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Second Gonanda dynasty

The Second Gonanda dynasty (or Restored Gonanda dynasty), was a Kashmiri Hindu dynasty. According to Kalhana, this dynasty ruled Kashmir just before the Karkotas.[2][3]

Gonanda dynasty of Kashmir
(Gonanda dynasty II)
c. 25 CE–c. 625 CE
Common languagesSanskrit
Religion
Hinduism
GovernmentMonarchy
Historical eraPre Classical India
• Established
c. 25 CE
• Disestablished
c. 625 CE

Sources edit

Literature edit

No contemporary literature exists.

The sole mentions are retrieved from the third book of Rajatarangini, an 11th-century work by Kalhana, which aimed to sketch an outline of Kashmir's history since ancient times, and did discuss the Karkota dynasty in depth.[4][5][a] Kalhana claimed to have depended on a variety of sources — earlier historical works, dynastic genealogies, inscriptions, coins and Puranas.[6]

Coinage edit

Several coins bearing names roughly consistent with the names of the Gonanda rulers — Śrī Meghamah (prob. king Meghavahana), Śrī Pravarasenah (King Pravarasena), Śrī Tuysīna (prob. King Tunjina), and Śrī Toramaņa (Toramana) — have been recently discovered.[7] These coins are quite rare, made of copper, silver, or debased gold, and generally follow Kushan and Kidarite designs.[7]

They show on the obverse a standing Shiva figures, variously accompanied by animals or Gana attendants, with the name of the king in the Brahmi script.[7] On the reverse, the Goddess Ardoxsho or Sri Lakshmi appears seated, with a Kidara monogram to left, and Jaya in Brahmi to right.[7]

Accuracy edit

The third book of the Rajatarangini, the last Gonanda dynasty of Kashmir ruled for about 590 years, until the establishment of the Karkota dynasty.[9] However the chronology is widely deemed to be faulty and on cross-vetting with coins and inscriptions from outside Kashmir, the names of some of the Gonanda rulers are found to roughly correspond with the Alchon Huns, who ruled hundreds of years later than the time-frame assigned by Kalhana.[10][11] In Kalhana's narrative, names of some rulers are reshuffled and/or repeated multiple times across the first and third book, some stories are retrofitted and recycled, some reigns are impossibly long, and some rulers are telescoped into the past.[12]

 
Coinage of Meghavahana.
Obverse: Shiva Pashupati ("Lord of the Beasts"), making a mudra gesture with right hand and holding filleted trident; behind, a lioness or tiger. Trace of legend Meghana... in Brahmi.
Reverse: Goddess seated facing on lotus, holding lotus in both hand, Kidara monogram to left, Jaya in Brahmi to right.

Establishment edit

This dynasty was of Kashmiri origin, and around late 400 ce this dynasty was influenced by Kiderites and Alkhon Huns or Huna people,the Huna princes did marriages with members of this dynasty, that's how it was established.according to some theories their founder Meghavahana is a descendent of Great Kushan king Kanishka from maternal line and Huna king Toramana from Paternal line.

Rule edit

This sections gives a literal description of the content of the third book in Rajatarngini. Efforts by historians to probe into individual kings are mentioned.

Meghavahana edit

Meghavahana was the son of Yudhisthira I's great-grandson, who had been granted asylum by Gopaditya, the king of Gandhara. Kalhana assigns a regnal span of 34 years. Meghavahana had been selected the husband of a Vaishnavite princess at a Swayamvara in another kingdom. The ministers of Kashmir brought him to Kashmir after San dhimati proved to be an unwilling king. Meghavahana banned animal slaughter and compensated those who earned their living through hunting. He patrnozed Brahmins, and set up a monastery. His queens built Buddhist viharas and monasteries. He subdued kings in regions as far as Sinhala Kingdom, forcing them to abandon animal slaughter.

Shreshtasena (Pravarasena I / Tungjina II) edit

Son of Meghavahana. Kalhana assigns a regnal span of 30 years.

Hiranya edit

Son of Shreshtasena, assisted by his brother and co-regent Toramana. The king imprisoned Toramana, when the latter stuck royal coins in his own name. Toramana's son Pravarasena, who had been brought up in secrecy by his mother Anjana, freed him. Hiranya died childless. Several coins of a king named Toramana have been found in the Kashmir region. This king is identified by some with Huna ruler Toramana, although his successor Mihirakula is placed much earlier by Kalhana.[13] Kalhana assigns a regnal span of about 30 years.

Toramana edit

Son of Pravarasena I, Vice-king of Hiranya.[7] Kalhana assigns a regnal span of years.

Matrigupta edit

According to Kalhana, the emperor Vikramditya (alias Harsha) of Ujjayini defeated the Shakas, and made his friend and poet Matrigupta the ruler of Kashmir. After Vikramaditya's death, Matrigupta abdicated the throne in favour of Pravarasena. According to D. C. Sircar, Kalhana has confused the legendary Vikramaditya of Ujjain with the Vardhana Emperor Harsha (c. 606-47 CE).[14] The latter is identified with Shiladitya mentioned in Xuanzang's account. However, according to M. A. Stein, Kalhana's Vikramaditya is another Shiladitya mentioned in Xuanzang's account: a king of Malwa around 580 CE.[15] Kalhana assigns a regnal span of 4 years and 9 months.

Pravarasena II edit

Historical evidence suggests that a king named Pravarasena ruled Kashmir in the 6th century CE.[13] According to Kalhana, Pravarasena subdued many other kings, in lands as far as Saurashtra. He restored the rule of Vikramaditya's son Pratapshila (alias Shiladitya), who had been expelled from Ujjain by his enemies. Pratapshila agreed to be a vassal of Pravarasena after initial resistance. He founded a city called Pravarapura, which is identified by later historians as the modern city of Srinagar on the basis topographical details.[16] Kalhana assigns a regnal span of 60 years.

Yudhisthira II edit

Son of Pravarasena II. Kalhana assigns a regnal span of 39 years and 8 months.

Narendraditya I edit

Son of Yudhishthira II and Padmavati. Kalhana assigns a regnal span of 13 years.

Ranaditya I (Tungina III) edit

Younger brother of Narendraditya. His queen Ranarambha was an incarnation of Bhramaravasini. The Chola king Ratisena had found her among the waves, during an ocean worship ritual. Kalhana assigns a regnal span of 300 years.

Vikramaditya edit

Son of Ranaditya. Kalhana assigns a regnal span of 42 years.

Baladitya edit

Younger brother of Vikramaditya. He subdued several enemies. Baladitya (apparently) had no male heir but a daughter Anaṅgalekhā and did not wish his territory to be annexed by in-laws.[17][9] To avert such a possibility he married her to Durlabhavardhana, a low-caste employee having no royal lineage.[9] However, after Baladitya's death, Durlabhavardhana ascended to the throne with help from a minister, and claimed descent from the mythical Naga king Karkotaka, establishing the Karkota Dynasty.[18][19][20][21][9]

This view is accepted by Witzel.[22] Kalhana assigns a regnal span of 36 years and 8 months.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ At least three other Rajataranginis were composed in medieval Kashmir. They are since-lost.[citation needed]

References edit

  1. ^ Schwartzberg, Joseph E. (1978). A Historical atlas of South Asia. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 146, map XIV.2 (f). ISBN 0226742210.
  2. ^ S.R. Bakshi (1997), Kashmir: History and People,p.63
  3. ^ Nagendra Kr Singh (2000), Buddhism in Kashmir, p.115
  4. ^ Siudmak, John (1 January 2013). 1. Historical and Cultural Background of Kashmir Up to 1003 AD. Brill. pp. 11, 16–19, 251, 262. ISBN 978-90-04-24832-8.
  5. ^ Zutshi, Chitralekha (2019). "Kashmir as Sacred Space". Kashmir. Delhi: Oxford University Press. Especially Blessed Landscape/Peripheral Kingdom.
  6. ^ Witzel, Michael (1990). "On Indian Historical Writing: The role of the Vamsavalis". 南アジア研究. Japanese Association for South Asian Studies. 2: 10–11, 30. doi:10.11384/jjasas1989.1990.1.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h Cribb, Joe (2016). "Early Medieval Kashmir Coinage – A New Hoard and An Anomaly". Numismatic Digest. 40.
  8. ^ Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal (PDF). p. 6.
  9. ^ a b c d Stein, Marc Aurel (1900). Kalhana's Rajatarangini: a chronicle of the kings of Kasmir. Westminster: Archibald Constable. pp. 86–97, 136, 142 (Introduction), 120–185 (The Rajatarangini of Kalahana: Fourth Book).
  10. ^ Siudmak, John (5 April 2013). The Hindu-Buddhist Sculpture of Ancient Kashmir and its Influences. ISBN 978-9004248328.
  11. ^ Cribb, Joe (2016). "Early Medieval Kashmir Coinage – A New Hoard and An Anomaly". Numismatic Digest. Numismatic Society of Bombay. 40: 98.
  12. ^ Dezső, Csaba (2020). "X.1.3: The Kashmir Secular Tradition". In Balogh, Daniel (ed.). Hunnic Peoples in Central and South Asia: Sources for their Origin and History. Groningen: Barkhuis. pp. 296–308. ISBN 9789493194014.
  13. ^ a b Stein 1979, pp. 65.
  14. ^ D. C. Sircar (1969). . Munshiram Manoharlal. p. 111. ISBN 978-8121503488. Archived from the original on 17 June 2016.
  15. ^ Stein 1979, pp. 66.
  16. ^ Stein 1989, pp. 439–441.
  17. ^ Rangachari, Devika (1 April 2002). "Kalhana's Rājataranginī: A Gender Perspective1". The Medieval History Journal. 5 (1): 46, 48. doi:10.1177/097194580200500103. ISSN 0971-9458. S2CID 144377502.
  18. ^ SEN, TANSEN (2004). "Kaśmīr, Tang China, and Muktāpīḍa Lalitā-Ditya's Ascendancy over the Southern Hindukush Region". Journal of Asian History. 38 (2): 141–162. ISSN 0021-910X. JSTOR 41933381.
  19. ^ Zutshi, Chitralekha (2019). "Kashmir as Sacred Space". Kashmir. Delhi: Oxford University Press. Aryavarta.
  20. ^ Pal, Sayantani (2016), "Karkota dynasty of Kashmir", The Encyclopedia of Empire, American Cancer Society, pp. 1–2, doi:10.1002/9781118455074.wbeoe049, ISBN 978-1-118-45507-4, retrieved 18 March 2021
  21. ^ Witzel, Michael (September 1991). "THE BRAHMINS OF KASHMIR" (PDF). pp. 24–28.
  22. ^ Witzel, Michael (2016). "Kashmiri Brahmins under the Karkota, Utpala and Lohara Dynasties, 625-1101 CE". In Franco, Eli; Ratié, Isabelle (eds.). Around Abhinavagupta: Aspects of the Intellectual History of Kashmir from the Ninth to the Eleventh Century. Leipziger Studien zu Kultur und Geschichte Süd- und Zentralasiens. Münster, Germany. pp. 609–643. ISBN 978-3-643-90697-7.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)

Works cited edit

  • Stein, Marc Aurel (1979) [1900]. "Chronological and Dynastic Tables of Kalhana's Record of Kasmir Kings". Kalhana's Rajatarangini: A Chronicle of the Kings of Kasmir. Vol. 1. Motilal Banarsidass.
  • Stein, Marc Aurel (1989). Kalhana's Rajatarangini: a chronicle of the kings of Kasmir. Motilal Banarsidass. ISBN 978-81-208-0370-1.

second, gonanda, dynasty, former, dynasties, gonanda, dynasty, restored, gonanda, dynasty, kashmiri, hindu, dynasty, according, kalhana, this, dynasty, ruled, kashmir, just, before, karkotas, gonanda, dynasty, kashmir, gonanda, dynasty, cesouth, asia600, cemor. For former dynasties see Gonanda dynasty The Second Gonanda dynasty or Restored Gonanda dynasty was a Kashmiri Hindu dynasty According to Kalhana this dynasty ruled Kashmir just before the Karkotas 2 3 Gonanda dynasty of Kashmir Gonanda dynasty II c 25 CE c 625 CESouth Asia600 CEMORISPANDYASLICCHAVISCHOLASZHANGZHUNGCHERASSAMATATASGAUDAKAMARUPAVISHNU KUNDINASPALLAVASALUPASNEZAKSALCHONSKALINGASPANDUVAMSHISSHASHANKASSHAILODBHAVASGONANDASMAUKHARISTAKKAWESTERNTURKSTOCHARIANSMAITRAKASRAISPRATIHARASLATER GUPTASPUSHYA BHUTISCHALUKYASEARLYKALA CHURISSASANIANEMPIRE class notpageimage Heartland of the Gonanda Dynasty around Srinagara with neighbouring polities circa 700 CE 1 Common languagesSanskritReligionHinduismGovernmentMonarchyHistorical eraPre Classical India Establishedc 25 CE Disestablishedc 625 CEPreceded by Succeeded byKushan EmpireKidaritesAlchon Huns Karkota Dynasty Contents 1 Sources 1 1 Literature 1 2 Coinage 2 Accuracy 3 Establishment 4 Rule 4 1 Meghavahana 4 2 Shreshtasena Pravarasena I Tungjina II 4 3 Hiranya 4 4 Toramana 4 5 Matrigupta 4 6 Pravarasena II 4 7 Yudhisthira II 4 8 Narendraditya I 4 9 Ranaditya I Tungina III 4 10 Vikramaditya 4 11 Baladitya 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 7 1 Works citedSources editLiterature edit No contemporary literature exists The sole mentions are retrieved from the third book of Rajatarangini an 11th century work by Kalhana which aimed to sketch an outline of Kashmir s history since ancient times and did discuss the Karkota dynasty in depth 4 5 a Kalhana claimed to have depended on a variety of sources earlier historical works dynastic genealogies inscriptions coins and Puranas 6 Coinage editSeveral coins bearing names roughly consistent with the names of the Gonanda rulers Sri Meghamah prob king Meghavahana Sri Pravarasenah King Pravarasena Sri Tuysina prob King Tunjina and Sri Toramana Toramana have been recently discovered 7 These coins are quite rare made of copper silver or debased gold and generally follow Kushan and Kidarite designs 7 nbsp Coinage of Pravarasena supposed founder of Srinagar Obverse Standing Shiva with two figures seated below Name Pravarasena Reverse goddess seated on a lion Legend Kidara Circa 6th early 7th century CE 7 nbsp Coin in the name of Sri Tujina Circa 7th century CE Kashmir 7 Obverse King in Kushan style legend to left Sri Tu jina Reverse goddess on a lotus legend to left Jaya to right Kidara 8 nbsp Coin in the name of Sri Toramana the Kashmir ruler named Toramana 7 They show on the obverse a standing Shiva figures variously accompanied by animals or Gana attendants with the name of the king in the Brahmi script 7 On the reverse the Goddess Ardoxsho or Sri Lakshmi appears seated with a Kidara monogram to left and Jaya in Brahmi to right 7 Accuracy editThe third book of the Rajatarangini the last Gonanda dynasty of Kashmir ruled for about 590 years until the establishment of the Karkota dynasty 9 However the chronology is widely deemed to be faulty and on cross vetting with coins and inscriptions from outside Kashmir the names of some of the Gonanda rulers are found to roughly correspond with the Alchon Huns who ruled hundreds of years later than the time frame assigned by Kalhana 10 11 In Kalhana s narrative names of some rulers are reshuffled and or repeated multiple times across the first and third book some stories are retrofitted and recycled some reigns are impossibly long and some rulers are telescoped into the past 12 nbsp Coinage of Meghavahana Obverse Shiva Pashupati Lord of the Beasts making a mudra gesture with right hand and holding filleted trident behind a lioness or tiger Trace of legend Meghana in Brahmi Reverse Goddess seated facing on lotus holding lotus in both hand Kidara monogram to left Jaya in Brahmi to right Establishment editThis dynasty was of Kashmiri origin and around late 400 ce this dynasty was influenced by Kiderites and Alkhon Huns or Huna people the Huna princes did marriages with members of this dynasty that s how it was established according to some theories their founder Meghavahana is a descendent of Great Kushan king Kanishka from maternal line and Huna king Toramana from Paternal line Rule editThis sections gives a literal description of the content of the third book in Rajatarngini Efforts by historians to probe into individual kings are mentioned Meghavahana edit Meghavahana was the son of Yudhisthira I s great grandson who had been granted asylum by Gopaditya the king of Gandhara Kalhana assigns a regnal span of 34 years Meghavahana had been selected the husband of a Vaishnavite princess at a Swayamvara in another kingdom The ministers of Kashmir brought him to Kashmir after San dhimati proved to be an unwilling king Meghavahana banned animal slaughter and compensated those who earned their living through hunting He patrnozed Brahmins and set up a monastery His queens built Buddhist viharas and monasteries He subdued kings in regions as far as Sinhala Kingdom forcing them to abandon animal slaughter Shreshtasena Pravarasena I Tungjina II edit Son of Meghavahana Kalhana assigns a regnal span of 30 years Hiranya edit Son of Shreshtasena assisted by his brother and co regent Toramana The king imprisoned Toramana when the latter stuck royal coins in his own name Toramana s son Pravarasena who had been brought up in secrecy by his mother Anjana freed him Hiranya died childless Several coins of a king named Toramana have been found in the Kashmir region This king is identified by some with Huna ruler Toramana although his successor Mihirakula is placed much earlier by Kalhana 13 Kalhana assigns a regnal span of about 30 years Toramana edit Son of Pravarasena I Vice king of Hiranya 7 Kalhana assigns a regnal span of years Matrigupta edit According to Kalhana the emperor Vikramditya alias Harsha of Ujjayini defeated the Shakas and made his friend and poet Matrigupta the ruler of Kashmir After Vikramaditya s death Matrigupta abdicated the throne in favour of Pravarasena According to D C Sircar Kalhana has confused the legendary Vikramaditya of Ujjain with the Vardhana Emperor Harsha c 606 47 CE 14 The latter is identified with Shiladitya mentioned in Xuanzang s account However according to M A Stein Kalhana s Vikramaditya is another Shiladitya mentioned in Xuanzang s account a king of Malwa around 580 CE 15 Kalhana assigns a regnal span of 4 years and 9 months Pravarasena II edit Historical evidence suggests that a king named Pravarasena ruled Kashmir in the 6th century CE 13 According to Kalhana Pravarasena subdued many other kings in lands as far as Saurashtra He restored the rule of Vikramaditya s son Pratapshila alias Shiladitya who had been expelled from Ujjain by his enemies Pratapshila agreed to be a vassal of Pravarasena after initial resistance He founded a city called Pravarapura which is identified by later historians as the modern city of Srinagar on the basis topographical details 16 Kalhana assigns a regnal span of 60 years Yudhisthira II edit Son of Pravarasena II Kalhana assigns a regnal span of 39 years and 8 months Narendraditya I edit Son of Yudhishthira II and Padmavati Kalhana assigns a regnal span of 13 years Ranaditya I Tungina III edit Younger brother of Narendraditya His queen Ranarambha was an incarnation of Bhramaravasini The Chola king Ratisena had found her among the waves during an ocean worship ritual Kalhana assigns a regnal span of 300 years Vikramaditya edit Son of Ranaditya Kalhana assigns a regnal span of 42 years Baladitya edit Younger brother of Vikramaditya He subdued several enemies Baladitya apparently had no male heir but a daughter Anaṅgalekha and did not wish his territory to be annexed by in laws 17 9 To avert such a possibility he married her to Durlabhavardhana a low caste employee having no royal lineage 9 However after Baladitya s death Durlabhavardhana ascended to the throne with help from a minister and claimed descent from the mythical Naga king Karkotaka establishing the Karkota Dynasty 18 19 20 21 9 This view is accepted by Witzel 22 Kalhana assigns a regnal span of 36 years and 8 months See also editKarkoṭa dynastyNotes edit At least three other Rajataranginis were composed in medieval Kashmir They are since lost citation needed References edit Schwartzberg Joseph E 1978 A Historical atlas of South Asia Chicago University of Chicago Press p 146 map XIV 2 f ISBN 0226742210 S R Bakshi 1997 Kashmir History and People p 63 Nagendra Kr Singh 2000 Buddhism in Kashmir p 115 Siudmak John 1 January 2013 1 Historical and Cultural Background of Kashmir Up to 1003 AD Brill pp 11 16 19 251 262 ISBN 978 90 04 24832 8 Zutshi Chitralekha 2019 Kashmir as Sacred Space Kashmir Delhi Oxford University Press Especially Blessed Landscape Peripheral Kingdom Witzel Michael 1990 On Indian Historical Writing The role of the Vamsavalis 南アジア研究 Japanese Association for South Asian Studies 2 10 11 30 doi 10 11384 jjasas1989 1990 1 a b c d e f g h Cribb Joe 2016 Early Medieval Kashmir Coinage A New Hoard and An Anomaly Numismatic Digest 40 Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal PDF p 6 a b c d Stein Marc Aurel 1900 Kalhana s Rajatarangini a chronicle of the kings of Kasmir Westminster Archibald Constable pp 86 97 136 142 Introduction 120 185 The Rajatarangini of Kalahana Fourth Book Siudmak John 5 April 2013 The Hindu Buddhist Sculpture of Ancient Kashmir and its Influences ISBN 978 9004248328 Cribb Joe 2016 Early Medieval Kashmir Coinage A New Hoard and An Anomaly Numismatic Digest Numismatic Society of Bombay 40 98 Dezso Csaba 2020 X 1 3 The Kashmir Secular Tradition In Balogh Daniel ed Hunnic Peoples in Central and South Asia Sources for their Origin and History Groningen Barkhuis pp 296 308 ISBN 9789493194014 a b Stein 1979 pp 65 D C Sircar 1969 Ancient Malwa And The Vikramaditya Tradition Munshiram Manoharlal p 111 ISBN 978 8121503488 Archived from the original on 17 June 2016 Stein 1979 pp 66 Stein 1989 pp 439 441 Rangachari Devika 1 April 2002 Kalhana s Rajatarangini A Gender Perspective1 The Medieval History Journal 5 1 46 48 doi 10 1177 097194580200500103 ISSN 0971 9458 S2CID 144377502 SEN TANSEN 2004 Kasmir Tang China and Muktapiḍa Lalita Ditya s Ascendancy over the Southern Hindukush Region Journal of Asian History 38 2 141 162 ISSN 0021 910X JSTOR 41933381 Zutshi Chitralekha 2019 Kashmir as Sacred Space Kashmir Delhi Oxford University Press Aryavarta Pal Sayantani 2016 Karkota dynasty of Kashmir The Encyclopedia of Empire American Cancer Society pp 1 2 doi 10 1002 9781118455074 wbeoe049 ISBN 978 1 118 45507 4 retrieved 18 March 2021 Witzel Michael September 1991 THE BRAHMINS OF KASHMIR PDF pp 24 28 Witzel Michael 2016 Kashmiri Brahmins under the Karkota Utpala and Lohara Dynasties 625 1101 CE In Franco Eli Ratie Isabelle eds Around Abhinavagupta Aspects of the Intellectual History of Kashmir from the Ninth to the Eleventh Century Leipziger Studien zu Kultur und Geschichte Sud und Zentralasiens Munster Germany pp 609 643 ISBN 978 3 643 90697 7 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Works cited edit Stein Marc Aurel 1979 1900 Chronological and Dynastic Tables of Kalhana s Record of Kasmir Kings Kalhana s Rajatarangini A Chronicle of the Kings of Kasmir Vol 1 Motilal Banarsidass Stein Marc Aurel 1989 Kalhana s Rajatarangini a chronicle of the kings of Kasmir Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 0370 1 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Second Gonanda dynasty amp oldid 1186253349, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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