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Chola Empire

The Chola Empire, which is often referred to as the Imperial Cholas,[1] was a medieval Indian, thalassocratic empire that was established by the Pottapi branch of the Chola dynasty that rose to prominence during the middle of the ninth century CE and united southern India under their rule.

Chola Empire
848 CE–1279 CE
Imperial coin of Emperor Rajaraja I (985–1014). Uncertain Tamil Nadu mint. Legend "Chola, conqueror of the Gangas" in Tamil, seated tiger with two fish.
Map showing the greatest extent of the Chola empire c. 1030 under Rajendra I: territories are shown in blue, subordinates and areas of influence are shown in pink.
CapitalPazhaiyaarai, Thanjavur, Gangaikonda Cholapuram
Official languages
Religion
Hinduism
GovernmentMonarchy
Emperor 
• 848–871 CE
Vijayalaya Chola (first)
• 1246-1279 CE
Rajendra III (last)
Historical eraMiddle Ages
• Established
848 CE
• Empire at its greatest extent
1030 CE
• Disestablished
1279 CE

The power and the prestige the Cholas had among political powers in South, Southeast, and East Asia at its peak is evident in their expeditions to the Ganges, naval raids on cities of the Srivijaya Empire on the island of Sumatra, and their repeated embassies to China.[2] The Chola fleet represented the peak of ancient Indian maritime capacity. Around 1070, the Cholas began to lose almost all of their overseas territories but the later Cholas (1070–1279) continued to rule portions of southern India. The Chola empire went into decline at the beginning of the 13th century with the rise of the Pandyan dynasty, which ultimately caused the Chola's downfall.[3]

The Cholas established a centralized form of government and a disciplined bureaucracy. Their patronage of Tamil literature and their zeal for building temples resulted in some of the greatest works of Tamil literature and architecture.[4] The Chola kings were avid builders, and regarded temples in their kingdoms as both places of worship and of economic activity.[5][6] A prime example of Chola architecture is Brihadisvara temple at Thanjavur, a UNESCO World Heritage site, which the Rajaraja commissioned in 1010. They were also well known for their patronage of art. The development of the sculpting technique used in Chola bronzes of Hindu deities that were built using a lost wax process, was pioneered in their time. The Chola tradition of art spread, and influenced the architecture and art of Southeast Asia.[7][8]

Founding edit

 
The city of Thanjavur

Vijayalaya, the successor of Srikantha Chola, founded the Chola empire in 848 CE.[9] Vijayalaya belonged to a Pottapi Chola family, a Telugu Chola branch that claimed descent from ancient Tamil king Karikala Chola[10] and possibly a feudatory of the Pallava dynasty. Vijayalaya took an opportunity arising out of a conflict between the Pandya and Pallava empires in c. 850, captured Thanjavur from Muttarayar, and established the imperial line of the medieval Chola Dynasty.[11][12] Thanjavur became the capital of the Imperial Chola empire.[13]

Under Aditya I, the Pallava dynasty defeated the Pandyan dynasty of Madurai in 885, occupied large parts of Kannada country, and had marital ties with the Western Ganga dynasty. In 925, Aditya's son Parantaka I conquered Sri Lanka, which was then-known as Ilangai. Parantaka I also defeated the Rashtrakuta dynasty under Krishna II in the Battle of Vallala.[14] Later, Parantaka I was defeated by Rashtrakutas under Krishna III and the Cholas' heir apparent Rajaditya Chola was killed in the Battle of Takkolam, in which the Cholas lost Tondaimandalam region to Rashtrakutas.[citation needed]

The Cholas recovered their power during the reign of Parantaka II. The Chola army under the command of crown prince Aditha Karikalan defeated the Pandyas and expanded the kingdom to Tondaimandalam. Aditha Karikalan was assassinated in a political plot. After Parantaka II, Uttama Chola became the Chola emperor and was followed by Raja Raja Chola I, the greatest Chola monarch.[citation needed]

Imperial era edit

 
Chola princes Aditha Karikalan and Arulmozhi Varman meeting their guru
 
Rajendra I proclaimed as Emperor by Shiva and Shakthi

Under Rajaraja I and Rajendra I, the Chola Empire reach its Imperial state.[15] At its peak, the empire stretched from the northern parts of Sri Lanka northwards to the GodavariKrishna river basin, up to the Konkan coast in Bhatkal, the entire Malabar Coast (the Chea country) in addition to Lakshadweep and the Maldives islands. Rajaraja Chola I was an energetic ruler who applied himself to the task of governance with the same zeal he had shown in waging wars. He integrated his empire into a tight, administrative grid under royal control and strengthened local self-government. In 1000, Rajaraja conducted a land survey to effectively marshall his empire's resources.[16] He built Brihadeeswarar Temple in 1010.[17]

Rajendra conquered Odisha and his armies continued north and defeated the forces of the Pala dynasty of Bengal, and reached the Ganges river in northern India.[18] Rajendra built a new capital called Gangaikonda Cholapuram to celebrate his victories in northern India.[19] Rajendra I successfully invaded the Srivijaya kingdom in Southeast Asia, which led to the decline of the empire there.[20] This expedition left such an impression on the Malay people of the medieval period his name is mentioned in the corrupted form as Raja Chulan in the Malay chronicle Sejarah Melayu.[21][22][23] Rajendra also completed the conquest of the Rajarata kingdom of Sri Lanka and took the Sinhala king Mahinda V a prisoner; he also conquered Rattapadi—territories of the Rashtrakutas, Chalukya country, Talakkad, and Kolar, where Kolaramma temple still has his portrait statue—in Kannada country.[24][full citation needed] Rajendra's territories included the Ganges–Hooghly–Damodar basin,[25] as well as Rajarata of Sri Lanka and the Maldives.[11] The kingdoms along the east coast of India up to the river Ganges acknowledged Chola suzerainty.[26] Diplomatic missions were sent to China in 1016, 1033, and 1077.[11]

Chola–Chalukya wars edit

From the period of Rajaraja, the Cholas engaged in a series of conflicts with the Western Chalukyas. The Old Chalukya dynasty had split into two sibling dynasties, the Western and Eastern Chalukyas. Rajaraja's daughter Kundavai was married to the Eastern Chalukya prince Vimaladitya, who ruled from Vengi. The Western Chalukyas felt the Vengi kingdom was in their natural sphere of influence. Cholas inflicted several defeats on the Western Chalukyas. The frontier mostly remained at the Tungabhadra River for both kingdoms and resulted in the death of king Rajadhiraja.

Rajendra's reign was followed by those of three of his sons in succession; Rajadhiraja I, Rajendra II, and Virarajendra. In his eagerness to restore Chola hegemony over Vengi to its former absolute state, Rajadhiraja I (1042–1052) led an expedition into Vengi country in 1044–1045. He fought a battle at Dhannada, and compelled the Western Chalukyan army and Vijayaditya VII to retreat in disorder. Rajendra then entered the Western Chalukyan dominions and set fire to the Kollipaka fort on the frontier between the Kalyani and Vengi territories.

This brought relief for Rajaraja Narendra, who was now firmly in control at Vengi, with Rajadhiraja I proceeding to the Chalukyan capital, displacing the Chalukyan king Someshvara I, performing his coronation at Manyakheta, and collecting tribute from the defeated king, who had fled the battlefield. While the Chalukyans kept creating trouble through Vijayaditya VII, Vengi remained firmly under the control of the Cholas. Someshvara I again launched an attack on Vengi and then the Cholas in 1054.

After Rajadhiraja died, Rajendra II crowned himself on the battlefield. He galvanized the Chola army, defeating the Chalukyas under Someshvara I. The Chalukya king again fled the battlefield, leaving behind his queen and riches in the possession of the victorious Chola army. The Cholas consolidated their hold on Vengi and Kalinga. Although there were occasional skirmishes with the Chalukyas, they were repeatedly defeated by both the Cholas and the Vengi princes, who openly professed loyalty to the Chola empire. Following the death of Rajaraja Narendra in 1061, another opportunity for the Kalyani court to strengthen its hold on Vengi arose. Vijayaditya VII seized Vengi and with the consent of the Kalyani court, established himself permanently in the kingdom. Meanwhile, prince Rajendra Chalukya, son of Rajaraja Narendra through the Chola princess Ammangai, was brought up in the Chola harem. Rajendra Chalukya married Madhurantakidevi, the daughter of RajendraII. To restore him on the Vengi throne, RajendraII sent his son Rajamahendra and brother ViraRajendra against the Western Chalukyas and Vijayaditya VII. Chola forces marched against Gangavadi and repelled the Chalukyas. Virarajendra then marched against Vengi and probably killed Saktivarman II, son of Vijayaditya VII.

In the midst of this, in 1063, Rajendra II died; because his son Rajamahendra had predeceased him, Virarajendra returned to Gangaikonda Cholapuram and was crowned the Chola king (1063–1070). Virarajendra split the Western Chalukya kingdom by persuading Chalukya prince Vikramaditya IV to become his son-in-law and to seize the throne of Kalyani for himself. When Virarajendra died in 1070, he was succeeded by his son Adhirajendra, who was assassinated a few months later, leaving the Chola dynasty was without a lineal successor in the Vijayalaya Chola line.

Later Cholas edit

 
Sculpture of Kulottunga I
 
Airavatesvara Temple Built by Rajaraja II.

Marital and political alliances between the Eastern Chalukyas began during the reign of Rajaraja following his invasion of Vengi. Rajaraja Chola's daughter married Chalukya prince Vimaladitya,[27] and Rajendra Chola's daughter Ammanga Devi was married to the Eastern Chalukya prince Rajaraja Narendra.[28] In 1070, Virarajendra Chola's son Athirajendra Chola was assassinated in a civil disturbance, and Kulothunga Chola I, the son of Ammanga Devi and Rajaraja Narendra, ascended the Chola throne, beginning the Later Chola dynasty.[29]

The Later Chola dynasty was led by capable rulers such as Kulothunga I, his son Vikrama Chola, and other successors Rajaraja II, Rajadhiraja II, and Kulothunga III, who conquered Kalinga, Ilam, and Kataha. The rule of the Later Cholas between 1218, starting with Rajaraja III to the last emperor Rajendra III, was not as strong as those of the emperors between 850 and 1215. Around 1118, the Cholas lost control of Vengi to the Western Chalukya and Gangavadi (southern Mysore) districts to the Hoysala Empire. Immediately after the accession of king Vikrama Chola, the son and successor of Kulothunga Chola I, the Cholas recovered the province of Vengi by defeating Chalukya Someshvara III; the Cholas also recovered Gangavadi from the Hoysalas. The Chola empire, though not as strong as between 850 and 1150, was still largely territorially intact under Rajaraja II (1146–1175) a fact attested to by the construction of the third grand, chariot-shaped Airavatesvara Temple at Dharasuram on the outskirts of modern Kumbakonam. Up to 1215, during the rule of Kulothunga Chola III, Chola administration and territorial integrity was stable and very prosperous, but during his rule, Chola power started declining following his defeat by Maravarman Sundara Pandiyan II in 1215–1216.[30] Subsequently, the Cholas also lost control of the island of Sri Lanka and were driven out by the revival of Sinhala power.[31]

The decline of the Cholas was also marked by the resurgence of the Pandyan dynasty as the most powerful rulers in South India. A lack of a controlling central administration in its erstwhile Pandyan territories prompted a number of claimants to the Pandya throne to cause a civil war, in which the Sinhalas and the Cholas were involved by proxy. Details of the Pandyan civil war, and the role played by the Cholas and Sinhalas, are present in the Mahavamsa and Pallavarayanpettai inscriptions.[32][33]

For three generations, the Eastern Chalukyan princes had married into the imperial Chola family and felt they belonged to it as much as to the Eastern Chalukya dynasty. The Chalukya prince Rajendra Chalukya of Vengi had "spent his childhood days in Gangaikonda Cholapuram and was a familiar favourite to the princes and the people of the Chola country" according to Kalingathuparani, an epic written in praise of him. Following the death of the death of Adhirajendra, Rajendra Chalukya established himself on the Chola throne as Kulottunga I (1070–1122), beginning the Later Chola or Chalukya-Chola period.[34]

Kulothunga I reconciled himself with his uncle Vijayaditya VII and allowed him to rule Vengi for the rest of his life. The Eastern Chalukya line came to an end with Vijayaditya's death in 1075 and Vengi became a province of the Chola Empire.[citation needed] Kulottunga Chola I administered the province through his sons, whom he sent there as viceroys. There was a prolonged fight between Kulottunga Chola I and Vikramaditya VI.[citation needed] Kulothunga's long reign was characterized by unparalleled success and prosperity; he avoided unnecessary wars and earned the admiration of his subjects. Kulottunga's successes resulted in the well-being of the empire for the next 100 years but Kulothunga lost the territories in the island of Lanka and began to lose control of the Pandya territories.[citation needed]

Diminished empire edit

 
Chola kingdom under Kulothunga III

Under Rajaraja Chola III and his successor Rajendra Chola III, the Later Cholas were quite weak and experienced continuous trouble. One feudatory the Kadava chieftain Kopperunchinga I held Rajaraja Chola III as a hostage for some time.[35] At the close of the 12th century, the growing influence of the Hoysalas replaced the declining Chalukyas as the main player in Kannada country but they also faced constant trouble from the Seunas and the Kalachuris, who were occupying the Chalukya capital. The Hoysalas found it convenient to have friendly relations with the Cholas from the time of Kulothunga Chola III, who had defeated Hoysala Veera Ballala II, who had subsequent marital relations with the Chola monarch. This continued during the time of Rajaraja Chola III, the son and successor of Kulothunga Chola III[30][36]

The Hoysalas played a divisive role in the politics of Tamil country during this period. They exploited the lack of unity among the Tamil kingdoms and alternately supported one Tamil kingdom against the other, thereby preventing the Cholas and Pandyas from rising to their full potential. During the reign of Rajaraja III, the Hoysalas sided with the Cholas, and defeated the Kadava chieftain Kopperunjinga and the Pandyas, and established a presence in Tamil country. Rajendra Chola III, who succeeded Rajaraja III, was a more competent ruler who led successful expeditions to the north, as attested to by his epigraphs found as far as Cuddappah.[37] He also defeated two Pandya princes, one of whom was Maravarman Sundara Pandya II, and briefly made the Pandyas submit to Chola control. The Hoysalas, under Vira Someswara, were quick to intervene and sided with the Pandyas, and repulsed the Cholas to counter the latter's revival.[38]

In South India, the Pandyas had become a great power that banished the Hoysalas from Malanadu and Kannada country; the Hoysalas were allies of the Cholas on Tamil country. The demise of the Cholas was caused by the Pandyas in 1279. The Pandyas steadily gained control of Tamil country and territories in Sri Lanka, southern Chera country, Telugu country under Maravarman Sundara Pandiyan II and his able successor Jatavarman Sundara Pandyan, before inflicting several defeats on the joint forces of the Cholas under Rajaraja Chola III, and the Hoysalas under Someshwara, his son Ramanatha.[30] Fromn 1215, the Pandyans gradually became a major force in Tamil country and consolidated their position in Madurai-Rameswaram-Ilam-southern Chera country and the Kanyakumari belt, and had been steadily increasing their territories in the Kaveri belt between Dindigul, Tiruchy, Karur, and Satyamangalam and in the Kaveri Delta, Thanjavur, Mayuram, Chidambaram, Vriddhachalam, and Kanchi. The Pandyans marched to Arcot; Tirumalai, Nellore, Visayawadai, Vengi, and Kalingam by 1250.[39]

The Pandyas steadily routed the Hoysalas and the Cholas,[40] and dispossessed the Hoysalas, defeating them under Jatavarman Sundara Pandiyan at Kannanur Kuppam.[41] At the close of Rajendra's reign, the Pandyan empire was at the height of its prosperity and had replaced the Chola empire in the view of foreign observers.[42] The last-recorded date of Rajendra III is 1279; there is no evidence he was immediately followed by another Chola prince.[43][44] In around 1279, Kulasekhara Pandiyan routed the Hoysalas from Kannanur Kuppam and in the same war, the last Chola emperor Rajendra III was routed and the Chola empire ceased to exist. The Chola empire was completely overshadowed by the Pandyan empire and sank into obscurity by the end of the 13th century until period of the Vijayanagara Empire.[45][44]

In the early 16th century, Virasekhara Chola, king of Tanjore, rose out of obscurity and plundered the dominions of the Pandya prince in the south. The Pandya, who was under the protection of the Vijayanagara, appealed to the emperor and the Raya accordingly directed his agent (Karyakartta) Nagama Nayaka, who was stationed in the south, to put down the Chola. Nagama Nayaka then defeated the Chola but the once-loyal officer of Krishnadeva Raya defied the emperor and decided to keep Madurai for himself. Krishnadeva Raya is said to have dispatched Nagama's son Viswanatha, who defeated his father and restored Madurai to Vijayanagara rule.[46] The fate of Virasekhara Chola, the last of the line of Cholas, is not known. It is speculated he either fell in battle or was executed along with his heirs during his encounter with Vijayanagara.[47][48]

Administration edit

Government edit

 
The mandalams of the Chola empire, early 12th century CE

During the rule of the Cholas, the whole of South India was for the first time brought under a single government.[a]

The Cholas' system of government was monarchical, as in the Sangam age.[49] There was little in common between the local chiefdoms of the earlier period, and the imperial states of Rajaraja Chola and his successors.[50] Aside from the early capital at Thanjavur and the later one at Gangaikonda Cholapuram, Kanchipuram and Madurai were considered to be regional capitals where occasional courts were held. The king was the supreme leader and a benevolent authoritarian. His administrative role consisted of issuing oral commands to responsible officers when representations were made to him. Due to the lack of a legislature or a legislative system in the modern sense, the fairness of king's orders depended on his morality and belief in Dharma. The Chola kings built temples and endowed them with great wealth. The temples acted as both places of worship and centres of economic activity, benefiting the community.[51] Some of the output of villages was given to temples, which reinvested some of the wealth accumulated as loans to the settlements.[52] The Chola empire was divided into several provinces called mandalams which were further divided into valanadus, which were subdivided into units called kottams or kutrams.[53] According to Kathleen Gough, during the Chola period, the Vellalar were the "dominant secular aristocratic caste ... providing the courtiers, most of the army officers, the lower ranks of the kingdom's bureaucracy, and the upper layer of the peasantry".[54]

Before the reign of Rajaraja Chola I, huge parts of Chola territory were ruled by hereditary lords and local princes who were in a loose alliance with the Chola rulers. Thereafter, until the reign of Vikrama Chola in 1133, when Chola power was at its peak, these hereditary lords and local princes almost vanished from Chola records, and were either replaced with or became dependent officials, through whom the administration was improved and the Chola kings were able to exercise closer control over the parts of the empire.[55] The administrative structure expanded, particularly during and after the reign of Rajaraja Chola I. The government at this time had a multi-tiered, large, land-revenue department that was largely concerned with maintaining accounts. Corporate bodies such as the Ur, Nadu, Sabha, Nagaram, and sometimes local chieftains, undertook The assessment and collection of revenue, and passed the revenue to the centre. During the reign of Rajaraja Chola I, the state initiated a massive project of land survey and assessment, and the empire was reorganised into units known as valanadus.[56]

The executive officer first communicated the order of the King to the local authorities. Afterwards, the records of the transaction was drawn up and attested by witnesses, who were either local magnates or government officers.[57] At local government level, every village was a self-governing unit. A number of villages constituted a larger entity known as a kurram, nadu or kottam, depending on the area.[58][59][60] A number of kurrams constituted a valanadu.[61] These structures underwent constant change and refinement throughout the Chola period.[62]

In the Chola empire, Justice was mostly a local matter; minor disputes were settled at village level.[60] Minor crimes were punished with fines or a direction for the offender to donate to a charitable endowment. Even crimes such as manslaughter or murder were punished with fines. The king heard and decided crimes of the state, such as treason; the typical punishment in these cases was either execution or the confiscation of property.[63]

Military edit

 
Chola Soldiers in battle at Airavatesvara Temple

The Chola military had four elements; the cavalry, the elephant corps, several divisions of infantry, and a navy.[64] The Emperor was the supreme commander. There were regiments of bowmen and swordsmen, the latter of which were the most-permanent and most-dependable troops. The Chola army was spread all over the country and was stationed in local garrisons or military camps known as Kodagams. Elephants played a major role in the army; the empire had numerous war elephants that carried houses or huge howdahs on their backs. These howdahs were full of soldiers who shot arrows at long range and fought with spears at close quarters.[65] The Chola army was mostly composed of Kaikolars—men with strong arms who were royal troops receiving regular payments from the treasury[b].[66]

Chola rulers built several palaces and fortifications to protect their cities. The fortifications were mostly made of bricks but other materials like stone, wood, and mud were also used.[67][68] According to the ancient Tamil text Silappadikaram, Tamil kings defended their forts with catapults that threw stones, huge cauldrons of boiling water or molten lead, and hooks, chains, and traps.[69][70][need quotation to verify]

Chola soldiers used weapons such as swords, bows, javelins, spears, and steel shields.[71] Particularly the famous Wootz steel, which has a long history in south India dating back to the period before the Christian era, seems to have been used to produce weapons.[72]

The Chola navy was the zenith of ancient India sea power.[65] It played a vital role in the expansion of the empire, including the conquest of the Sri Lanka islands and naval raids on Srivijaya.[73] The navy grew both in size and status during the medieval Cholas reign. Chola admirals commanded much respect and prestige, and naval commanders also acted as diplomats in some instances. From 900 to 1100, the navy grew from a small entity to that of a potent power projection and diplomatic symbol in Asia, but was gradually reduced in significance when Cholas fought land battles to subjugate the Chalukyas of the Andhra-Kannada area in South India.[74]

Chloa rulers patronised a martial art called Silambam.[citation needed] Ancient and medieval Tamil texts mention different forms of martial traditions but the ultimate expression of the loyalty of the warrior to his commander was a form of martial suicide called Navakandam.[citation needed] The medieval text Kalingathu Parani, which celebrates the victory of Kulothunga Chola I and his general in the battle for Kalinga, describes the practice in detail.[citation needed]

Economy edit

Land revenue and trade tax were the main source of income.[75] Chola rulers issued coins in gold, silver, and copper.[76] The Chola economy was based on three tiers; at the local level, agricultural settlements formed the foundation to commercial towns nagaram, which acted as redistribution centres for externally produced items bound for consumption in the local economy and as sources of products made by nagaram artisans for international trade. At the top of this economy were elite merchant groups (samayam) who organised and dominated the regions international maritime trade.[77][clarification needed]

The Chola Empire's main export was cotton cloth.[78] Uraiyur, the capital of the early Chola rulers, was a centre for cotton textiles Tamil poets praised.[79][80] Chola rulers encouraged the weaving industry and derived revenue from it.[81] During this period, weavers started to organise themselves into guilds.[82] Weavers had their own residential sector in all towns; the most important weaving communities in early medieval times were the Saliyar and Kaikolar.[81] During the Chola period, silk weaving attained a high degree of skill and Kanchipuram became one of the main centres for silk.[83][84]

Metalcrafts peaked during the 10th to 11th centuries because Chola rulers like Chembian Maadevi extended their patronage to metal craftsmen.[85] Wootz steel was a major Chola export.[86] Farmers occupied one of the highest positions in society.[87] These were the Vellalar community, who formed the nobility or the landed aristocracy of the country and were an economically powerful group.[87][88] Agriculture was the principal occupation for many people besides landowners.[89] The Vellalar community was the dominant secular aristocratic caste under the Chola rulers, providing the courtiers, most of the army officers, the lower ranks of the bureaucracy, and the upper ranks of the peasantry.[54]

In almost all villages, the distinction between persons paying the land tax (iraikudigal) and those who did not was clearly established. There was a class of hired day-labourers who assisted in agricultural operations on estates of other people and received a daily wage. All cultivable land was held in one of the three broad classes of tenure; peasant proprietorship called vellan-vagai, service tenure, and eleemosynary tenure resulting from charitable gifts.[90] The vellan-vagai were the ordinary ryotwari village of modern times, having direct relations with the government and paying a land-tax liable to periodic revision.[77] The vellan-vagai villages fell into two broad classes; one directly paid a variable annual revenue to the state and the other paid fixed-rate dues to public institutions like temples to which they were assigned.[91] The prosperity of an agricultural country depends to a large extent on the facilities provided for irrigation. Apart from sinking wells and excavating tanks, Chola rulers built large, stone dams across the Kaveri and other rivers, and cut channels to distribute water over large tracts of land.[92] Rajendra Chola I dug near his capital an artificial lake that was filled with water from the Kolerun and the Vellar rivers.[91]

An internal trade in several articles was carried out by organised mercantile corporations. The metal industries and the jewellers' art had reached a high degree of excellence. Sea salt was made under government supervision and control. Merchants organised into guilds that were described sometimes by the terms nanadesis; these were powerful, autonomous corporations of merchants that visited other countries in the course of trade. These corporations had mercenary armies for the protection of their merchandise. There were also local organisations of merchants called "nagaram" in big centres of trade like Kanchipuram and Mamallapuram.[93][91]

Hospitals edit

 
Aerial view of the Venkatesa Perumal Temple in Thirumukkudal (near Kanchipuram), a temple built by Virarajendra in 1069. The temple also included a hospital and Vedic schools.

Hospitals were maintained by the Chola kings, whose government gave lands for that purpose. The Tirumukkudal inscription shows a hospital was named after Vira Chola. Many diseases were cured by the doctors of the hospital, which was under the control of a chief physician, who was paid annually eighty kalams of paddy, eight kasus, and a grant of land. Apart from the doctors, other remunerated staff included a nurse, a barber who performed minor operations, and a waterman.[94]

The Chola queen Kundavai established a hospital at Tanjavur and gave land for its perpetual maintenance.[95]

Society edit

During the Chola period several guilds, communities, and castes emerged. The guild was one of the most significant institutions of south India and merchants organised themselves into guilds. The best known of these were the Manigramam and Ayyavole guilds though other guilds such as Anjuvannam and Valanjiyar were also in existence.[96] Members of the Vellalar caste were sent to northern Sri Lanka by the Chola rulers as settlers.[97] The Ulavar caste were agricultural workers and peasants were known as Kalamar.[87]

The Kaikolar community were weavers and merchants who also maintained armies. During the Chola period, they had predominant trading and military roles.[98] During the reign of the Imperial Chola rulers (10th–13th centuries), there were major changes in the temple administration and land ownership. There was more involvement of non-Brahmin peoples in temple administration. This can be attributed to the shift in financial power. Skilled classes like weavers and merchants had become prosperous. Land ownership was no longer a privilege of the Brahmins (priest caste) and the Vellalar land owners.[99]

There is little information on the size and the density of the population during the Chola reign.[100] The stability in the core Chola region enabled the people to lead a productive and contented life but there are reports of widespread famine caused by natural calamities.[101]

The quality of the inscriptions of the regime indicates the inscribers had a high level of literacy and education. The text in these inscriptions was written by court poets and engraved by talented artisans. Education in the contemporary sense was not considered important; there is circumstantial evidence some village councils organised schools to teach the basics of reading and writing to children,[102] although there is no evidence of systematic education system for the masses.[103] Vocational education was through hereditary training, in which the father passed on his skills to his sons. Tamil was the medium of education for the masses; monasteries (matha or gatika) were centres of learning and received government support.[104]

Under Chola kings, there was generally an emphasis on a fair justice system, and the kings were often described as sengol-valavan, the king who established just rule; and priests warned the king royal justice would ensure a happy future for him, and that injustice would lead to divine punishment.[105][106]

Foreign trade edit

The Cholas, who were in possession of parts of the west and east coasts of peninsular India,[107] engaged in foreign trade and maritime activity, extending their influence to China and Southeast Asia.[108] Towards the end of the 9th century, southern India had developed extensive maritime and commercial activity.[109] South Indian guilds played a major role in inter-regional and overseas trade. The best-known guilds were the Manigramam and Ayyavole, who followed the conquering Chola armies.[110] The encouragement of the Chola court furthered the expansion of Tamil merchant associations and guilds into Southeast Asia and China.[111][112] The Tang dynasty of China, the Srivijaya Empire under the Sailendras, and the Abbasid Kalifat at Baghdad were the Chola Empire's main trading partners.[113]

The Chola dynasty played a significant role in linking the markets of China to the rest of the world. The empire's market structure and economic policies were more conducive to a large-scale, cross-regional market trade than those enacted by the Chinese Song Dynasty. A Chola record gives their rationale for engagement in foreign trade: "Make the merchants of distant foreign countries who import elephants and good horses attach to yourself by providing them with villages and decent dwellings in the city, by affording them daily audience, presents and allowing them profits. Then those articles will never go to your enemies."[114]

Song dynasty reports record an embassy from Chulian (Chola) reached the Chinese court in 1077,[115][116] and that the king of the Chulian at the time, Kulothunga I, was called Ti-hua-kia-lo. This embassy was a trading venture and was highly profitable to the Chola visitors, who returned with copper coins in exchange for articles of tribute, including glass and spices.[117] The motive behind Rajendra's expedition to Srivijaya was probably the protection of the merchants' interests.[118]

Canals and water tanks edit

 
Water Tank of the Nataraja Temple in Chidambaram.

There was tremendous agrarian expansion during the rule of the imperial Chola dynasty (c. 900–1270) in present-day Tamil Nadu, particularly in the Kaveri Basin. Canals of the Kaveri River were constructed in this period; these include the Uyyakondan canal, Rajendran vaykkal, and Sembian Mahadegvi vaykkal. There was an efficient, well-developed system of water management from the village level upwards. There was an increase in royal patronage, and the number of devadana and bramadeya lands, which increased the role of the temples and village assemblies in farming. Tank committees (eri-variyam) and garden committees (totta-variam) were as active as the temples with their vast resources in land, men and money. The water tanks that came up during the Chola period include one Rajendra Chola built at Solagangam in his capital city Gangaikonda Solapuram and was described as the liquid pillar of victory. Solagagam was about 16 mi (26 km) long, and was provided with sluices and canals for irrigating land in the neighbouring areas. Another very large lake of this period, which remains an important source of irrigation, is Viranameri near Kattumannarkoil in South Arcot district that Parantaka Chola founded. Other famous lakes of this period are Madurantakam, Sundra-cholapereri, and Kundavai-Pereri, which was named after a Chola queen).[119]

Art and architecture edit

Architecture edit

 
Gangaikonda Cholapuram, the capital of the Chola Empire, built from 1023 to 1027 by Rajendra I.
 
Brihadisvara Temple, built in 1010 by Rajaraja I

The Cholas continued the temple-building traditions of the Pallava dynasty and contributed significantly to the Dravidian temple design.[120] They built a number of Shiva temples along the banks of the Kaveri river. The template for these and future temples was formulated by Aditya I and Parantaka.[121][122][123] The Chola temple architecture has been appreciated for its magnificence and delicate workmanship, ostensibly following the rich traditions of the Pallava Dynasty.[124] Architectural historian James Fergusson says "the Chola artists conceived like giants and finished like jewelers".[124] A new development in Chola art that characterised the Dravidian architecture in later times was the addition of a huge gateway called gopuram to the enclosure of the temple, which had been developed under the Pandya dynasty.[124] The Chola school of art spread to Southeast Asia, and influenced the architecture and art of Southeast Asia.[125][126]

Temple building received great impetus from the conquests and the genius of Rajaraja Chola and his son Rajendra Chola I.[127] The temples at Thanjavur and Gangaikondacholapuram display the maturity and grandeur to which the Chola architecture had evolved. The Shiva temple of Thanjavur, which was completed around 1009, idisplays the material achievements of Rajaraja's reign, being the largest and tallest of all Indian temples of its time. The temple of Gangaikondacholisvaram at Gangaikondacholapuram, which was designed by Rajendra Chola, was intended to excel its predecessor. It was completed around 1030 in the same style. The greater elaboration in its appearance attests to the more affluent state of the Chola empire under Rajendra.[120][128][page needed] The Brihadisvara Temple, the temple of Gangaikondacholisvaram and the Airavatesvara Temple at Darasuram were declared World Heritage Sites by UNESCO, and are referred to as the Great Living Chola Temples.[129]

The Chola period is also noted for its sculptures and bronzes.[130][131][132] Specimens in museums around the world and in temples of South India include figures of Shiva in various forms, such as Vishnu and his consort Lakshmi, and the Shaivite saints.[120] These works generally conform to the iconographic conventions established by long tradition but the sculptors of the 11th and the 12th centuries worked with great freedom to achieve a classic grace and grandeur. The best example of this can be seen in the form of Nataraja the Divine Dancer.[133][c]

Literature edit

 
Kambar often recited poems at the Kamba Ramyanam Mandapam

Literature flourished in the Chola Empire. The poet Kambar was active during the reign of Kulothunga III. Kambar's epic poem Ramavataram (also referred to as Kambaramayanam) is a classic of Tamil literature; though the author states he followed Valmiki's Ramayana, it is generally accepted his work is not a simple translation or adaptation of the Sanskrit epic.[135][page needed] Kambar's work describes the colour and landscape of his own time; his description of Kosala is an idealised account of the features of Chola country.[136][137][page needed][138]

Jayamkondar's Kalingattuparani is an example of narrative poetry that draws a clear boundary between history and fictitious conventions. This poem describes events during Kulothunga's war in Kalinga, and depicts the pomp and circumstance of war, and the gruesome details of the field.[138][139] The Tamil poet Ottakuttan was a contemporary of Kulottunga I and served at the courts of three of Kulothunga's successors.[140][141] Ottakuttan wrote Kulothunga Cholan Ula, a poem extolling the virtues of the Chola king.[142]

Nannul is a Chola-era work on Tamil grammar. It discusses all five branches of grammar and, according to Berthold Spuler, is still relevant and is one of the most-distinguished normative grammars of literary Tamil.[143]

The Telugu Choda period was significant for the development of Telugu literature under the patronage of the rulers. In this era, great Telugu poets Tikkana, Ketana, Marana and Somana were active. Tikkana Somayaji wrote Nirvachanottara Ramayanamu and Andhra Mahabharatamu. Abhinava Dandi Ketana wrote Dasakumaracharitramu, Vijnaneswaramu, and Andhra Bhashabhushanamu. Marana wrote Markandeya Purana in Telugu. Somana wrote Basava Purana. Tikkana is one of the kavitrayam who translated Mahabharata into Telugu.[144]

Of the period's devotional literature, the arrangement of the Shaivite canon into eleven books was the work of Nambi Andar Nambi, who lived close to the end of the 10th century.[145][146] Relatively few Vaishnavite works were composed during the Later Chola period, possibly because of the rulers' apparent animosity towards them.[147]

Religion edit

 
Bronze Chola Statue of Nataraja at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City

In general, Cholas were followers of Hinduism. While the Cholas built their largest and most-important temple dedicated to Shiva, it is uncertain whether they were followers of Shaivism only or that they were not favourably disposed to other faiths. The second Chola king Aditya I (871–903) built temples for Shiva and Vishnu. Inscriptions of 890 refer to his contributions to the construction Ranganatha Temple at Srirangapatnam in the Western Gangas, who were both his feudatories and had connections by marriage with him. He also said the great temples of Shiva and Ranganatha temple were to be the Kuladhanam of the Chola emperors.[148]

Parantaka II was a devotee of the reclining Vishnu (Vadivu Azhagiya Nambi) at Anbil the outskirts of Tiruchy, to whom he gave numerous gifts and embellishments. He prayed before Vishnu before his embarking on a war to regain territories in and around Kanchi and Arcot from the waning Rashtrakutas, and leading expeditions against Madurai and Ilam (Sri Lanka).[149] Parantaka I and Parantaka Chola II endowed and built temples for Shiva and Vishnu.[150] Rajaraja Chola I patronised Buddhists and provided for the construction of the Chudamani Vihara, a Buddhist monastery in Nagapattinam, at the request of Sri Chulamanivarman, the Srivijaya Sailendra king.[151][152]

During the period of the Later Cholas, there were supposed instances of intolerance towards Vaishnavites[153] especially towards their acharya Ramanuja.[154] A Chola sovereign called Krimikanta Chola is said to have persecuted Ramanuja. Some scholars identify Kulothunga Chola II with Krimikanta Chola or worm-necked Chola, who is so-called because he is said to have suffered from cancer of the throat or neck. The latter finds mention in the vaishnava Guruparampara and is said to have been a strong opponent of the Vaishnavas. The 17th-century work Parpannamritam refers to a Chola king called Krimikanta who is said to have removed the Govindaraja idol from the Chidambaram Nataraja temple.[155] According to temple records of the Srirangam temple, however, Kulottunga Chola II was the son of Krimikanta Chola. The former, unlike his father, is said to have been a repentant son who supported Vaishnavism.[156][157]

Ramanuja is said to have made Kulottunga II a disciple of his nephew Dasarathi. The king then granted the management of Ranganathaswamy temple to Dasarathi and his descendants as per the wish of Ramanuja.[158][159] Historian Nilakanta Sastri identifies Krimikanta Chola with Athirajendra Chola or Virarajendra Chola, with whom the main Vijayalaya Chola line ended.[160][161] An inscription from 1160 states the custodians of Shiva temples who had social intercourse with Vaishnavites would forfeit their property. This is a direction to the Shaivite community by its religious heads rather than a diktat by a Chola emperor. While Chola kings built their largest temples for Shiva, and emperors like Rajaraja Chola I held titles like Sivapadasekharan, in none of their inscriptions did the Chola emperors proclaim their clan solely followed Shaivism or that Shaivism was the state religion during their rule.[162][163][164]

Family tree edit

Medieval Cholas
Vijayalaya
848–881
Aditya I
871–907
Parantaka I
907–954
RajadityaGandaraditya
950–957
Arinjaya
956–957
Uttama
971–987
Parantaka II
957–970
Aditya IIRaja Raja I
985–1014
Kundavai
Rajendra I
1012–1044
Rajadhiraja I
1018–1054
Rajendra II
1051–1063
Virarajendra
1063–1070
Athirajendra
1067–1070

Emperors edit

Ruler Reign Notes
Vijayalaya Chola 848–870 Founder of the Chola empire, belonging to Telugu Chodas of Pottapi branch and descendant of the Early Cholas.
Aditya I 870–907
Parantaka I 907–955
Gandaraditya 955–957 Ruled jointly.
Arinjaya 956–957
Parantaka II 957–970
Uttama 970–985
Rajaraja I the Great   985–1014
Rajendra I   1014–1044
Rajadhiraja I   1044–1054
Rajendra II 1054–1063
Virarajendra 1063–1070
Athirajendra 1070 Left no heirs.
Kulothunga I   1070–1122 Son of Amangai Devi Chola, daughter of Rajendra I, and Rajaraja Narendra, ruler of Eastern Chalukya dynasty. Kolothunga's reign started the period which was known as Chalukya-Chola dynasty or simply Later Cholas.
Vikrama 1122–1135
Kulothunga II   1135–1150 Grandson of the previous.
Rajaraja II   1150–1173
Rajadhiraja II 1173–1178 Grandson of king Vikrama Chola.
Kulothunga III   1178–1218
Rajaraja III 1218–1256
Rajendra III 1256–1279 Last Chola ruler, defeated by the Jatavarman Sundara Pandyan I of the Pandya dynasty. After the war, the remaining Chola royal bloods were reduced to the state of being chieftains by the Pandyan forces.

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ The only other time when peninsular India would be brought under one government before the independence of India was during the Vijayanagara Empire (1336–1614).[citation needed]
  2. ^ Arul mozhideva-terinda-kaikola padai; in this, arulmozhideva is the king's name, terinda means well known, and padai means regime
  3. ^ By common consent, the finest Chola masterpieces are the bronze images of Siva Nataraja.[134]

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  • Nagasamy, R. (1981), Tamil Coins – A study, Institute of Epigraphy, Tamil Nadu State Dept. of Archaeology
  • Paine, Lincoln (2014), The Sea and Civilization: A Maritime History of the World, Atlantic Books, ISBN 978-1-78239-357-3
  • Prasad, G. Durga (1988), History of the Andhras up to 1565 A. D., P. G. Publishers
  • Rajasuriar, G. K. (1998), The history of the Tamils and the Sinhalese of Sri Lanka
  • Ramaswamy, Vijaya (2007), Historical Dictionary of the Tamils, Scarecrow Press, ISBN 978-0-81086-445-0
  • Rothermund, Dietmar (1993), An Economic History of India: From Pre-colonial Times to 1991 (Reprinted ed.), Routledge, ISBN 978-0-41508-871-8
  • Sadarangani, Neeti M. (2004), Bhakti Poetry in Medieval India: Its Inception, Cultural Encounter and Impact, Sarup & Sons, ISBN 978-8-17625-436-6
  • Sakhuja, Vijay; Sakhuja, Sangeeta (2009), "Rajendra Chola I's Naval Expedition to South-East Asia: A Nautical Perspective", in Kulke, Hermann; Kesavapany, K.; Sakhuja, Vijay (eds.), Nagapattinam to Suvarnadwipa: Reflections on the Chola Naval Expeditions to Southeast Asia, Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, ISBN 978-9-81230-937-2
  • Sastri, K. A. N. (1984) [1935], The CōĻas, University of Madras
  • Sastri, K. A. N. (2002) [1955], A History of South India: From Prehistoric Times to the Fall of Vijayanagar, Oxford University Press
  • Scharfe, Hartmut (2002), Education in Ancient India, Brill Academic Publishers, ISBN 978-90-04-12556-8
  • Schmidt, Karl J. (1995), An Atlas and Survey of South Asian History, M.E. Sharpe, ISBN 978-0-76563-757-4
  • Sen, Sailendra Nath (1999), Ancient Indian History and Civilization, New Age International, ISBN 978-8-12241-198-0
  • Sen, Tansen (2009), "The Military Campaigns of Rajendra Chola and the Chola-Srivija-China Triangle", in Kulke, Hermann; Kesavapany, K.; Sakhuja, Vijay (eds.), Nagapattinam to Suvarnadwipa: Reflections on the Chola Naval Expeditions to Southeast Asia, Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, ISBN 978-9-81230-937-2
  • Singh, Upinder (2008), A History of Ancient and Early Medieval India: From the Stone Age to the 12th Century, Pearson Education India, ISBN 978-8-13171-120-0
  • "South Indian Inscriptions", Archaeological Survey of India, What Is India Publishers (P) Ltd, retrieved 30 May 2008
  • Spuler, Bertold (1975), Handbook of Oriental Studies, Part 2, BRILL, ISBN 978-9-00404-190-5
  • Stein, Burton (1980), Peasant state and society in medieval South India, Oxford University Press
  • Stein, Burton (1998), A history of India, Blackwell Publishers, ISBN 978-0-631-20546-3
  • Subbarayalu, Y. (2009), "A Note on the Navy of the Chola State", in Kulke, Hermann; Kesavapany, K.; Sakhuja, Vijay (eds.), Nagapattinam to Suvarnadwipa: Reflections on the Chola Naval Expeditions to Southeast Asia, Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, ISBN 978-9-81230-937-2
  • Thapar, Romila (1995), Recent Perspectives of Early Indian History, South Asia Books, ISBN 978-81-7154-556-8
  • Tripathi, Rama Sankar (1967), History of Ancient India, Motilal Banarsidass, ISBN 978-81-208-0018-2
  • Talbot, Austin Cynthia (2001), Pre-colonial India in Practice: Society, Region, and Identity in Medieval Andhra, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19803-123-9
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  • Wolpert, Stanley A (1999), India, University of California Press, ISBN 978-0-520-22172-7

Further reading edit

  • Nilakanta Sastri, K.A. (1955). A History of South India, OUP, New Delhi (Reprinted 2002).
  • Durga Prasad, History of the Andhras up to 1565 A. D., P. G. PUBLISHERS
  • Nilakanta Sastri, K.A. (1935). The Cōlas, University of Madras, Madras (Reprinted 1984).

chola, empire, chola, redirects, here, other, uses, chola, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, so. Chola redirects here For other uses see Chola disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Chola Empire news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Chola Empire which is often referred to as the Imperial Cholas 1 was a medieval Indian thalassocratic empire that was established by the Pottapi branch of the Chola dynasty that rose to prominence during the middle of the ninth century CE and united southern India under their rule Chola Empire848 CE 1279 CEImperial coin of Emperor Rajaraja I 985 1014 Uncertain Tamil Nadu mint Legend Chola conqueror of the Gangas in Tamil seated tiger with two fish Map showing the greatest extent of the Chola empire c 1030 under Rajendra I territories are shown in blue subordinates and areas of influence are shown in pink CapitalPazhaiyaarai Thanjavur Gangaikonda CholapuramOfficial languagesMiddle Tamil Classical Sanskrit liturgical purpose ReligionHinduismGovernmentMonarchyEmperor 848 871 CEVijayalaya Chola first 1246 1279 CERajendra III last Historical eraMiddle Ages Established848 CE Empire at its greatest extent1030 CE Disestablished1279 CEPreceded by Succeeded byPandya DynastyPallava EmpireChera KingdomEastern ChalukyasSrivijaya EmpireTambralingaEastern Ganga DynastyAnuradhapura KingdomPrincipality of RuhunaWestern Chalukya Empire Pandya DynastyKingdom of PolonnaruwaKakatiya EmpireEastern Ganga DynastyMelayu KingdomVenadHoysala EmpireThe power and the prestige the Cholas had among political powers in South Southeast and East Asia at its peak is evident in their expeditions to the Ganges naval raids on cities of the Srivijaya Empire on the island of Sumatra and their repeated embassies to China 2 The Chola fleet represented the peak of ancient Indian maritime capacity Around 1070 the Cholas began to lose almost all of their overseas territories but the later Cholas 1070 1279 continued to rule portions of southern India The Chola empire went into decline at the beginning of the 13th century with the rise of the Pandyan dynasty which ultimately caused the Chola s downfall 3 The Cholas established a centralized form of government and a disciplined bureaucracy Their patronage of Tamil literature and their zeal for building temples resulted in some of the greatest works of Tamil literature and architecture 4 The Chola kings were avid builders and regarded temples in their kingdoms as both places of worship and of economic activity 5 6 A prime example of Chola architecture is Brihadisvara temple at Thanjavur a UNESCO World Heritage site which the Rajaraja commissioned in 1010 They were also well known for their patronage of art The development of the sculpting technique used in Chola bronzes of Hindu deities that were built using a lost wax process was pioneered in their time The Chola tradition of art spread and influenced the architecture and art of Southeast Asia 7 8 Contents 1 Founding 2 Imperial era 2 1 Chola Chalukya wars 3 Later Cholas 3 1 Diminished empire 4 Administration 4 1 Government 4 2 Military 4 3 Economy 4 4 Hospitals 4 5 Society 4 6 Foreign trade 4 7 Canals and water tanks 5 Art and architecture 5 1 Architecture 5 2 Literature 5 3 Religion 6 Family tree 7 Emperors 8 Footnotes 9 References 9 1 Works cited 10 Further readingFounding editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp The city of ThanjavurVijayalaya the successor of Srikantha Chola founded the Chola empire in 848 CE 9 Vijayalaya belonged to a Pottapi Chola family a Telugu Chola branch that claimed descent from ancient Tamil king Karikala Chola 10 and possibly a feudatory of the Pallava dynasty Vijayalaya took an opportunity arising out of a conflict between the Pandya and Pallava empires in c 850 captured Thanjavur from Muttarayar and established the imperial line of the medieval Chola Dynasty 11 12 Thanjavur became the capital of the Imperial Chola empire 13 Under Aditya I the Pallava dynasty defeated the Pandyan dynasty of Madurai in 885 occupied large parts of Kannada country and had marital ties with the Western Ganga dynasty In 925 Aditya s son Parantaka I conquered Sri Lanka which was then known as Ilangai Parantaka I also defeated the Rashtrakuta dynasty under Krishna II in the Battle of Vallala 14 Later Parantaka I was defeated by Rashtrakutas under Krishna III and the Cholas heir apparent Rajaditya Chola was killed in the Battle of Takkolam in which the Cholas lost Tondaimandalam region to Rashtrakutas citation needed The Cholas recovered their power during the reign of Parantaka II The Chola army under the command of crown prince Aditha Karikalan defeated the Pandyas and expanded the kingdom to Tondaimandalam Aditha Karikalan was assassinated in a political plot After Parantaka II Uttama Chola became the Chola emperor and was followed by Raja Raja Chola I the greatest Chola monarch citation needed Imperial era edit nbsp Chola princes Aditha Karikalan and Arulmozhi Varman meeting their guru nbsp Rajendra I proclaimed as Emperor by Shiva and ShakthiUnder Rajaraja I and Rajendra I the Chola Empire reach its Imperial state 15 At its peak the empire stretched from the northern parts of Sri Lanka northwards to the Godavari Krishna river basin up to the Konkan coast in Bhatkal the entire Malabar Coast the Chea country in addition to Lakshadweep and the Maldives islands Rajaraja Chola I was an energetic ruler who applied himself to the task of governance with the same zeal he had shown in waging wars He integrated his empire into a tight administrative grid under royal control and strengthened local self government In 1000 Rajaraja conducted a land survey to effectively marshall his empire s resources 16 He built Brihadeeswarar Temple in 1010 17 Rajendra conquered Odisha and his armies continued north and defeated the forces of the Pala dynasty of Bengal and reached the Ganges river in northern India 18 Rajendra built a new capital called Gangaikonda Cholapuram to celebrate his victories in northern India 19 Rajendra I successfully invaded the Srivijaya kingdom in Southeast Asia which led to the decline of the empire there 20 This expedition left such an impression on the Malay people of the medieval period his name is mentioned in the corrupted form as Raja Chulan in the Malay chronicle Sejarah Melayu 21 22 23 Rajendra also completed the conquest of the Rajarata kingdom of Sri Lanka and took the Sinhala king Mahinda V a prisoner he also conquered Rattapadi territories of the Rashtrakutas Chalukya country Talakkad and Kolar where Kolaramma temple still has his portrait statue in Kannada country 24 full citation needed Rajendra s territories included the Ganges Hooghly Damodar basin 25 as well as Rajarata of Sri Lanka and the Maldives 11 The kingdoms along the east coast of India up to the river Ganges acknowledged Chola suzerainty 26 Diplomatic missions were sent to China in 1016 1033 and 1077 11 Chola Chalukya wars edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Chola Empire news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message From the period of Rajaraja the Cholas engaged in a series of conflicts with the Western Chalukyas The Old Chalukya dynasty had split into two sibling dynasties the Western and Eastern Chalukyas Rajaraja s daughter Kundavai was married to the Eastern Chalukya prince Vimaladitya who ruled from Vengi The Western Chalukyas felt the Vengi kingdom was in their natural sphere of influence Cholas inflicted several defeats on the Western Chalukyas The frontier mostly remained at the Tungabhadra River for both kingdoms and resulted in the death of king Rajadhiraja Rajendra s reign was followed by those of three of his sons in succession Rajadhiraja I Rajendra II and Virarajendra In his eagerness to restore Chola hegemony over Vengi to its former absolute state Rajadhiraja I 1042 1052 led an expedition into Vengi country in 1044 1045 He fought a battle at Dhannada and compelled the Western Chalukyan army and Vijayaditya VII to retreat in disorder Rajendra then entered the Western Chalukyan dominions and set fire to the Kollipaka fort on the frontier between the Kalyani and Vengi territories This brought relief for Rajaraja Narendra who was now firmly in control at Vengi with Rajadhiraja I proceeding to the Chalukyan capital displacing the Chalukyan king Someshvara I performing his coronation at Manyakheta and collecting tribute from the defeated king who had fled the battlefield While the Chalukyans kept creating trouble through Vijayaditya VII Vengi remained firmly under the control of the Cholas Someshvara I again launched an attack on Vengi and then the Cholas in 1054 After Rajadhiraja died Rajendra II crowned himself on the battlefield He galvanized the Chola army defeating the Chalukyas under Someshvara I The Chalukya king again fled the battlefield leaving behind his queen and riches in the possession of the victorious Chola army The Cholas consolidated their hold on Vengi and Kalinga Although there were occasional skirmishes with the Chalukyas they were repeatedly defeated by both the Cholas and the Vengi princes who openly professed loyalty to the Chola empire Following the death of Rajaraja Narendra in 1061 another opportunity for the Kalyani court to strengthen its hold on Vengi arose Vijayaditya VII seized Vengi and with the consent of the Kalyani court established himself permanently in the kingdom Meanwhile prince Rajendra Chalukya son of Rajaraja Narendra through the Chola princess Ammangai was brought up in the Chola harem Rajendra Chalukya married Madhurantakidevi the daughter of RajendraII To restore him on the Vengi throne RajendraII sent his son Rajamahendra and brother ViraRajendra against the Western Chalukyas and Vijayaditya VII Chola forces marched against Gangavadi and repelled the Chalukyas Virarajendra then marched against Vengi and probably killed Saktivarman II son of Vijayaditya VII In the midst of this in 1063 Rajendra II died because his son Rajamahendra had predeceased him Virarajendra returned to Gangaikonda Cholapuram and was crowned the Chola king 1063 1070 Virarajendra split the Western Chalukya kingdom by persuading Chalukya prince Vikramaditya IV to become his son in law and to seize the throne of Kalyani for himself When Virarajendra died in 1070 he was succeeded by his son Adhirajendra who was assassinated a few months later leaving the Chola dynasty was without a lineal successor in the Vijayalaya Chola line Later Cholas edit nbsp Sculpture of Kulottunga I nbsp Airavatesvara Temple Built by Rajaraja II Marital and political alliances between the Eastern Chalukyas began during the reign of Rajaraja following his invasion of Vengi Rajaraja Chola s daughter married Chalukya prince Vimaladitya 27 and Rajendra Chola s daughter Ammanga Devi was married to the Eastern Chalukya prince Rajaraja Narendra 28 In 1070 Virarajendra Chola s son Athirajendra Chola was assassinated in a civil disturbance and Kulothunga Chola I the son of Ammanga Devi and Rajaraja Narendra ascended the Chola throne beginning the Later Chola dynasty 29 The Later Chola dynasty was led by capable rulers such as Kulothunga I his son Vikrama Chola and other successors Rajaraja II Rajadhiraja II and Kulothunga III who conquered Kalinga Ilam and Kataha The rule of the Later Cholas between 1218 starting with Rajaraja III to the last emperor Rajendra III was not as strong as those of the emperors between 850 and 1215 Around 1118 the Cholas lost control of Vengi to the Western Chalukya and Gangavadi southern Mysore districts to the Hoysala Empire Immediately after the accession of king Vikrama Chola the son and successor of Kulothunga Chola I the Cholas recovered the province of Vengi by defeating Chalukya Someshvara III the Cholas also recovered Gangavadi from the Hoysalas The Chola empire though not as strong as between 850 and 1150 was still largely territorially intact under Rajaraja II 1146 1175 a fact attested to by the construction of the third grand chariot shaped Airavatesvara Temple at Dharasuram on the outskirts of modern Kumbakonam Up to 1215 during the rule of Kulothunga Chola III Chola administration and territorial integrity was stable and very prosperous but during his rule Chola power started declining following his defeat by Maravarman Sundara Pandiyan II in 1215 1216 30 Subsequently the Cholas also lost control of the island of Sri Lanka and were driven out by the revival of Sinhala power 31 The decline of the Cholas was also marked by the resurgence of the Pandyan dynasty as the most powerful rulers in South India A lack of a controlling central administration in its erstwhile Pandyan territories prompted a number of claimants to the Pandya throne to cause a civil war in which the Sinhalas and the Cholas were involved by proxy Details of the Pandyan civil war and the role played by the Cholas and Sinhalas are present in the Mahavamsa and Pallavarayanpettai inscriptions 32 33 For three generations the Eastern Chalukyan princes had married into the imperial Chola family and felt they belonged to it as much as to the Eastern Chalukya dynasty The Chalukya prince Rajendra Chalukya of Vengi had spent his childhood days in Gangaikonda Cholapuram and was a familiar favourite to the princes and the people of the Chola country according to Kalingathuparani an epic written in praise of him Following the death of the death of Adhirajendra Rajendra Chalukya established himself on the Chola throne as Kulottunga I 1070 1122 beginning the Later Chola or Chalukya Chola period 34 Kulothunga I reconciled himself with his uncle Vijayaditya VII and allowed him to rule Vengi for the rest of his life The Eastern Chalukya line came to an end with Vijayaditya s death in 1075 and Vengi became a province of the Chola Empire citation needed Kulottunga Chola I administered the province through his sons whom he sent there as viceroys There was a prolonged fight between Kulottunga Chola I and Vikramaditya VI citation needed Kulothunga s long reign was characterized by unparalleled success and prosperity he avoided unnecessary wars and earned the admiration of his subjects Kulottunga s successes resulted in the well being of the empire for the next 100 years but Kulothunga lost the territories in the island of Lanka and began to lose control of the Pandya territories citation needed Diminished empire edit nbsp Chola kingdom under Kulothunga IIIUnder Rajaraja Chola III and his successor Rajendra Chola III the Later Cholas were quite weak and experienced continuous trouble One feudatory the Kadava chieftain Kopperunchinga I held Rajaraja Chola III as a hostage for some time 35 At the close of the 12th century the growing influence of the Hoysalas replaced the declining Chalukyas as the main player in Kannada country but they also faced constant trouble from the Seunas and the Kalachuris who were occupying the Chalukya capital The Hoysalas found it convenient to have friendly relations with the Cholas from the time of Kulothunga Chola III who had defeated Hoysala Veera Ballala II who had subsequent marital relations with the Chola monarch This continued during the time of Rajaraja Chola III the son and successor of Kulothunga Chola III 30 36 The Hoysalas played a divisive role in the politics of Tamil country during this period They exploited the lack of unity among the Tamil kingdoms and alternately supported one Tamil kingdom against the other thereby preventing the Cholas and Pandyas from rising to their full potential During the reign of Rajaraja III the Hoysalas sided with the Cholas and defeated the Kadava chieftain Kopperunjinga and the Pandyas and established a presence in Tamil country Rajendra Chola III who succeeded Rajaraja III was a more competent ruler who led successful expeditions to the north as attested to by his epigraphs found as far as Cuddappah 37 He also defeated two Pandya princes one of whom was Maravarman Sundara Pandya II and briefly made the Pandyas submit to Chola control The Hoysalas under Vira Someswara were quick to intervene and sided with the Pandyas and repulsed the Cholas to counter the latter s revival 38 In South India the Pandyas had become a great power that banished the Hoysalas from Malanadu and Kannada country the Hoysalas were allies of the Cholas on Tamil country The demise of the Cholas was caused by the Pandyas in 1279 The Pandyas steadily gained control of Tamil country and territories in Sri Lanka southern Chera country Telugu country under Maravarman Sundara Pandiyan II and his able successor Jatavarman Sundara Pandyan before inflicting several defeats on the joint forces of the Cholas under Rajaraja Chola III and the Hoysalas under Someshwara his son Ramanatha 30 Fromn 1215 the Pandyans gradually became a major force in Tamil country and consolidated their position in Madurai Rameswaram Ilam southern Chera country and the Kanyakumari belt and had been steadily increasing their territories in the Kaveri belt between Dindigul Tiruchy Karur and Satyamangalam and in the Kaveri Delta Thanjavur Mayuram Chidambaram Vriddhachalam and Kanchi The Pandyans marched to Arcot Tirumalai Nellore Visayawadai Vengi and Kalingam by 1250 39 The Pandyas steadily routed the Hoysalas and the Cholas 40 and dispossessed the Hoysalas defeating them under Jatavarman Sundara Pandiyan at Kannanur Kuppam 41 At the close of Rajendra s reign the Pandyan empire was at the height of its prosperity and had replaced the Chola empire in the view of foreign observers 42 The last recorded date of Rajendra III is 1279 there is no evidence he was immediately followed by another Chola prince 43 44 In around 1279 Kulasekhara Pandiyan routed the Hoysalas from Kannanur Kuppam and in the same war the last Chola emperor Rajendra III was routed and the Chola empire ceased to exist The Chola empire was completely overshadowed by the Pandyan empire and sank into obscurity by the end of the 13th century until period of the Vijayanagara Empire 45 44 In the early 16th century Virasekhara Chola king of Tanjore rose out of obscurity and plundered the dominions of the Pandya prince in the south The Pandya who was under the protection of the Vijayanagara appealed to the emperor and the Raya accordingly directed his agent Karyakartta Nagama Nayaka who was stationed in the south to put down the Chola Nagama Nayaka then defeated the Chola but the once loyal officer of Krishnadeva Raya defied the emperor and decided to keep Madurai for himself Krishnadeva Raya is said to have dispatched Nagama s son Viswanatha who defeated his father and restored Madurai to Vijayanagara rule 46 The fate of Virasekhara Chola the last of the line of Cholas is not known It is speculated he either fell in battle or was executed along with his heirs during his encounter with Vijayanagara 47 48 Administration editGovernment edit Main article Chola Government nbsp The mandalams of the Chola empire early 12th century CEDuring the rule of the Cholas the whole of South India was for the first time brought under a single government a The Cholas system of government was monarchical as in the Sangam age 49 There was little in common between the local chiefdoms of the earlier period and the imperial states of Rajaraja Chola and his successors 50 Aside from the early capital at Thanjavur and the later one at Gangaikonda Cholapuram Kanchipuram and Madurai were considered to be regional capitals where occasional courts were held The king was the supreme leader and a benevolent authoritarian His administrative role consisted of issuing oral commands to responsible officers when representations were made to him Due to the lack of a legislature or a legislative system in the modern sense the fairness of king s orders depended on his morality and belief in Dharma The Chola kings built temples and endowed them with great wealth The temples acted as both places of worship and centres of economic activity benefiting the community 51 Some of the output of villages was given to temples which reinvested some of the wealth accumulated as loans to the settlements 52 The Chola empire was divided into several provinces called mandalams which were further divided into valanadus which were subdivided into units called kottams or kutrams 53 According to Kathleen Gough during the Chola period the Vellalar were the dominant secular aristocratic caste providing the courtiers most of the army officers the lower ranks of the kingdom s bureaucracy and the upper layer of the peasantry 54 Before the reign of Rajaraja Chola I huge parts of Chola territory were ruled by hereditary lords and local princes who were in a loose alliance with the Chola rulers Thereafter until the reign of Vikrama Chola in 1133 when Chola power was at its peak these hereditary lords and local princes almost vanished from Chola records and were either replaced with or became dependent officials through whom the administration was improved and the Chola kings were able to exercise closer control over the parts of the empire 55 The administrative structure expanded particularly during and after the reign of Rajaraja Chola I The government at this time had a multi tiered large land revenue department that was largely concerned with maintaining accounts Corporate bodies such as the Ur Nadu Sabha Nagaram and sometimes local chieftains undertook The assessment and collection of revenue and passed the revenue to the centre During the reign of Rajaraja Chola I the state initiated a massive project of land survey and assessment and the empire was reorganised into units known as valanadus 56 The executive officer first communicated the order of the King to the local authorities Afterwards the records of the transaction was drawn up and attested by witnesses who were either local magnates or government officers 57 At local government level every village was a self governing unit A number of villages constituted a larger entity known as a kurram nadu or kottam depending on the area 58 59 60 A number of kurrams constituted a valanadu 61 These structures underwent constant change and refinement throughout the Chola period 62 In the Chola empire Justice was mostly a local matter minor disputes were settled at village level 60 Minor crimes were punished with fines or a direction for the offender to donate to a charitable endowment Even crimes such as manslaughter or murder were punished with fines The king heard and decided crimes of the state such as treason the typical punishment in these cases was either execution or the confiscation of property 63 Military edit nbsp Chola Soldiers in battle at Airavatesvara TempleThe Chola military had four elements the cavalry the elephant corps several divisions of infantry and a navy 64 The Emperor was the supreme commander There were regiments of bowmen and swordsmen the latter of which were the most permanent and most dependable troops The Chola army was spread all over the country and was stationed in local garrisons or military camps known as Kodagams Elephants played a major role in the army the empire had numerous war elephants that carried houses or huge howdahs on their backs These howdahs were full of soldiers who shot arrows at long range and fought with spears at close quarters 65 The Chola army was mostly composed of Kaikolars men with strong arms who were royal troops receiving regular payments from the treasury b 66 Chola rulers built several palaces and fortifications to protect their cities The fortifications were mostly made of bricks but other materials like stone wood and mud were also used 67 68 According to the ancient Tamil text Silappadikaram Tamil kings defended their forts with catapults that threw stones huge cauldrons of boiling water or molten lead and hooks chains and traps 69 70 need quotation to verify Chola soldiers used weapons such as swords bows javelins spears and steel shields 71 Particularly the famous Wootz steel which has a long history in south India dating back to the period before the Christian era seems to have been used to produce weapons 72 The Chola navy was the zenith of ancient India sea power 65 It played a vital role in the expansion of the empire including the conquest of the Sri Lanka islands and naval raids on Srivijaya 73 The navy grew both in size and status during the medieval Cholas reign Chola admirals commanded much respect and prestige and naval commanders also acted as diplomats in some instances From 900 to 1100 the navy grew from a small entity to that of a potent power projection and diplomatic symbol in Asia but was gradually reduced in significance when Cholas fought land battles to subjugate the Chalukyas of the Andhra Kannada area in South India 74 Chloa rulers patronised a martial art called Silambam citation needed Ancient and medieval Tamil texts mention different forms of martial traditions but the ultimate expression of the loyalty of the warrior to his commander was a form of martial suicide called Navakandam citation needed The medieval text Kalingathu Parani which celebrates the victory of Kulothunga Chola I and his general in the battle for Kalinga describes the practice in detail citation needed Economy edit Land revenue and trade tax were the main source of income 75 Chola rulers issued coins in gold silver and copper 76 The Chola economy was based on three tiers at the local level agricultural settlements formed the foundation to commercial towns nagaram which acted as redistribution centres for externally produced items bound for consumption in the local economy and as sources of products made by nagaram artisans for international trade At the top of this economy were elite merchant groups samayam who organised and dominated the regions international maritime trade 77 clarification needed The Chola Empire s main export was cotton cloth 78 Uraiyur the capital of the early Chola rulers was a centre for cotton textiles Tamil poets praised 79 80 Chola rulers encouraged the weaving industry and derived revenue from it 81 During this period weavers started to organise themselves into guilds 82 Weavers had their own residential sector in all towns the most important weaving communities in early medieval times were the Saliyar and Kaikolar 81 During the Chola period silk weaving attained a high degree of skill and Kanchipuram became one of the main centres for silk 83 84 Metalcrafts peaked during the 10th to 11th centuries because Chola rulers like Chembian Maadevi extended their patronage to metal craftsmen 85 Wootz steel was a major Chola export 86 Farmers occupied one of the highest positions in society 87 These were the Vellalar community who formed the nobility or the landed aristocracy of the country and were an economically powerful group 87 88 Agriculture was the principal occupation for many people besides landowners 89 The Vellalar community was the dominant secular aristocratic caste under the Chola rulers providing the courtiers most of the army officers the lower ranks of the bureaucracy and the upper ranks of the peasantry 54 In almost all villages the distinction between persons paying the land tax iraikudigal and those who did not was clearly established There was a class of hired day labourers who assisted in agricultural operations on estates of other people and received a daily wage All cultivable land was held in one of the three broad classes of tenure peasant proprietorship called vellan vagai service tenure and eleemosynary tenure resulting from charitable gifts 90 The vellan vagai were the ordinary ryotwari village of modern times having direct relations with the government and paying a land tax liable to periodic revision 77 The vellan vagai villages fell into two broad classes one directly paid a variable annual revenue to the state and the other paid fixed rate dues to public institutions like temples to which they were assigned 91 The prosperity of an agricultural country depends to a large extent on the facilities provided for irrigation Apart from sinking wells and excavating tanks Chola rulers built large stone dams across the Kaveri and other rivers and cut channels to distribute water over large tracts of land 92 Rajendra Chola I dug near his capital an artificial lake that was filled with water from the Kolerun and the Vellar rivers 91 An internal trade in several articles was carried out by organised mercantile corporations The metal industries and the jewellers art had reached a high degree of excellence Sea salt was made under government supervision and control Merchants organised into guilds that were described sometimes by the terms nanadesis these were powerful autonomous corporations of merchants that visited other countries in the course of trade These corporations had mercenary armies for the protection of their merchandise There were also local organisations of merchants called nagaram in big centres of trade like Kanchipuram and Mamallapuram 93 91 Hospitals edit nbsp Aerial view of the Venkatesa Perumal Temple in Thirumukkudal near Kanchipuram a temple built by Virarajendra in 1069 The temple also included a hospital and Vedic schools Hospitals were maintained by the Chola kings whose government gave lands for that purpose The Tirumukkudal inscription shows a hospital was named after Vira Chola Many diseases were cured by the doctors of the hospital which was under the control of a chief physician who was paid annually eighty kalams of paddy eight kasus and a grant of land Apart from the doctors other remunerated staff included a nurse a barber who performed minor operations and a waterman 94 The Chola queen Kundavai established a hospital at Tanjavur and gave land for its perpetual maintenance 95 Society edit During the Chola period several guilds communities and castes emerged The guild was one of the most significant institutions of south India and merchants organised themselves into guilds The best known of these were the Manigramam and Ayyavole guilds though other guilds such as Anjuvannam and Valanjiyar were also in existence 96 Members of the Vellalar caste were sent to northern Sri Lanka by the Chola rulers as settlers 97 The Ulavar caste were agricultural workers and peasants were known as Kalamar 87 The Kaikolar community were weavers and merchants who also maintained armies During the Chola period they had predominant trading and military roles 98 During the reign of the Imperial Chola rulers 10th 13th centuries there were major changes in the temple administration and land ownership There was more involvement of non Brahmin peoples in temple administration This can be attributed to the shift in financial power Skilled classes like weavers and merchants had become prosperous Land ownership was no longer a privilege of the Brahmins priest caste and the Vellalar land owners 99 There is little information on the size and the density of the population during the Chola reign 100 The stability in the core Chola region enabled the people to lead a productive and contented life but there are reports of widespread famine caused by natural calamities 101 The quality of the inscriptions of the regime indicates the inscribers had a high level of literacy and education The text in these inscriptions was written by court poets and engraved by talented artisans Education in the contemporary sense was not considered important there is circumstantial evidence some village councils organised schools to teach the basics of reading and writing to children 102 although there is no evidence of systematic education system for the masses 103 Vocational education was through hereditary training in which the father passed on his skills to his sons Tamil was the medium of education for the masses monasteries matha or gatika were centres of learning and received government support 104 Under Chola kings there was generally an emphasis on a fair justice system and the kings were often described as sengol valavan the king who established just rule and priests warned the king royal justice would ensure a happy future for him and that injustice would lead to divine punishment 105 106 Foreign trade edit See also Chola Navy and Relationship of the Cholas with the Chinese The Cholas who were in possession of parts of the west and east coasts of peninsular India 107 engaged in foreign trade and maritime activity extending their influence to China and Southeast Asia 108 Towards the end of the 9th century southern India had developed extensive maritime and commercial activity 109 South Indian guilds played a major role in inter regional and overseas trade The best known guilds were the Manigramam and Ayyavole who followed the conquering Chola armies 110 The encouragement of the Chola court furthered the expansion of Tamil merchant associations and guilds into Southeast Asia and China 111 112 The Tang dynasty of China the Srivijaya Empire under the Sailendras and the Abbasid Kalifat at Baghdad were the Chola Empire s main trading partners 113 The Chola dynasty played a significant role in linking the markets of China to the rest of the world The empire s market structure and economic policies were more conducive to a large scale cross regional market trade than those enacted by the Chinese Song Dynasty A Chola record gives their rationale for engagement in foreign trade Make the merchants of distant foreign countries who import elephants and good horses attach to yourself by providing them with villages and decent dwellings in the city by affording them daily audience presents and allowing them profits Then those articles will never go to your enemies 114 Song dynasty reports record an embassy from Chulian Chola reached the Chinese court in 1077 115 116 and that the king of the Chulian at the time Kulothunga I was called Ti hua kia lo This embassy was a trading venture and was highly profitable to the Chola visitors who returned with copper coins in exchange for articles of tribute including glass and spices 117 The motive behind Rajendra s expedition to Srivijaya was probably the protection of the merchants interests 118 Canals and water tanks edit nbsp Water Tank of the Nataraja Temple in Chidambaram There was tremendous agrarian expansion during the rule of the imperial Chola dynasty c 900 1270 in present day Tamil Nadu particularly in the Kaveri Basin Canals of the Kaveri River were constructed in this period these include the Uyyakondan canal Rajendran vaykkal and Sembian Mahadegvi vaykkal There was an efficient well developed system of water management from the village level upwards There was an increase in royal patronage and the number of devadana and bramadeya lands which increased the role of the temples and village assemblies in farming Tank committees eri variyam and garden committees totta variam were as active as the temples with their vast resources in land men and money The water tanks that came up during the Chola period include one Rajendra Chola built at Solagangam in his capital city Gangaikonda Solapuram and was described as the liquid pillar of victory Solagagam was about 16 mi 26 km long and was provided with sluices and canals for irrigating land in the neighbouring areas Another very large lake of this period which remains an important source of irrigation is Viranameri near Kattumannarkoil in South Arcot district that Parantaka Chola founded Other famous lakes of this period are Madurantakam Sundra cholapereri and Kundavai Pereri which was named after a Chola queen 119 Art and architecture editArchitecture edit Main article Chola art and architecture nbsp Gangaikonda Cholapuram the capital of the Chola Empire built from 1023 to 1027 by Rajendra I nbsp Brihadisvara Temple built in 1010 by Rajaraja IThe Cholas continued the temple building traditions of the Pallava dynasty and contributed significantly to the Dravidian temple design 120 They built a number of Shiva temples along the banks of the Kaveri river The template for these and future temples was formulated by Aditya I and Parantaka 121 122 123 The Chola temple architecture has been appreciated for its magnificence and delicate workmanship ostensibly following the rich traditions of the Pallava Dynasty 124 Architectural historian James Fergusson says the Chola artists conceived like giants and finished like jewelers 124 A new development in Chola art that characterised the Dravidian architecture in later times was the addition of a huge gateway called gopuram to the enclosure of the temple which had been developed under the Pandya dynasty 124 The Chola school of art spread to Southeast Asia and influenced the architecture and art of Southeast Asia 125 126 Temple building received great impetus from the conquests and the genius of Rajaraja Chola and his son Rajendra Chola I 127 The temples at Thanjavur and Gangaikondacholapuram display the maturity and grandeur to which the Chola architecture had evolved The Shiva temple of Thanjavur which was completed around 1009 idisplays the material achievements of Rajaraja s reign being the largest and tallest of all Indian temples of its time The temple of Gangaikondacholisvaram at Gangaikondacholapuram which was designed by Rajendra Chola was intended to excel its predecessor It was completed around 1030 in the same style The greater elaboration in its appearance attests to the more affluent state of the Chola empire under Rajendra 120 128 page needed The Brihadisvara Temple the temple of Gangaikondacholisvaram and the Airavatesvara Temple at Darasuram were declared World Heritage Sites by UNESCO and are referred to as the Great Living Chola Temples 129 The Chola period is also noted for its sculptures and bronzes 130 131 132 Specimens in museums around the world and in temples of South India include figures of Shiva in various forms such as Vishnu and his consort Lakshmi and the Shaivite saints 120 These works generally conform to the iconographic conventions established by long tradition but the sculptors of the 11th and the 12th centuries worked with great freedom to achieve a classic grace and grandeur The best example of this can be seen in the form of Nataraja the Divine Dancer 133 c Literature edit nbsp Kambar often recited poems at the Kamba Ramyanam MandapamLiterature flourished in the Chola Empire The poet Kambar was active during the reign of Kulothunga III Kambar s epic poem Ramavataram also referred to as Kambaramayanam is a classic of Tamil literature though the author states he followed Valmiki s Ramayana it is generally accepted his work is not a simple translation or adaptation of the Sanskrit epic 135 page needed Kambar s work describes the colour and landscape of his own time his description of Kosala is an idealised account of the features of Chola country 136 137 page needed 138 Jayamkondar s Kalingattuparani is an example of narrative poetry that draws a clear boundary between history and fictitious conventions This poem describes events during Kulothunga s war in Kalinga and depicts the pomp and circumstance of war and the gruesome details of the field 138 139 The Tamil poet Ottakuttan was a contemporary of Kulottunga I and served at the courts of three of Kulothunga s successors 140 141 Ottakuttan wrote Kulothunga Cholan Ula a poem extolling the virtues of the Chola king 142 Nannul is a Chola era work on Tamil grammar It discusses all five branches of grammar and according to Berthold Spuler is still relevant and is one of the most distinguished normative grammars of literary Tamil 143 The Telugu Choda period was significant for the development of Telugu literature under the patronage of the rulers In this era great Telugu poets Tikkana Ketana Marana and Somana were active Tikkana Somayaji wrote Nirvachanottara Ramayanamu and Andhra Mahabharatamu Abhinava Dandi Ketana wrote Dasakumaracharitramu Vijnaneswaramu and Andhra Bhashabhushanamu Marana wrote Markandeya Purana in Telugu Somana wrote Basava Purana Tikkana is one of the kavitrayam who translated Mahabharata into Telugu 144 Of the period s devotional literature the arrangement of the Shaivite canon into eleven books was the work of Nambi Andar Nambi who lived close to the end of the 10th century 145 146 Relatively few Vaishnavite works were composed during the Later Chola period possibly because of the rulers apparent animosity towards them 147 Religion edit nbsp Bronze Chola Statue of Nataraja at the Metropolitan Museum of Art New York CityIn general Cholas were followers of Hinduism While the Cholas built their largest and most important temple dedicated to Shiva it is uncertain whether they were followers of Shaivism only or that they were not favourably disposed to other faiths The second Chola king Aditya I 871 903 built temples for Shiva and Vishnu Inscriptions of 890 refer to his contributions to the construction Ranganatha Temple at Srirangapatnam in the Western Gangas who were both his feudatories and had connections by marriage with him He also said the great temples of Shiva and Ranganatha temple were to be the Kuladhanam of the Chola emperors 148 Parantaka II was a devotee of the reclining Vishnu Vadivu Azhagiya Nambi at Anbil the outskirts of Tiruchy to whom he gave numerous gifts and embellishments He prayed before Vishnu before his embarking on a war to regain territories in and around Kanchi and Arcot from the waning Rashtrakutas and leading expeditions against Madurai and Ilam Sri Lanka 149 Parantaka I and Parantaka Chola II endowed and built temples for Shiva and Vishnu 150 Rajaraja Chola I patronised Buddhists and provided for the construction of the Chudamani Vihara a Buddhist monastery in Nagapattinam at the request of Sri Chulamanivarman the Srivijaya Sailendra king 151 152 During the period of the Later Cholas there were supposed instances of intolerance towards Vaishnavites 153 especially towards their acharya Ramanuja 154 A Chola sovereign called Krimikanta Chola is said to have persecuted Ramanuja Some scholars identify Kulothunga Chola II with Krimikanta Chola or worm necked Chola who is so called because he is said to have suffered from cancer of the throat or neck The latter finds mention in the vaishnava Guruparampara and is said to have been a strong opponent of the Vaishnavas The 17th century work Parpannamritam refers to a Chola king called Krimikanta who is said to have removed the Govindaraja idol from the Chidambaram Nataraja temple 155 According to temple records of the Srirangam temple however Kulottunga Chola II was the son of Krimikanta Chola The former unlike his father is said to have been a repentant son who supported Vaishnavism 156 157 Ramanuja is said to have made Kulottunga II a disciple of his nephew Dasarathi The king then granted the management of Ranganathaswamy temple to Dasarathi and his descendants as per the wish of Ramanuja 158 159 Historian Nilakanta Sastri identifies Krimikanta Chola with Athirajendra Chola or Virarajendra Chola with whom the main Vijayalaya Chola line ended 160 161 An inscription from 1160 states the custodians of Shiva temples who had social intercourse with Vaishnavites would forfeit their property This is a direction to the Shaivite community by its religious heads rather than a diktat by a Chola emperor While Chola kings built their largest temples for Shiva and emperors like Rajaraja Chola I held titles like Sivapadasekharan in none of their inscriptions did the Chola emperors proclaim their clan solely followed Shaivism or that Shaivism was the state religion during their rule 162 163 164 Family tree editMedieval CholasVijayalaya848 881Aditya I871 907Parantaka I907 954RajadityaGandaraditya950 957Arinjaya956 957Uttama971 987Parantaka II957 970Aditya IIRaja Raja I985 1014KundavaiRajendra I1012 1044Rajadhiraja I1018 1054Rajendra II1051 1063Virarajendra1063 1070Athirajendra1067 1070Emperors editRuler Reign NotesVijayalaya Chola 848 870 Founder of the Chola empire belonging to Telugu Chodas of Pottapi branch and descendant of the Early Cholas Aditya I 870 907Parantaka I 907 955Gandaraditya 955 957 Ruled jointly Arinjaya 956 957Parantaka II 957 970Uttama 970 985Rajaraja I the Great nbsp 985 1014Rajendra I nbsp 1014 1044Rajadhiraja I nbsp 1044 1054Rajendra II 1054 1063Virarajendra 1063 1070Athirajendra 1070 Left no heirs Kulothunga I nbsp 1070 1122 Son of Amangai Devi Chola daughter of Rajendra I and Rajaraja Narendra ruler of Eastern Chalukya dynasty Kolothunga s reign started the period which was known as Chalukya Chola dynasty or simply Later Cholas Vikrama 1122 1135Kulothunga II nbsp 1135 1150 Grandson of the previous Rajaraja II nbsp 1150 1173Rajadhiraja II 1173 1178 Grandson of king Vikrama Chola Kulothunga III nbsp 1178 1218Rajaraja III 1218 1256Rajendra III 1256 1279 Last Chola ruler defeated by the Jatavarman Sundara Pandyan I of the Pandya dynasty After the war the remaining Chola royal bloods were reduced to the state of being chieftains by the Pandyan forces Footnotes edit The only other time when peninsular India would be brought under one government before the independence of India was during the Vijayanagara Empire 1336 1614 citation needed Arul mozhideva terinda kaikola padai in this arulmozhideva is the king s name terinda means well known and padai means regime By common consent the finest Chola masterpieces are the bronze images of Siva Nataraja 134 References edit Kaimal Padma May 1992 Art of the Imperial Cholas By Vidya Dehejia New York Columbia University Press 1990 xv 148 pp 36 00 The Journal of Asian Studies book review 51 2 414 416 doi 10 2307 2058068 ISSN 1752 0401 JSTOR 2058068 S2CID 163175500 K A Nilakanta Sastri A History of South India p 158 K A Nilakanta Sastri A History of South India p 195 196 Keay 2011 p 215 Vasudevan pp 20 22 Keay 2011 pp 217 218 Promsak Jermsawatdi Thai Art with Indian Influences p 57 John Stewart Bowman Columbia Chronologies of Asian History and Culture p 335 Sen 1999 pp 477 478 Gupta S p 1977 Readings in South Indian History pp 62 63 a b c Dehejia 1990 p xiv Kulke amp Rothermund 2001 pp 122 123 Eraly 2011 p 67 Sen 1999 pp 373 Kulke amp Rothermund 2001 p 115 Eraly 2011 p 68 Endowments to the Temple Archaeological Survey of India Balaji Sadasivan The Dancing Girl A History of Early India p 133 Farooqui Salma Ahmed Salma Ahmed Farooqui A Comprehensive History of Medieval India p 25 Ronald Findlay Kevin H O Rourke Power and Plenty Trade War and the World Economy in the Second Millennium p 67 Geoffrey C Gunn History Without Borders The Making of an Asian World Region 1000 1800 p 43 Sen 2009 p 91 Tansen Sen Buddhism Diplomacy and Trade The Realignment of Sino Indian Relations p 226 Kala The Journal of Indian Art History Congress The Congress 1995 p 31 Sastri 1984 pp 194 210 Majumdar 1987 p 407 Majumdar 1987 p 405 Chopra Ravindran amp Subrahmanian 2003 p 120 Majumdar 1987 p 408 a b c Tripathi 1967 p 471 Finegan Jack 1989 An archaeological history of religions of Indian Asia New York Paragon House p 323 ISBN 0 913729 43 4 South Indian Inscriptions Vol 12 Chopra Ravindran amp Subrahmanian 2003 pp 128 129 Government Oriental Manuscripts Library Madras Government Oriental Series Issue 157 Tamil Nadu India p 729 Sastri 2002 p 194 Majumdar 1987 p 410 Journal of the Sri Venkatesvara Oriental Institute Sri Venkatesvara Oriental Institute 5 7 64 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Missing or empty title help Sailendra Nath Sen 1999 Ancient Indian History and Civilization New Age International p 487 South India and Her Muhammadan Invaders by S Krishnaswami Aiyangar pp 40 41 Sastri 2002 pp 195 196 Sastri 2002 p 196 Tripathi 1967 p 485 Sastri 2002 p 197 a b Chopra Ravindran amp Subrahmanian 2003 p 130 Tripathi 1967 p 472 P K S Raja 1966 Mediaeval Kerala Navakerala Co op Publishing House p 47 E Ke Ceṣattiri 1998 Sri Brihadisvara the Great Temple of Thanjavur Nile Books p 24 Stein Burton 1990 Vijayanagara The New Cambridge History of India Vol 1 Cambridge University Press p 57 Kulke amp Rothermund 2001 p 104 Stein 1998 p 26 Vasudevan 2003 pp 20 22 Francis D K Ching Mark M Jarzombek Vikramaditya Prakash A Global History of Architecture p 338 N Jayapalan History of India p 171 ISBN 81 7156 914 5 a b Gough 2008 p 29 Talbot 2001 p 172 Singh 2008 p 590 U B Singh Administrative System in India Vedic Age to 1947 p 77 Tripathi 1967 pp 474 475 Stein 1998 p 20 a b Sastri 2002 p 185 Sastri 2002 p 150 Sastri 1984 p 465 Sastri 1984 p 477 Sakhuja amp Sakhuja 2009 p 88 a b Barua 2005 p 18 Sen 1999 p 491 Kaikolar Dehejia 1990 p 79 Subbarayalu 2009 pp 97 99 Eraly 2011 p 176 Rajasuriar 1998 p 15 Sen 1999 p 205 Menon R V G Technology and Society p 15 Pradeep Barua The State at War in South Asia p 17 Sastri 2002 p 175 Showick Thorpe Edgar Thorpe The Pearson General Studies Manual 2009 1st ed p 59 Singh 2008 p 54 a b Schmidt 1995 p 32 Devare 2009 p 179 Eraly 2011 p 208 Ramaswamy 2007 p 20 a b Singh 2008 p 599 Radhika Seshan Trade and Politics on the Coromandel Coast Seventeenth and Early Eighteenth centuries p 18 G K Ghosh Shukla Ghosh Indian Textiles Past and Present p 123 124 P V L Narasimha Rao Kanchipuram Land of Legends Saints and Temples p 134 Ramaswamy 2007 p 51 Mukherjee 2011 p 105 a b c S Ganeshram History of People and Their Environs Essays in Honour of Prof B S Chandrababu p 319 Singh 2008 p 592 Sen 1999 pp 490 492 Reddy Indian History p B57 a b c Mukund 1999 pp 30 32 Ramaswamy 2007 p 86 Rothermund 1993 p 9 N Jayapalan Economic History of India p 49 Balasubrahmanyam Venkataraman Temple art under the Chola queens p 72 Mukund 1999 p 29 30 Hellmann Rajanayagam 2004 p 104 Carla M Sinopoli The Political Economy of Craft Production Crafting Empire in South India p 188 Sadarangani 2004 p 16 Sastri 2002 p 284 Chopra Ravindran amp Subrahmanian 2003 pp 125 129 Scharfe 2002 p 180 Italian traveller Pietro Della Valle 1623 gave an account of a village schools in South India this account reflects the system of primary education that existed in Tamil Nadu Sastri 2002 p 293 Balasubrahmanyam S 1977 Middle Chola Temples Rajaraja I to Kulottunga I A D 985 1070 Oriental Press p 291 ISBN 9789060236079 Subrahmanian N 1971 History of Tamil Nadu to A D 1336 Koodal Publishers retrieved 12 June 2023 Kulke amp Rothermund 2001 p 124 Kulke amp Rothermund 2001 pp 116 117 Kulke amp Rothermund 2001 pp 12 118 Mukund 1999 p 29 30 Tansen Sen Buddhism Diplomacy and Trade The Realignment of Sino Indian Relations p 159 Tripathi 1967 pp 465 477 Sastri 1984 p 604 Tansen Sen Buddhism Diplomacy and Trade The Realignment of Sino Indian Relations p 156 Kulke amp Rothermund 2001 p 117 Thapar 1995 p xv Mukund 2012 p 92 Mukund 2012 p 95 Lallanji Gopal History of Agriculture in India Up to c 1200 A D p 501 a b c Tripathi 1967 p 479 Dehejia 1990 p 10 Harle 1994 p 295 Mitter 2001 p 57 a b c V V Subba Reddy Temples of South India p 110 Jermsawatdi 1979 p 57 John Stewart Bowman Columbia Chronologies of Asian History and Culture p 335 Vasudevan 2003 pp 21 24 Nagasamy 1970 Great Living Chola Temples UNESCO Retrieved 3 June 2008 Chopra Ravindran amp Subrahmanian 2003 p 186 Mitter 2001 p 163 Thapar 1995 p 309 310 Wolpert 1999 p 174 Mitter 2001 p 59 Sanujit Ghose Legend of Ram Ismail 1988 p 1195 D P Dubey Rays and Ways of Indian Culture a b Chopra Ravindran amp Subrahmanian 2003 p 116 Sastri 2002 pp 20 340 341 Sastri 2002 pp 184 340 Chopra Ravindran amp Subrahmanian 2003 p 20 Encyclopaedia of Indian literature vol 1 p 307 Spuler 1975 p 194 www wisdomlib org 23 June 2018 The Telugu Cholas of Konidena A D 1050 1300 Part 1 www wisdomlib org Retrieved 7 January 2019 Sastri 2002 pp 342 343 Chopra Ravindran amp Subrahmanian 2003 p 115 Sastri 1984 p 681 Darasuram Temple Inscriptions What Is India 2007 01 29 Retrieved on 2013 07 12 Tripathi 1967 p 480 Vasudevan 2003 p 102 Sastri 1984 p 214 Majumdar 1987 p 4067 Stein 1998 p 134 Vasudevan 2003 p 104 Natarajan B Ramachandran Balasubrahmanyan 1994 Tillai and Nataraja Chidambaram India Mudgala Trust p 108 V N Hari Rao 1961 Kōil Ol ugu The Chronicle of the Srirangam Temple with Historical Notes Rochouse p 87 Kōvintacami Mu 1977 A Survey of the Sources for the History of Tamil Literature Annamalai University p 161 Sreenivasa Ayyangar C R 1908 The Life and Teachings of Sri Ramanujacharya R Venkateshwar p 239 Mackenzie Colin 1972 T V Mahalingam ed Mackenzie manuscripts summaries of the historical manuscripts in the Mackenzie collection Vol 1 University of Madras p 14 Jagannathan Sarojini 1994 Impact of Sri Ramanujacarya on Temple Worship Nag p 148 Kalidos Raju 1976 History and Culture of the Tamils From Prehistoric Times to the President s Rule Vijay p 139 Sastri 2002 p 176 Sastri 1984 p 645 Chopra Ravindran amp Subrahmanian 2003 p 126 Works cited edit Barua Pradeep 2005 The State at War in South Asia University of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 0 80321 344 9 Chopra P N Ravindran T K Subrahmanian N 2003 History of South India Ancient Medieval and Modern S Chand amp Company Ltd ISBN 978 81 219 0153 6 Das Sisir Kumar 1995 History of Indian Literature 1911 1956 Struggle for Freedom Triumph and Tragedy Sahitya Akademi ISBN 978 81 7201 798 9 Dehejia Vidya 1990 The Art of the Imperial Cholas Columbia University Press Devare Hema 2009 Cultural Implications of the Chola Maritime Fabric Trade with Southeast Asia in Kulke Hermann Kesavapany K Sakhuja Vijay eds Nagapattinam to Suvarnadwipa Reflections on the Chola Naval Expeditions to Southeast Asia Institute of Southeast Asian Studies ISBN 978 9 81230 937 2 Eraly Abraham 2011 The First Spring The Golden Age of India Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 67008 478 4 Gough Kathleen 2008 Rural Society in Southeast India Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 52104 019 8 Harle J C 1994 The art and architecture of the Indian Subcontinent Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 06217 5 Hellmann Rajanayagam Dagmar 2004 From Differences to Ethnic Solidarity Among the Tamils in Hasbullah S H Morrison Barrie M eds Sri Lankan Society in an Era of Globalization Struggling To Create A New Social Order SAGE ISBN 978 8 13210 320 2 Ismail M M 1988 Epic Tamil Encyclopaedia of Indian literature vol 2 Sahitya Akademi ISBN 81 260 1194 7 Jermsawatdi Promsak 1979 Thai Art with Indian Influences Abhinav Publications ISBN 978 8 17017 090 7 Kulke Hermann Rothermund Dietmar 2001 A History of India Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 32920 0 Keay John 12 April 2011 India A History Open Road Grove Atlantic ISBN 978 0 8021 9550 0 Lucassen Jan Lucassen Leo 2014 Globalising Migration History The Eurasian Experience BRILL ISBN 978 9 00427 136 4 Majumdar R C 1987 1952 Ancient India Motilal Banarsidass Publications ISBN 978 81 208 0436 4 Miksic John N 2013 Singapore and the Silk Road of the Sea 1300 1800 NUS Press ISBN 978 9971 69 558 3 Mitter Partha 2001 Indian art Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 284221 3 Mukherjee Rila 2011 Pelagic Passageways The Northern Bay of Bengal Before Colonialism Primus Books ISBN 978 9 38060 720 7 Mukund Kanakalatha 1999 The Trading World of the Tamil Merchant Evolution of Merchant Capitalism in the Coromandel Orient Blackswan ISBN 978 8 12501 661 8 Mukund Kanakalatha 2012 Merchants of Tamilakam Pioneers of International Trade Penguin Books India ISBN 978 0 67008 521 7 Nagasamy R 1970 Gangaikondacholapuram State Department of Archaeology Government of Tamil Nadu Nagasamy R 1981 Tamil Coins A study Institute of Epigraphy Tamil Nadu State Dept of Archaeology Paine Lincoln 2014 The Sea and Civilization A Maritime History of the World Atlantic Books ISBN 978 1 78239 357 3 Prasad G Durga 1988 History of the Andhras up to 1565 A D P G Publishers Rajasuriar G K 1998 The history of the Tamils and the Sinhalese of Sri Lanka Ramaswamy Vijaya 2007 Historical Dictionary of the Tamils Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 81086 445 0 Rothermund Dietmar 1993 An Economic History of India From Pre colonial Times to 1991 Reprinted ed Routledge ISBN 978 0 41508 871 8 Sadarangani Neeti M 2004 Bhakti Poetry in Medieval India Its Inception Cultural Encounter and Impact Sarup amp Sons ISBN 978 8 17625 436 6 Sakhuja Vijay Sakhuja Sangeeta 2009 Rajendra Chola I s Naval Expedition to South East Asia A Nautical Perspective in Kulke Hermann Kesavapany K Sakhuja Vijay eds Nagapattinam to Suvarnadwipa Reflections on the Chola Naval Expeditions to Southeast Asia Institute of Southeast Asian Studies ISBN 978 9 81230 937 2 Sastri K A N 1984 1935 The CōLas University of Madras Sastri K A N 2002 1955 A History of South India From Prehistoric Times to the Fall of Vijayanagar Oxford University Press Scharfe Hartmut 2002 Education in Ancient India Brill Academic Publishers ISBN 978 90 04 12556 8 Schmidt Karl J 1995 An Atlas and Survey of South Asian History M E Sharpe ISBN 978 0 76563 757 4 Sen Sailendra Nath 1999 Ancient Indian History and Civilization New Age International ISBN 978 8 12241 198 0 Sen Tansen 2009 The Military Campaigns of Rajendra Chola and the Chola Srivija China Triangle in Kulke Hermann Kesavapany K Sakhuja Vijay eds Nagapattinam to Suvarnadwipa Reflections on the Chola Naval Expeditions to Southeast Asia Institute of Southeast Asian Studies ISBN 978 9 81230 937 2 Singh Upinder 2008 A History of Ancient and Early Medieval India From the Stone Age to the 12th Century Pearson Education India ISBN 978 8 13171 120 0 South Indian Inscriptions Archaeological Survey of India What Is India Publishers P Ltd retrieved 30 May 2008 Spuler Bertold 1975 Handbook of Oriental Studies Part 2 BRILL ISBN 978 9 00404 190 5 Stein Burton 1980 Peasant state and society in medieval South India Oxford University Press Stein Burton 1998 A history of India Blackwell Publishers ISBN 978 0 631 20546 3 Subbarayalu Y 2009 A Note on the Navy of the Chola State in Kulke Hermann Kesavapany K Sakhuja Vijay eds Nagapattinam to Suvarnadwipa Reflections on the Chola Naval Expeditions to Southeast Asia Institute of Southeast Asian Studies ISBN 978 9 81230 937 2 Thapar Romila 1995 Recent Perspectives of Early Indian History South Asia Books ISBN 978 81 7154 556 8 Tripathi Rama Sankar 1967 History of Ancient India Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 0018 2 Talbot Austin Cynthia 2001 Pre colonial India in Practice Society Region and Identity in Medieval Andhra Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19803 123 9 Vasudevan Geeta 2003 Royal Temple of Rajaraja An Instrument of Imperial Cola Power Abhinav Publications ISBN 978 81 7017 383 0 Wolpert Stanley A 1999 India University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 22172 7Further reading editNilakanta Sastri K A 1955 A History of South India OUP New Delhi Reprinted 2002 Durga Prasad History of the Andhras up to 1565 A D P G PUBLISHERS Nilakanta Sastri K A 1935 The Cōlas University of Madras Madras Reprinted 1984 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chola Empire amp oldid 1192149522, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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