fbpx
Wikipedia

Rai dynasty

The Rai dynasty (c. 489–632 CE) was a polity of ancient Sindh.[2]

Rai dynasty
489–632
Map of Sindh (Rais), c. 550–600 CE.[1]
GovernmentMonarchy
History 
• Established
489
• Disestablished
632
Today part ofSindh, Pakistan

Scholarship

Pre-Islamic Sindh has been the subject of voluminous scholarship concerning the eve of Arab conquests; under the British Raj, as bureaucrats and amateur historians mined the Chachnama to justify their invasion of Khairpur citing the tyranny of the Muslim rulers, the Rai dynasty received some attention.[3][a] In modern scholarship, the dynasty has attracted sparse attention from a few numismatists.[5]

Background

Coinage attests to the indirect influence of Sasanians over Sindh since the reign of Shapur II.[6][b] In the last Sassanian mints discovered from the region—of Peroz I (r. 459–484)—a new Brahmi legend "Ranaditya Satya" appears on the reverse, which was probably the name of the local ruler.[6][c] Sometime soon, Sindh appears to have fallen off the orbit of Sassanians who were reeling under Hephthalite invasions.[6] The Rai dynasty's origin probably laid in this power vacuum.[5]

Sources

Sindh, as a region, had no extant histories until late-medieval era and our knowledge of Rai dynasty remains rudimentary.[4]

No definitive epigraphic or archaeological evidence, pertaining to the dynasty, can be located.[4][d] The lone literary source remains Chachnama.[2][3] Though the historical accuracy of Chachnama remains disputed among scholars,[e] its narrative has made to multiple Persian and Oriental histories of the region including Tarikh i Sind (17th c.), Tuhfatul karaam (18th c.), and British Gazettes.[4]

Rulers

The Rais reigned for a period of 144 years c. 489 – 632 A.D. They allegedly had familial ties with other rulers of South Asia including Kashmir, Kabul, Rajasthan, Gujarat etc.[12] However, their origins remain unknown.[f]

Rai Diwaji, Rai Sahiras I, and Rai Sahasi I

Nothing is known about the first three kings; their names are mentioned in a single line in the Chachnama, where Wazir Buddhiman describes the territorial expanses and administrative structure of Rais under Rai Sahiras II to Chach.[2][13]

Rai Sahiras II

The Chachnama in its opening verses note Rai Sahiras II to be famed for his justice and generosity; his coffers overflowed with wealth.[12] The kingdom was divided into four units, each under a governor or a vassal.[14] The southern unit extended from the coasts of Arabian Sea to Lohana and Samona—including Nerun and Debal port—and had its capital at Brahmanabad.[14] The central unit spanned across the areas around Jankan and Rujaban to the Makran frontier; it had Sewistan as its capital.[14] The western unit extended over a vast area—Batia, Chachpur and Dehrpur—of western Sindh; Iskalanda was the capital.[14] The northern unit was centered around Multan, adjoining Kashmir.[14]

Sahiras II met his death while attempting to ward off an invasion by the Sassanian King of Nimroz into Kirman. He was portrayed as a valiant king who battled till death despite much of his forces deserting the battle; Makran and other unknown territories were lost in the conflict.[2][14][13]

Rai Sahasi II

Under his regime, the kingdom exhibited socioeconomic prosperity; Sahasi II is praised as a benevolent ruler who chose to abide by his counsel.[13] He was married to Sohman Devi.[12]

During his regime, Chach, a poor learned Brahmin was inducted under minister/chamberlain Ram in the epistolary office. He impressed Sahasi II with his expertise and rose through the ranks quickly, eventually becoming his personal secretary after Ram's death.[12][13] As Chach gained access to the interiors of palace, Devi became enamored of him and proposed for marriage but met with Chach's rejection; Chachnama explains that he did not wish to incur the King's wrath and swerve further away from the scriptural ideals of a Brahminic life.[12][13] Yet, Chach accepted her request for providing company and their relationship blossomed.[12] Sahasi II, ignorant of Chach's ways, continued to let him gain unprecedented control in the affairs of the state until his natural death.[12]

Usurpation

On Sahasi II's death, Devi proposed that Chach usurp the throne.[12] He conceded to Devi's plan, albeit unwillingly, and the news of Sahasi II's death was withheld from public; in the meanwhile, the familial claimants to the throne were incited against each other in a fatal internecine warfare.[12][g] Then Devi proclaimed that Sahasi II, though recovering, was unable to hold court and had appointed Chach as the caretaker ruler for his lifetime.[12][13] The elites were lured into supporting the coverup and Chach ruled as the de facto King for about six months.[13]

However, the news of the King's death somehow made way to Sahasi II's brother—Rai Mahrit, then ruler of Chittor—who claimed the throne and mounted a military offensive against Chach.[12][13] Chachnama notes Chach to have been ambiguous about the morality of taking on a legitimate successor before being coaxed by Devi, who had shamed his masculinity.[2][12] Having secured a freak victory,[h] he commissioned triumphal arches and held public feasts winning over the masses; soon, Devi had him declared as the heir to the throne, being a man of unsurmountable intellect and bravery, and would marry him with the approval of the court.[2][12][13]

Thus the Brahman dynasty was established, in what is portrayed in Chachnama, as the intrigues of a femme fatale working in conjunction with a willing-yet-ethical apprentice.[2][12] Chach would later have to subdue protracted resistance from Bachhera, a relative of Sahasi II and the governor (or vassal) of Multan province.[13]

External links

Preceded by Monarchy
489–632
Succeeded by

Notes

  1. ^ Alexander Cunningham proposed an alternate chronology (? – >641 A.D.) — primarily on the basis of local coin-finds and equating Sindhu with the Sin tu kingdom, as described in the Great Tang Records on the Western Regions — identifying the first two Rais as Toramana and Mihirakula, and the latter three as Tegin Shah, Vasudeva, and an anonymous successor.[4]
  2. ^ Abundant Sasanian mints but with significant variations —in typology, style, and especially, denomination— have been excavated from Sind.[6] Literary sources do not record Sasanian activity and details thereof in these frontier regions.
  3. ^ Two series of Peroz's coin (first crown and third crown) are observed in Sindh. Only in the second, does this legend appear replacing the two attendants of the fire temple![6]
  4. ^ Alexander M. Fishman and Ian Todd speculate a series of gold dinars and silver dammas found in the region — similar to the Ranaditya Satya mints, in deriving from Sassanian coinage but bearing different legends and different crown patterns — to have been minted by the Rais.[5] The legends might be read as Sri Shahi Rasra(…), Sri Jayataka, Sri Harsharuka, and Sri Bharharsha some of which match, albeit roughly, with speculative reconstructions obtainable from the Chachnama — Diwaj > Diwaditya > Devaditya alias Ranaditya (?), Sahiras I > Shahi Rasra(…) (?), Sahsi I > ?, Sahiras II > Sri Harsha (?), and Sahsi II > ?.[5][7] Pankaj Tandon does not find the attribution convincing.[8]
  5. ^ Chachnama purports to be a Persian translation by `Ali Kufi (13th-century) of an undated, original Arabic text which is not extant anymore. Manan Ahmed rejects Kufi's assertion and hypothesizes it to be an original work that drew on then-extant histories to imagine an alternative romantic-nationalist past of Sindh. In contrast, Irfan Habib and Jaakko Hämeen-Anttila emphasizes on unique features of the text that would have been impossible without a literal translation and rejects Asif's doubts on the veracity of the events described in Chachnama,[9][10] as does André Wink criticizing Asif's intensely source-critical approach.[11]
  6. ^ Chintaman Vinayak Vaidya held the Rais to be descendants of Mauryas and hence, Shudra, by caste.[4] This descent was proposed on the basis of Rai Mahrit, then ruler of Chittor claiming to be Sahasi II's brother. Rulers of pre-Sisodia Rajasthan usually claimed a descent from Mauryas and this identification went perfectly with Xuanzang's noting the King of Sin-tu to be a Sudra.
  7. ^ The claimants were asked to meet the frail King, one by one. In reality, Devi had each of them imprisoned and claimed that it was the King who had them imprisoned out of a quarrel with some other claimant. Thus, it was necessary to kill him to gain King's trusts, and freedom.
  8. ^ Chach challenged Mahrit to a one-on-one combat, claiming his Brahmin origins had precluded learning the skills of cavalry. However, in the combat, Chach mounted a horse and beheaded Mahrit. Mahrit's forces went into a disarray receiving the news of his death.

References

  1. ^ Schwartzberg, Joseph E. (1978). A Historical atlas of South Asia. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. pp. 26, 145 map XIV.1 (i). ISBN 0226742210.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Wink, Andre (1996). Al Hind: The Making of the Indo-Islamic World. BRILL. pp. 133, 152–153. ISBN 90-04-09249-8.
  3. ^ a b Asif 2016.
  4. ^ a b c d e Mirchandani, B. D. (1985). Glimpses of Ancient Sind: A Collection of Historical Papers. Sindh: Saraswati M. Gulrajani. pp. 25, 53–56.
  5. ^ a b c d Fishman, A. M.; Todd, I. J.; Pieper, W. (2021). "Recently Discovered Gold, Silver and Copper Coins of pre-Islamic Sindh and the Yashaditya Series". Numismatische Zeitschrift. 127: 389–392.
  6. ^ a b c d e Schindel, Nikolaus; Alram, Michael; Daryaee, Touraj; Pendleton, Elizabeth (2016). The Parthian and Early Sasanian Empires: adaptation and expansion. Oxbow Books. pp. 126–130. ISBN 9781785702105.
  7. ^ Habib, Irfan (2012). "Linguistic Materials from Eighth-century Sind: An Exploration of the Chachnama". In Jafri, S.Z.H (ed.). Recording the Progress of Indian History: Symposia Papers of the Indian History Congress, 1992–2010. Delhi: Primus Books. pp. 80–81, 86.
  8. ^ Tandon, Pankaj (2022). "Research on the Guptas and (Iranian) Huns, 2014–2020" (PDF). In Alram, Michael; Bodzek, Jaroslaw; Bursche, Aleksander (eds.). The Survey of Numismatic Research 2014–2020. Vol. II. International Numismatic Council.
  9. ^ Habib, Irfan (June 2017). "Book Review: Manan Ahmad Asif, A Book of Conquest: The Chachnåma and Muslim Origins in South Asia". Studies in People's History. 4 (1): 105–109. doi:10.1177/2348448917694235. ISSN 2348-4489. S2CID 165517641.
  10. ^ Hämeen-Anttila, Jaakko (2018-10-02). "A Book of Conquest: The Chachnama and Muslim Origins in South Asia". Islam and Christian–Muslim Relations. 29 (4): 536–538. doi:10.1080/09596410.2018.1522158. hdl:20.500.11820/0c6e731b-6baf-4caa-a86b-d6b626bc2f1c. ISSN 0959-6410. S2CID 150269490.
  11. ^ Andre Wink. Review of Asif, Manan Ahmed, A Book of Conquest: The Chachnama and Muslim Origins in South Asia. H-Asia, H-Net Reviews. May, 2017.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Asif, Manan Ahmed (2016). A Book of Conquest: The Chachnama and Muslim Origins in South Asia. Harvard University Press. pp. 65, 81–82, 131–134. ISBN 9780674660113.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Baloch, N. A., ed. (1983). Fathnamah I-Sind: Being the Original Record of the Arab Conquest of The Sind. Islamabad, Pakistan: Institute of Islamic History, Culture and Civilization: Islamic University.
  14. ^ a b c d e f Siddiqi, Iqtidar Husain (2013). Indo-Persian Historiography Up to the Thirteenth Century. Primus Books. p. 31.

dynasty, polity, ancient, sindh, 632south, asia600, cemorispandyaslicchavischolaszhangzhungcherassamatatasgaudakamarupavishnu, kundinaspallavasalupasnezaksalchonskalingaspanduvamshisshashankasshailodbhavasgonandasmaukharistakkawesternturkstochariansmaitrakaspr. The Rai dynasty c 489 632 CE was a polity of ancient Sindh 2 Rai dynasty489 632South Asia600 CEMORISPANDYASLICCHAVISCHOLASZHANGZHUNGCHERASSAMATATASGAUDAKAMARUPAVISHNU KUNDINASPALLAVASALUPASNEZAKSALCHONSKALINGASPANDUVAMSHISSHASHANKASSHAILODBHAVASGONANDASMAUKHARISTAKKAWESTERNTURKSTOCHARIANSMAITRAKASPRATIHARASLATER GUPTASPUSHYA BHUTISCHALUKYASEARLYKALA CHURISSASANIANEMPIRE Map of Sindh Rais c 550 600 CE 1 GovernmentMonarchyHistory Established489 Disestablished632Preceded by Succeeded byHind Sasanian province Brahmin dynasty of SindhToday part ofSindh Pakistan Contents 1 Scholarship 2 Background 2 1 Sources 3 Rulers 3 1 Rai Diwaji Rai Sahiras I and Rai Sahasi I 3 2 Rai Sahiras II 3 3 Rai Sahasi II 4 Usurpation 5 External links 6 Notes 7 ReferencesScholarship EditPre Islamic Sindh has been the subject of voluminous scholarship concerning the eve of Arab conquests under the British Raj as bureaucrats and amateur historians mined the Chachnama to justify their invasion of Khairpur citing the tyranny of the Muslim rulers the Rai dynasty received some attention 3 a In modern scholarship the dynasty has attracted sparse attention from a few numismatists 5 Background EditSee also Sasanian coinage of Sindh Coinage attests to the indirect influence of Sasanians over Sindh since the reign of Shapur II 6 b In the last Sassanian mints discovered from the region of Peroz I r 459 484 a new Brahmi legend Ranaditya Satya appears on the reverse which was probably the name of the local ruler 6 c Sometime soon Sindh appears to have fallen off the orbit of Sassanians who were reeling under Hephthalite invasions 6 The Rai dynasty s origin probably laid in this power vacuum 5 Sources Edit Sindh as a region had no extant histories until late medieval era and our knowledge of Rai dynasty remains rudimentary 4 No definitive epigraphic or archaeological evidence pertaining to the dynasty can be located 4 d The lone literary source remains Chachnama 2 3 Though the historical accuracy of Chachnama remains disputed among scholars e its narrative has made to multiple Persian and Oriental histories of the region including Tarikh i Sind 17th c Tuhfatul karaam 18th c and British Gazettes 4 Rulers EditThe Rais reigned for a period of 144 years c 489 632 A D They allegedly had familial ties with other rulers of South Asia including Kashmir Kabul Rajasthan Gujarat etc 12 However their origins remain unknown f Rai Diwaji Rai Sahiras I and Rai Sahasi I Edit Nothing is known about the first three kings their names are mentioned in a single line in the Chachnama where Wazir Buddhiman describes the territorial expanses and administrative structure of Rais under Rai Sahiras II to Chach 2 13 Rai Sahiras II Edit The Chachnama in its opening verses note Rai Sahiras II to be famed for his justice and generosity his coffers overflowed with wealth 12 The kingdom was divided into four units each under a governor or a vassal 14 The southern unit extended from the coasts of Arabian Sea to Lohana and Samona including Nerun and Debal port and had its capital at Brahmanabad 14 The central unit spanned across the areas around Jankan and Rujaban to the Makran frontier it had Sewistan as its capital 14 The western unit extended over a vast area Batia Chachpur and Dehrpur of western Sindh Iskalanda was the capital 14 The northern unit was centered around Multan adjoining Kashmir 14 Sahiras II met his death while attempting to ward off an invasion by the Sassanian King of Nimroz into Kirman He was portrayed as a valiant king who battled till death despite much of his forces deserting the battle Makran and other unknown territories were lost in the conflict 2 14 13 Rai Sahasi II Edit Under his regime the kingdom exhibited socioeconomic prosperity Sahasi II is praised as a benevolent ruler who chose to abide by his counsel 13 He was married to Sohman Devi 12 During his regime Chach a poor learned Brahmin was inducted under minister chamberlain Ram in the epistolary office He impressed Sahasi II with his expertise and rose through the ranks quickly eventually becoming his personal secretary after Ram s death 12 13 As Chach gained access to the interiors of palace Devi became enamored of him and proposed for marriage but met with Chach s rejection Chachnama explains that he did not wish to incur the King s wrath and swerve further away from the scriptural ideals of a Brahminic life 12 13 Yet Chach accepted her request for providing company and their relationship blossomed 12 Sahasi II ignorant of Chach s ways continued to let him gain unprecedented control in the affairs of the state until his natural death 12 Usurpation EditOn Sahasi II s death Devi proposed that Chach usurp the throne 12 He conceded to Devi s plan albeit unwillingly and the news of Sahasi II s death was withheld from public in the meanwhile the familial claimants to the throne were incited against each other in a fatal internecine warfare 12 g Then Devi proclaimed that Sahasi II though recovering was unable to hold court and had appointed Chach as the caretaker ruler for his lifetime 12 13 The elites were lured into supporting the coverup and Chach ruled as the de facto King for about six months 13 However the news of the King s death somehow made way to Sahasi II s brother Rai Mahrit then ruler of Chittor who claimed the throne and mounted a military offensive against Chach 12 13 Chachnama notes Chach to have been ambiguous about the morality of taking on a legitimate successor before being coaxed by Devi who had shamed his masculinity 2 12 Having secured a freak victory h he commissioned triumphal arches and held public feasts winning over the masses soon Devi had him declared as the heir to the throne being a man of unsurmountable intellect and bravery and would marry him with the approval of the court 2 12 13 Thus the Brahman dynasty was established in what is portrayed in Chachnama as the intrigues of a femme fatale working in conjunction with a willing yet ethical apprentice 2 12 Chach would later have to subdue protracted resistance from Bachhera a relative of Sahasi II and the governor or vassal of Multan province 13 External links Edit Imperial house Rai DynastyPreceded bySassanian dynasty Monarchy489 632 Succeeded byBrahman dynastyNotes Edit Alexander Cunningham proposed an alternate chronology gt 641 A D primarily on the basis of local coin finds and equating Sindhu with the Sin tu kingdom as described in the Great Tang Records on the Western Regions identifying the first two Rais as Toramana and Mihirakula and the latter three as Tegin Shah Vasudeva and an anonymous successor 4 Abundant Sasanian mints but with significant variations in typology style and especially denomination have been excavated from Sind 6 Literary sources do not record Sasanian activity and details thereof in these frontier regions Two series of Peroz s coin first crown and third crown are observed in Sindh Only in the second does this legend appear replacing the two attendants of the fire temple 6 Alexander M Fishman and Ian Todd speculate a series of gold dinars and silver dammas found in the region similar to the Ranaditya Satya mints in deriving from Sassanian coinage but bearing different legends and different crown patterns to have been minted by the Rais 5 The legends might be read as Sri Shahi Rasra Sri Jayataka Sri Harsharuka and Sri Bharharsha some of which match albeit roughly with speculative reconstructions obtainable from the Chachnama Diwaj gt Diwaditya gt Devaditya alias Ranaditya Sahiras I gt Shahi Rasra Sahsi I gt Sahiras II gt Sri Harsha and Sahsi II gt 5 7 Pankaj Tandon does not find the attribution convincing 8 Chachnama purports to be a Persian translation by Ali Kufi 13th century of an undated original Arabic text which is not extant anymore Manan Ahmed rejects Kufi s assertion and hypothesizes it to be an original work that drew on then extant histories to imagine an alternative romantic nationalist past of Sindh In contrast Irfan Habib and Jaakko Hameen Anttila emphasizes on unique features of the text that would have been impossible without a literal translation and rejects Asif s doubts on the veracity of the events described in Chachnama 9 10 as does Andre Wink criticizing Asif s intensely source critical approach 11 Chintaman Vinayak Vaidya held the Rais to be descendants of Mauryas and hence Shudra by caste 4 This descent was proposed on the basis of Rai Mahrit then ruler of Chittor claiming to be Sahasi II s brother Rulers of pre Sisodia Rajasthan usually claimed a descent from Mauryas and this identification went perfectly with Xuanzang s noting the King of Sin tu to be a Sudra The claimants were asked to meet the frail King one by one In reality Devi had each of them imprisoned and claimed that it was the King who had them imprisoned out of a quarrel with some other claimant Thus it was necessary to kill him to gain King s trusts and freedom Chach challenged Mahrit to a one on one combat claiming his Brahmin origins had precluded learning the skills of cavalry However in the combat Chach mounted a horse and beheaded Mahrit Mahrit s forces went into a disarray receiving the news of his death References Edit Schwartzberg Joseph E 1978 A Historical atlas of South Asia Chicago University of Chicago Press pp 26 145 map XIV 1 i ISBN 0226742210 a b c d e f g Wink Andre 1996 Al Hind The Making of the Indo Islamic World BRILL pp 133 152 153 ISBN 90 04 09249 8 a b Asif 2016 a b c d e Mirchandani B D 1985 Glimpses of Ancient Sind A Collection of Historical Papers Sindh Saraswati M Gulrajani pp 25 53 56 a b c d Fishman A M Todd I J Pieper W 2021 Recently Discovered Gold Silver and Copper Coins of pre Islamic Sindh and the Yashaditya Series Numismatische Zeitschrift 127 389 392 a b c d e Schindel Nikolaus Alram Michael Daryaee Touraj Pendleton Elizabeth 2016 The Parthian and Early Sasanian Empires adaptation and expansion Oxbow Books pp 126 130 ISBN 9781785702105 Habib Irfan 2012 Linguistic Materials from Eighth century Sind An Exploration of the Chachnama In Jafri S Z H ed Recording the Progress of Indian History Symposia Papers of the Indian History Congress 1992 2010 Delhi Primus Books pp 80 81 86 Tandon Pankaj 2022 Research on the Guptas and Iranian Huns 2014 2020 PDF In Alram Michael Bodzek Jaroslaw Bursche Aleksander eds The Survey of Numismatic Research 2014 2020 Vol II International Numismatic Council Habib Irfan June 2017 Book Review Manan Ahmad Asif A Book of Conquest The Chachnama and Muslim Origins in South Asia Studies in People s History 4 1 105 109 doi 10 1177 2348448917694235 ISSN 2348 4489 S2CID 165517641 Hameen Anttila Jaakko 2018 10 02 A Book of Conquest The Chachnama and Muslim Origins in South Asia Islam and Christian Muslim Relations 29 4 536 538 doi 10 1080 09596410 2018 1522158 hdl 20 500 11820 0c6e731b 6baf 4caa a86b d6b626bc2f1c ISSN 0959 6410 S2CID 150269490 Andre Wink Review of Asif Manan Ahmed A Book of Conquest The Chachnama and Muslim Origins in South Asia H Asia H Net Reviews May 2017 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Asif Manan Ahmed 2016 A Book of Conquest The Chachnama and Muslim Origins in South Asia Harvard University Press pp 65 81 82 131 134 ISBN 9780674660113 a b c d e f g h i j Baloch N A ed 1983 Fathnamah I Sind Being the Original Record of the Arab Conquest of The Sind Islamabad Pakistan Institute of Islamic History Culture and Civilization Islamic University a b c d e f Siddiqi Iqtidar Husain 2013 Indo Persian Historiography Up to the Thirteenth Century Primus Books p 31 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rai dynasty amp oldid 1151904407, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.