half Shiva half woman provide ample evidence of their tolerance 176 Buddhism was on a decline having made its ingress into Southeast Asia This is confirmed by the writings of Hiuen Tsiang Badami Aihole Kurtukoti and Puligere modern Lakshmeshwar in the Gadag district were primary places of learning Society edit The Hindu caste system was present and devadasis were recognised by the government Some kings had concubines ganikas who were given much respect 178 and Sati was perhaps absent since widows like Vinayavathi and Vijayanka are mentioned in records Devadasis were however present in temples Sage Bharata s Natyashastra the precursor to Bharatanatyam the classical dance of South India was popular and is seen in many sculptures and is mentioned in inscriptions 179 Some women from the royal family enjoyed political power in administration Queen Vijayanka was a noted Sanskrit poet 153 Kumkumadevi the younger sister of Vijayaditya and queen of Alupa King Chitravahana made several grants and had a Jain basadi called Anesajjebasadi constructed at Puligere 180 and the queens of Vikramaditya II Lokamahadevi and Trailokyamahadevi made grants and possibly consecrated the Lokesvara Temple now called Virupaksha temple but also and the Mallikarjuna temple respectively at Pattadakal 181 In popular culture editThe Chalukya era may be seen as the beginning of the fusion of cultures of northern and southern India making way for the transmission of ideas between the two regions This is seen clearly in the field of architecture The Chalukyas spawned the Vesara style of architecture which includes elements of the northern nagara and southern dravida styles During this period the expanding Sanskritic culture mingled with local Dravidian vernaculars which were already popular 62 Dravidian languages maintain these influences even today This influence helped to enrich literature in these languages 182 The Hindu legal system owes much to the Sanskrit work Mitakshara by Vijnaneshwara in the court of Western Chalukya King Vikramaditya VI Perhaps the greatest work in legal literature Mitakshara is a commentary on Yajnavalkya and is a treatise on law based on earlier writings and has found acceptance in most parts of India Englishman Henry Thomas Colebrooke later translated into English the section on inheritance giving it currency in the British Indian court system 183 It was during the Western Chalukya rule that the Bhakti movement gained momentum in South India in the form of Ramanujacharya and Basavanna later spreading into northern India A celebration called Chalukya utsava a three day festival of music and dance organised by the Government of Karnataka is held every year at Pattadakal Badami and Aihole 184 The event is a celebration of the achievements of the Chalukyas in the realm of art craft music and dance The program which starts at Pattadakal and ends in Aihole is inaugurated by the Chief Minister of Karnataka Singers dancers poets and other artists from all over the country take part in this event In the 26 February 2006 celebration 400 art troupes took part in the festivities Colorful cutouts of the Varaha the Chalukya emblem Satyashraya Pulakeshin Pulakeshin II famous sculptural masterpieces such as Durga Mahishasuramardhini Durga killing demon Mahishasura were present everywhere The program at Pattadakal is named Anivaritacharigund vedike after the famous architect of the Virupaksha temple Gundan Anivaritachari At Badami it is called Chalukya Vijayambika Vedike and at Aihole Ravikirti Vedike after the famous poet and minister Ravikirti in the court of Pulakeshin II Immadi Pulikeshi a Kannada movie of the 1960s starring Dr Rajkumar celebrates the life and times of the great king 184 See also editEastern Chalukyas Western Chalukyas Chalukya Cholas Hoysala Empire Chola dynasty Kamboi KambojaNotes and references edit Schwartzberg Joseph E 1978 A Historical atlas of South Asia Chicago University of Chicago Press p 146 map XIV 2 c ISBN 0226742210 Archived from the original on 24 February 2021 Retrieved 25 March 2021 An inscription dated 1095 AD of Vikramaditya VI mentions grants to a Vihara of Buddha and Arya Taradevi Cousens 1926 p11 N Laxminarayana Rao and Dr S C Nandinath have claimed the Chalukyas were Kannadigas Kannada speakers and very much the natives of Karnataka Kamath 2001 p 57 The Chalukyas were Kannadigas D C Sircar in Mahajan V D 1960 Reprint 2007 Ancient India Chand and Company New Delhi p 690 ISBN 81 219 0887 6 Natives of Karnataka Hans Raj 2007 Advanced history of India From earliest times to present times Part 1 Surgeet publications New Delhi p 339 The Chalukyas hailed from Karnataka John Keay 2000 p 168 Quote They belonged to Karnataka country and their mother tongue was Kannada Sen 1999 p 360 The Chalukyas of Badami seem to be of indigenous origin Kamath 2001 p 58 Jayasimha and Ranaraga the first members of the Chalukya family were possibly employees of the Kadambas in the northern part of the Kadamba Kingdom Fleet in Kanarese Dynasties p 343 in Moraes 1931 pp 51 52 Pulakesi I must have been an administrative official of the northern Kadamba territory centered in Badami Moraes 1931 pp 51 52 The Chalukya base was Badami and Aihole Thapar 2003 p 328 Inscriptional evidence proves the Chalukyas were native Kannadigas Karmarkar 1947 p 26 a b Ramesh 1984 p 20 Pulakesi I of Badami who was a feudatory of the Kadamba king Krishna Varman II overpowered his overlord in c 540 and took control of the Kadamba Kingdom Kamath 2001 p 35 Jayasimha Pulakesi I s grandfather is known from the Kaira inscription of 472 473 CE Both Jayasimha and Ranaraga Pulakesi I s father are known from Mahakuta inscription of 599 CE and Aihole record of 634 CE Ramesh 1984 pp 26 27 p 30 From the Badami Cliff inscription of Pulakesi I and from the Hyderabad record of Pulakesi II which states their family ancestry Kamath 2001 pp 56 58 Sastri 1955 p 154 Chopra 2003 p 73 part 1 Kamath 2001 p 56 Moraes 1931 pp 10 11 Ramesh 1984 p 19 Bilhana in his Sanskrit work Vikramanakadevacharitam claims the Early Chalukya family were born from the feet of Hindu God Brahma implying they were Shudras by caste while other sources claim they were born in the arms of Brahma and hence were Kshatriyas Ramesh 1984 p 15 Jain S 2011 THE INDIA THEY SAW VOL 1 THE INDIA THEY SAW VOL 1 by SANDHYA JAIN Perspectives on India The India They Saw Foreign Accounts Ocean Books p 266 ISBN 978 81 8430 106 9 Retrieved 28 September 2023 a b Sircar D C 1965 p 48 Indian Epigraphy Motilal Banarsidass Publishers Delhi ISBN 81 208 1166 6 a b Kamath 2001 p 57 Houben 1996 p 215 Professor N L Rao has pointed out that some of their family records in Sanskrit have also named the princes with arasa such as Kattiyarasa Kirtivarman I Bittarasa Kubja Vishnuvardhana and Mangalarasa Mangalesha Kamath 2001 pp 57 60 Historians Shafaat Ahmad Khan and S Krishnasvami Aiyangar clarify that Arasa is Kannada word equivalent to Sanskrit word Raja Journal of Indian History p 102 Published by Department of Modern Indian History University of Allahabad Dikshit Durga Prasad 1968 POLITICAL HISTORY OF THE CHALUKYAS OF BADAMI The Rashtrakuta inscriptions also praise the heroic nature of the Chalukyan army Karṇaṭakabala in their records a b Dr Hoernle suggests a non Sanskrit origin of the dynastic name Dr S C Nandinath feels the Chalukyas were of agricultural background and of Kannada origin who later took up a martial career He feels the word Chalki found in some of their records must have originated from salki an agricultural implement Kamath 2001 p 57 The word Chalukya is derived from a Dravidian root Kittel in Karmarkar 1947 p 26 a b Anirudh Kanisetti 2022 Lords of the Deccan Southern India from the Chalukyas to the Cholas India Juggernaut p 35 ISBN 978 93 91165 0 55 there seems to have been some connection to the crowbar chalke pointing to very humble origins likely as a leader of an agricultural group in the valley of the Malaprabha river in the northern part of the modern state of Karnataka Krishnarao B V 1939 The Origin and the Original Home of the Calukyas Proceedings of the Indian History Congress Indian History Congress 3 386 410 ISSN 2249 1937 JSTOR 44252388 Retrieved 22 December 2022 Vijayalakshmi Usha R 2010 Karmandala Satakam Politico Socio Cultural Analysis of Medieval Tamil Literature on the Vellala Community of South Karnataka Karmandala Satakam Politico Socio Cultural Analysis of Medieval Tamil Literature on the Vellala Community of South Karnataka 71 430 JSTOR 44147510 Raj Kumar 2008 Encyclopaedia of Untouchables Ancient Medieval and Modern Gyan Publishing House p 179 K A Nilakanta Sastri 1937 The Colas Thompson amp Co Ltd Printers Madras p 11 Kurukshetra University 1984 Praci jyoti Digest of Indological Studies in Latvian Kurukshetra University p 115 Retrieved 28 September 2023 Subramanian K R 1989 Buddhist Remains in Andhra and the History of Andhra Between 225 and 610 A D Asian Educational Services p 127 ISBN 978 81 206 0444 5 Retrieved 28 September 2023 The Andhra Pradesh Journal of Archaeology Director of Archaeology and Museums Government of Andhra Pradesh 1979 p 112 Retrieved 28 September 2023 Cupramaṇiyan T N 1953 South Indian temple inscriptions Madras Government oriental series Government Oriental Manuscripts Library p 693 Retrieved 28 September 2023 Kamath 2001 p 6 p 10 p 57 p 59 p 67 Ramesh 1984 p 76 p 159 pp 161 162 a b Kamath 2001 p 59 Azmathulla Shariff Badami Chalukyans magical transformation Deccan Herald Spectrum July 26 2005 Archived from the original on 10 February 2007 Retrieved 10 November 2006 Bolon Carol Radcliffe 1 January 1979 The Mahakuṭa Pillar and Its Temples Artibus Asiae 41 2 3 253 268 doi 10 2307 3249519 JSTOR 3249519 Thapar 2003 p 326 Kamath 2001 pp 12 57 67 Pulakesi II s Maharashtra extended from Nerbudda Narmada river in the north to Tungabhadra in the south Vaidya 1924 p 171 Kamath 2001 p 60 From the notes of Arab traveller Tabari Kamath 2001 p 60 a b c d Chopra 2003 p 75 part 1 The Buddhist Caves at Aurangabad Transformations in Art and Religion Pia Brancaccio BRILL 2010 p 82 Ramesh 1984 p 14 Sen Sailendra 2013 A Textbook of Medieval Indian History Primus Books p 28 ISBN 978 93 80607 34 4 S R Bakshi S G 2005 Early Aryans to Swaraj Sarup amp Sons p 325 ISBN 978 81 7625 537 0 It has been reported that the story of agnikula is mot mentioned at all in the original version of the Raso preserved in the Fort Library at Bikaner Kamath 2001 pp 56 Quote Another unhistorical trend met with in the epigraphical records of the 11th and subsequent centuries is the attempt on the part of the court poets no doubt again with the consent of their masters to invent mythical genealogies which seek to carry back the antiquity of the royal families not merely to the periods of the epics and the Vedas but to the very moment of their creation in the heavens As far as the Chalukyas of Vatapi are concerned the blame of engineering such travesties attaches once again to the Western Chalukyas of Kalyani and their Eastern Chalukya contemporaries The Eastern Chalukyas for instance have concocted the following long list of fifty two names commencing with no less a personage than the divine preserver Ramesh 1984 p 16 Kandavalli Balendu Sekaram The Andhras through the ages Sri Saraswati Book Depot 1973 p 188 R K Pruthi The Classical Age Discovery Publishing House 2004 India 288 pages p 106 Satyavrata Ramdas Patel The Soul of India Munshiram Manoharlal Publishers 1974 India 220 pages p 177 Dr Lewis s theory has not found acceptance because the Pallavas were in constant conflict with the Kadambas prior to the rise of Chalukyas Kamath 2001 p 57 a b Thapar 2003 p 326 Popular theories regarding the name are Puli tiger in Kannada and Kesin haried in Sanskrit Pole lustrous in Kannada from his earliest Badami cliff inscription that literally spells Polekesi Pole from Tamil word Punai to tie a knot Ramesh 1984 pp 31 32 The name probably meant the great lion Sastri 1955 p 134 The name probably meant One endowed with the strength of a great lion Chopra 2003 p 73 part 1 Kamath 2001 pp 58 59 Ramesh 1984 p 76 Chopra 2003 p 74 part 1 Quote His fame spread far and wide even beyond India Chopra 2003 p 75 part 1 Quote One of the great kings of India He successfully defied the expansion of king Harshavardhana of Northern India into the deccan The Aihole inscription by Ravikirti describes how King Harsha lost his Harsha or cheerful disposition after his defeat The Chinese traveller Hiuen Tsiang also confirms Pulakesi II s victory over King Harsha in his travelogue Pulakesi II took titles such as Prithvivallabha and Dakshinapatha Prithviswamy Kamath 2001 pp 58 60 Quote Thus began one of the most colourful careers in Indian History Ramesh 1984 p 76 Vikramaditya I who later revived the Chalukya fortunes was born to Pulakesi II and the daughter of Western Ganga monarch Durvinita Chopra 2003 p 74 part 1 His other queen an Alupa princess called Kadamba was the daughter of Aluka Maharaja G S Gai in Kamath 2001 p 94 Quote The Aihole record gives an impressive list of his military conquests and other achievements According to the record he conquered the Kadambas the Western Gangas the north Konkan by naval victory Harsha of Thanesar the Latas the Malwas the Gurjaras thereby obtaining sovereignty over the Maharashtras Berar Maharashtra and Kuntala with their nine and ninety thousand villages the Kalingas and the Kosalas Pishtapura Pishtapuram in eastern Andhra and Kanchipuram whose king had opposed the rise of his power Chopra 2003 p 74 part 1 Ramesh 1984 pp 79 80 pp 86 87 According to Dr R C Majumdar some principalities may have submitted to Pulakesi II out of fear of Harsha of Kanauj Kamath 2001 p 59 Sastri 1955 pp 135 136 Sastri 1955 p 136 This is attested to by an inscription behind the Mallikarjuna temple in Badami Sastri 1955 p 136 Chopra 2003 pp 75 76 part 1 From the Gadval plates dated c 674 of Vikramaditya I Chopra 2003 p 76 part 1 a b Chopra 2003 p 76 part 1 Sastri 1955 p 138 a b From the Kannada inscription at the Kailasanatha temple in Kanchipuram Sastri 1955 p 140 Kamath 2001 p 63 Thapar 2003 p 331 Ramesh 1984 pp 159 160 Dikshit Durga Prasad 1980 p 166 167 Political History of the Chalukyas of Badami Abhinav Publications New Delhi OCLC 831387906 Ramesh 1984 p 159 Ramesh 1984 pp 173 174 Poet Bilhanas 12th century Sanskrit work Vikramadeva Charitam and Ranna s Kannada work Gadayuddha 982 and inscriptions from Nilagunda Yevvur Kauthem and Miraj claim Tailapa II was son of Vikramaditya IV seventh in descent from Bhima brother of Badami Chalukya Vikramaditya II Kamath 2001 p 100 Kings of the Chalukya line of Vemulavada who were certainly from the Badami Chalukya family line used the title Malla which is often used by the Western Chalukyas Names such as Satyashraya which were used by the Badami Chalukya are also names of a Western Chalukya king Gopal B R in Kamath 2001 p 100 Unlike the Badami Chalukyas the Kalyani Chalukyas did not claim to be Harithiputhras of Manavysya gotra in lineage The use of titles like Tribhuvanamalla marked them as of a distinct line Fleet Bhandarkar and Altekar in Kamath 2001 p 100 Later legends and tradition hailed Tailapa as an incarnation of the God Krishna who fought 108 battles against the race of Ratta Rashtrakuta and captured 88 fortresses from them Sastri 1955 p 162 From his c 957 and c 965 records Kamath 2001 p 101 Vijnyaneshavara the Sanskrit scholar in his court eulogised him as a king like none other Kamath 2001 p 106 The writing Vikramankadevacharita by Bilhana is a eulogy of the achievements of the king in 18 cantos Sastri 1955 p 315 Cousens 1926 p 11 Vikrama Chalukya era of 1075 CE Thapar 2003 p 469 Chopra 2003 p 139 part 1 Sastri 1955 p 175 Kamath 2001 pp 114 115 Narasimhacharya 1988 pp 18 20 Sastri 1955 p 192 Pulakesi II made Vishnuvardhana the Yuvaraja or crown prince Later Vishnuvardhana become the founder of the Eastern Chalukya empire Sastri 1955 pp 134 136 p 312 a b Chopra 2003 p 132 part 1 Kamath 2001 p 8 Kamath 2001 p 60 a b c Chopra 2003 p 133 Sastri 1955 pp 164 165 Sastri 1955 p 165 Narasimhacharya 1988 p 68 The Eastern Chalukya inscriptions show a gradual shift towards Telugu with the appearance of Telugu stanzas from the time of king Gunaga Vijayaditya Vijayaditya III in the middle of the 9th century Dr K S S Seshan University of Hyderabad APOnline History of Andhra Pradesh ancient period Eastern Chalukyas Revenue Department Gazetteers Government of Andhra Pradesh Tata Consultancy Services Archived from the original on 6 December 2006 Retrieved 12 November 2006 The first work of Telugu literature is a translation of Mahabharata by Nannaya during the rule of Eastern Chalukya king Rajaraja Narendra 1019 1061 Sastri 1955 p 367 a b by Tartakov Gary Michael 1997 The Durga Temple at Aihole A Historiographical Study Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 563372 6 Hardy 1995 p 5 Quote The Badami Chalukyas had introduced a glorious chapter alike in heroism in battle and cultural magnificence in peace in the western Deccan K V Sounder Rajan in Kamath 2001 p 68 Kamath 2001 p 68 Tarr Gary 1970 p 156 Chronology and Development of the Chaḷukya Cave Temples Ars Orientalis Vol 8 pp 155 184 Hardy 1995 p 65 a b Hardy 1995 p 66 Sastri 1955 p 406 Quote The Chalukyas cut rock like titans but finished like jewellers Sheshadri in Kamath 2001 pp 68 69 Percy Brown in Kamath 2001 p 68 Sastri 1955 p 407 a b c Hardy 1995 p 67 Foekema 2003 p 11 Sastri 1955 pp 407 408 Carol Radcliffe Bolon 1980 pp 303 326 The Parvati Temple Sandur and Early Images of Agastya Artibus Asiae Vol 42 No 4 Hardy 1995 p 342 p 278 Sastri 1955 p 408 Kamath 2001 p 69 Quote Their creations have the pride of place in Indian art tradition Kamath 2001 p 115 Sastri 1955 p 427 Cousens 1926 p 17 Foekema 1996 p 14 Hardy 1995 p 156 Hardy 1995 pp 6 7 Cousens 1926 pp 100 102 Hardy 1995 p 333 Cousens 1926 pp 79 82 a b Hardy 1995 p 336 Hardy 1995 p 323 The Mahadeva Temple at Itagi has been called the finest in Kannada country after the Hoysaleswara temple at Halebidu Cousens in Kamath 2001 p 117 Cousens 1926 pp 114 115 Hardy 1995 p 326 Cousens 1926 pp 85 87 Hardy 1995 p 330 Foekema 2003 p 52 Hardy 1995 p 321 The Badami Chalukyas influenced the art of the rulers of Vengi and those of Gujarat Kamath 2001 pp 68 69 Quote He deemed himself the peer of Bharavi and Kalidasa An earlier inscription in Mahakuta in prose is comparable to the works of Bana Sastri 1955 p 312 a b Sastri 1955 p 312 The writing is on various topics including traditional medicine music precious stones dance etc Kamath 2001 p 106 a b Sen 1999 p 366 Thapar 2003 p 345 Sahitya Akademi 1988 p 1717 a b Chidananda Murthy in Kamath 2001 p 67 Such as Indranandi s Srutavatara Devachandra s Rajavalikathe Narasimhacharya 1934 pp 4 5 Bhattakalanka s Sabdanusasana of 1604 Sastri 1955 p 355 Sastri 1955 p 355 Mugali 1975 p 13 Narasimhacharya 1988 p 4 Sastri 1955 p 356 a b Chopra 2003 p 196 part 1 Sastri 1955 p 367 Chopra 2003 p 77 part1 Kamath 2001 p 64 Kamath 2001 pp 57 65 Dikshit Durga Prasad 1968 POLITICAL HISTORY OF THE CHALUKYAS OF BADAMI The Rashtrakuta inscriptions also praise the heroic nature of the Chalukyan army Karṇaṭakabala in their records The breakup of land into mandalas vishaya existed in the Kadamba administrative machinery Kamath 2001 pp 36 65 66 a b Kamath 2001 p 65 a b However they issued gold coins that weighed 120 grams in imitation of the Gupta dynasty A V Narasimha Murthy in Kamath 2001 p 65 Govindaraya Prabhu S 1 November 2001 The Southern India Coinage of the Chalukyas Prabhu s Web Page On Indian Coinage Archived from the original on 1 December 2008 Retrieved 6 August 2008 Chopra 2003 p 191 part 1 Sastri 1955 p 391 a b Kamath 2001 p 66 Chopra 2003 p 78 part 1 Vinopoti a concubine of King Vijayaditya is mentioned with due respect in an inscription Kamath 2001 p 67 One record mentions an artist called Achala who was well versed in Natyashastra Kamath 2001 p 67 From the Shiggaon plates of c 707 and Gudigeri inscription dated 1076 Ramesh 1984 pp 142 144 Cousens 1926 p 59 Sastri 1955 p 309 Sastri 1955 p 324 a b Staff correspondent Chalukya Utsava Depiction of grandeur and glory NewIndia Press Sunday February 26 2006 NewIndia Press Archived from the original on 29 September 2007 Retrieved 12 November 2006 References editBooks Bolon Carol Radcliffe 1 January 1979 The Mahakuṭa Pillar and Its Temples Artibus Asiae 41 2 3 253 268 doi 10 2307 3249519 JSTOR 3249519 Chopra P N Ravindran T K Subrahmanian N 2003 2003 History of South India Ancient Medieval and Modern Part 1 New Delhi Chand Publications ISBN 81 219 0153 7 Cousens Henry 1996 1926 The Chalukyan Architecture of Kanarese Districts New Delhi Archaeological Survey of India OCLC 37526233 Foekema Gerard 1996 Complete Guide to Hoysala Temples New Delhi Abhinav ISBN 81 7017 345 0 Foekema Gerard 2003 2003 Architecture decorated with architecture Later medieval temples of Karnataka 1000 1300 AD New Delhi Munshiram Manoharlal Publishers Pvt Ltd ISBN 81 215 1089 9 Hardy Adam 1995 1995 Indian Temple Architecture Form and Transformation The Karnata Dravida Tradition 7th to 13th Centuries Abhinav Publications ISBN 81 7017 312 4 Houben Jan E M 1996 1996 Ideology and Status of Sanskrit Contributions to the History of the Sanskrit language Brill ISBN 90 04 10613 8 Kamath Suryanath U 2001 1980 A concise history of Karnataka from pre historic times to the present Bangalore Jupiter books LCCN 80905179 OCLC 7796041 Karmarkar A P 1947 1947 Cultural history of Karnataka ancient and medieval Dharwad Karnataka Vidyavardhaka Sangha OCLC 8221605 Keay John 2000 2000 India A History New York Grove Publications ISBN 0 8021 3797 0 Michell George 2002 2002 Pattadakal Monumental Legacy Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 566057 9 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Moraes George M 1990 1931 The Kadamba Kula A History of Ancient and Medieval Karnataka New Delhi Madras Asian Educational Services ISBN 81 206 0595 0 Mugali R S 1975 1975 History of Kannada literature Sahitya Akademi OCLC 2492406 Narasimhacharya R 1988 1988 History of Kannada Literature New Delhi Madras Asian Educational Services ISBN 81 206 0303 6 Ramesh K V 1984 Chalukyas of Vatapi Delhi Agam Kala Prakashan OCLC 567370037 3987 10333 Sastri Nilakanta K A 2002 1955 A history of South India from prehistoric times to the fall of Vijayanagar New Delhi Indian Branch Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 560686 8 Sen Sailendra Nath 1999 Ancient Indian History and Civilization New Age Publishers ISBN 81 224 1198 3 Thapar Romila 2003 2003 The Penguin History of Early India New Delhi Penguin Books ISBN 0 14 302989 4 Vaidya C V History of Mediaeval Hindu India Being a History of India from 600 to 1200 A D Poona Oriental Book Supply Agency OCLC 6814734 Various 1988 1988 Encyclopaedia of Indian literature vol 2 Sahitya Akademi ISBN 81 260 1194 7 Web APOnline History of Andhra Pradesh ancient period Eastern Chalukyas by Tata Consultancy Services Archived from the original on 6 December 2006 Retrieved 12 November 2006 Architecture of Indian Subcontinent Takeyo Kamiya 20 September 1996 Published by Gerard da Cunha Architecture Autonomous Bardez Goa India Archived from the original on 2 April 2015 Retrieved 12 November 2006 Badami Chalukyans magical transformation an article by Azmathulla Shariff in Deccan Herald Spectrum 26 July 2005 Archived from the original on 10 February 2007 Retrieved 12 November 2006 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Chalukya Empire Chalukyan Art by Dr Jyotsna Kamat Kamat s Potpourri 4 November 2006 Retrieved 10 November 2006 History of the Kannada Literature Dr Jyotsna Kamat on Kamat s Potpourri Timeless Theater Karnataka History of Kannada 4 November 2006 Archived from the original on 3 April 2005 Retrieved 12 November 2006 Aihole Temples Photographs by Michael D Gunther 2002 Retrieved 10 November 2006 Badami Cave Temples Photographs by Michael D Gunther 2002 Retrieved 10 November 2006 Pattadakal Temples Photographs by Michael D Gunther 2002 Retrieved 10 November 2006 Chalukyas of Kalyana 973 1198 CE by Dr Jyotsna Kamat Coins of Alupas Archived from the original on 15 August 2006 Retrieved 10 November 2006 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chalukya dynasty amp oldid 1188485755, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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