Sivakara Deva I

Maharaja Sivakara Deva I or Sivakara Unmattasimha/ Unamattakeshari was a powerful monarch of the Bhaumakara Dynasty who ruled in the late tertiary part of the 8th century A.D. He was the descendant of Ksemankara Deva who is believed to be the founder of the Bhaumakara rule in ancient Odisha and also the earliest organizer of the Varna system in the region. Sivakara Deva I pursued a career of conquest in the eastern part of India establishing the Bhaumakaras as the supreme power in the whole region during his lifetime. He conquered the kingdom of Radha(Rarh) and subjugated the Eastern Ganga rulers of Kalinga as his vassals. He was a devout Buddhist who adopted the epithets of Paramopasaka and Paramatathgata meaning a devout worshiper of Buddha which has been mentioned in the Neulpur charter of the Bhaumakaras.[1] He sent a Buddhist scholar as an emissary to the Chinese emperor Te-tsong or Dezong with valuable Mahayana Buddhist manuscripts and established a new era of maritime trade and cultural relationship between ancient Odisha and China.

Sivakara Deva I
Unmattasimha or Unmattakeshari, Paramaposhaka, Paramatathagata
PredecessorKsemankara Deva
SuccessorSubhakara Deva I
SpouseJayavallabhi (Princess of Rarh)
HouseBhauma-Kara dynasty
ReligionBuddhism

Military Achievements

Sivakara Deva I is glorified as a military champion in eastern India across the inscriptions left by his descendants and others. The Talcher plates issued by one of his descendant Sivakara III compares him with the king Puru and states that he defeated and enslaved his enemies with his might. He is also described as an efficient archer in the battlefield being able to shoot multiple sharp arrows by drawing the bowstring till his ear.[2][3]

Conquest of Rarh

Sivakara Deva I marched with a huge army on Rarh and conquered the opponent after a high pitched battle with the forces of Rarh which was situated in the northern part of the Bhaumakara territory. Historian R.C.Banarjee identifies the mention of Rarh in the Bhaumakara inscription with the territory that comprised around the modern Bankura district confined between the rivers Ajay and Rup Narayan. He married Jayavallabhi who was the princess of Rarh kingdom after defeating the enemy. Historians have placed the northern extent of the Bhaumakara kingdom during this era to be Dandabhukti or the area surrounding modern Medinapur and hence established that invasion of Rarh by Sivakara Deva I was just raid in order to subjugate the kingdom as feudal state under the Bhaumakara rule.[4][5]

Conquest until River Godavari in the South

Sivakara Deva I sent his son Subhakara Deva I to conquer the southern territories of the early Eastern Ganga dynasty rulers which was also known as Svetaka Mandala or the heartland of Kalinga kingdom. The Dhenkanal charter of Tribhuvana Mahadevi I provides a poetic indication of a fierce battle between the armies Kalinga comprising large number of war elephants and that of Utkala's Bhaumakara dynasty which ended in the later's victory. The entire region from the rivers Rushikulya to Godavari was subjugated by the Bhaumakaras though allowing the Eastern Gangas to continue ruling as vassals under them. An Eastern Ganga king named as Jayavarmadeva mentioned himself as the vassal of Sivakara Deva I in his Ganjam grant and by whose permission he gave away the grants.[6]

Relations with Tang Dynasty of China and personality

Sivakara Deva I is also recorded to have sent an eminent Mahayana Buddhist scholar named as Prajna with the manuscript called Gandavyuha Sutra to the Tang court of emperor Dezong in China personally autographed by him. The monk Prajna who was a scholar in Buddhist studies at the monastery of Ratnagiri stayed in China for sometime and also translated the Buddhist manuscript Shat-paramita Sutra into Chinese. Sivakara Deva I is mentioned in the Chinese records as "the fortunate monarch who does what is pure, the lion".[7] This initiation of overseas cultural exchange indicates the existence of regular maritime routes for trade and cultural exchange between ancient Odisha and China.

The king is recorded to have many qualities of that employed both his heart and mind. He encouraged new talents and was always accompanied by several scholars. He was effort bound to solve the difficulties of his people and always tried to meet their hopes. The Angul inscription of his descendant Dharma Mahadevi praises him as "Unmattasimha acquired the ever-lasting renown and resembled the moon covering all regions with great lustre and delighting people by dispelling the heat." The Dhenkanal charter of Tribhuvana Mahadevi I also praises him for the good qualities like spending money on the construction of various spiritual places, monasteries and temples. He avoided excess personal luxury and taxation of his subjects.[8]

References

  1. History of Orissa, From the Earliest Times to the British Period by R.D.Banarji. Subham Printers, Cuttack -10: New Age Publications. 2006. pp. 132–134. ISBN 81-88337-47-1.CS1 maint: location (link)
  2. "Political History of the Bhauma-Karas" (PDF). www.shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in. pp. 112–116. Retrieved 13 March 2018.
  3. Orissa Under The Bhauma Kings. p. 47.
  4. "Kingdom of the Bhauma-Karas" (PDF). www.shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in. Retrieved 13 March 2018.
  5. History of Orissa by Dr. Purnachandra Das. New Delhi: Kalyani Publishers. 2004. pp. 27–30. ISBN 81-272-1367-5.
  6. "Feudatory States Under the Bhauma-Karas" (PDF). www.shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in. Retrieved 13 March 2018.
  7. "Kalinga and China : A Study in Ancient Relations" (PDF). www.magazines.odisha.gov.in. Retrieved 13 March 2018.
  8. "Political History of the Bhauma-Kara" (PDF). www.shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in. Retrieved 13 March 2018.
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