Kopperunchinga I

Kopperunchinga I

Kopperunchinga I (reigned c. 1216-1242 CE) was a Kadava chieftain who played a major role in the political affairs of the Tamil country. At one time an official in the service of the Chola king Kulothunga Chola III (1178-1218), Kopperunchinga utilised the opportunity arising out of the Pandyan invasion of the Chola country to become an independent king. Inscriptions of Kopperunchinga I are not many, since his kingdom was still in the making during the major part of his life, when he was actively engaged in conflict with other powers.

Rise of Kopperunchinga

Kopperunchinga I, who is referred variously as "Jiya-Mahipati", "Alagiyasiyan", "Sakalbhuvana-chakravartin Kopperunjinga" and "Manavalapperumal", was a subordinate of Kulothunga Chola III between 1191 and 1195. During this period the Chola empire was declining after many years of glory. During the final years of Kolothunga III's rule, the Pandya Maravarman Sundara Pandya defeated his son Rajaraja III and made the Chola subordinate to Pandya rule, thus marking the beginning of the final demise of the Cholas. Kopperunchinga I, though related to the Chola king by marital ties and an officer in his government until c. 1213, took advantage of the confusion and strengthened his personal position by garrisoning the town of Sendamangalam in the former South Arcot district, converting it into a military stronghold.

Consolidation

Conflicts with Yadavas and Hoysalas

Kopperunchinga's ambition to increase his power brought him into conflict with the Yadava king Singhana II, with whom he fought a battle at Uratti in 1222 or 1223 CE. Soon after this he had another engagement, with the Hoysala king Vira Narasimha II in 1224. The Hoysala king won this battle and the Kadavas were suppressed for a while. On re-establishing the supremacy previously exercised by the Cholas, the Hoysala king assumed the titles "Establisher of the Chola country" and "Destroyer of the demon Kadavaraya".

Defeat of the Cholas

Kopperunchinga's defeat at the hands of the Hoysalas did not hold him back long. He presently defeated the Chola king Rajaraja Chola III at the battle of Tellaru and imprisoned the king and his ministers at Sendamangalam in 1231-1232. A Chola inscription states that Kopperunchinga was helped by the Lanka king Parakrama Bahu II in the battle. To signalize his victory Kopperunchinga I assumed the title "Sakalabhuvanachakravartin" (Emperor of the Universe) and the epithet "Solanai-sirai-yittu-vaittu Sonadu-konda Alagiyasiyan" (Alagiasiyan who imprisoned the Chola and conquered the Chola country).

Defeat of the Hoysalas

While the Hoysala king was preparing to lay siege to Kopperunchinga's capital of Sendamangalam to counter the Kadava's rise, Kopperunchinga engaged the Hoysala armies at Perumbalur near Tiruchi in 1241 and killed the Hoysala generals Kesava, Harihara-Dandanayaka and others and seized their women and property. To protect against further attacks from the Hoysalas, Kopperunchinga built a fort at Tiruvenkadu on the banks of the river Kaveri. At the time of his death in 1242, he left his kingdom in a strong position.

Charitable endowments

Kopperunchinga I was a patron of Tamil literature. A great devotee of the god Nataraja at Chidambaram, he constructed the southern and eastern "gopura" (towers) of the temple there; he also greatly improved the ancient temples at Vennainallur and Vriddhachalam. The temple for goddess Bhagawati(durga) at chidambaram, which is still a cynosure for the eye was built by him in 1231 A.D. By this the pallava chieftain was probably signalling his intent of being brutal towards evil and oppurtunistic dynasties like the hoysalas that took centre stage albeit briefly due to the fall from grace of cholas. To mark his victory over the Hoysalas, he performed several deeds of munificence during a pilgrimage to various sacred places on the southern bank of the river Kaveri in Solamandalam.

ee also

*Pallava dynasty
*Chola dynasty

References

* Nilakanta Sastri, K.A. (1955, reprinted 2002). "A History of South India". OUP, New Delhi.
* South Indian Inscriptions - http://www.whatisindia.com/inscriptions/


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем решить контрольную работу

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Kopperunchinga II — (reigned c. 1243 1279 CE) was a Kadava chieftain, who succeeded his father Kopperunchinga I and continued his successes against the Hoysalas. Since the Chola power no longer constituted a threat, Kopperunchinga II acted as the de facto protector… …   Wikipedia

  • Kadava — was the name of a South Indian ruling dynasty who ruled parts of the Tamil country during the thirteenth and the fourteenth century CE. Kadavas were related to the Pallava dynasty and ruled from Kudalur near Cuddalore in Tamil Nadu.The Kadava… …   Wikipedia

  • Rajaraja Chola III — Infobox Chola | name=Rajaraja Chola III tamil = மூன்றாம் இராஜராஜ சோழன் caption = Chola territories c. 1246 CE title = Rajakesari reign= 1216 C.E. 1256 C.E. capital = Gangaikonda Cholapuram queen= Unknown children= Rajendara Chola III predecessor …   Wikipedia

  • Later Cholas — The Later Chola dynasty ruled the Chola Empire from 1070 C.E. until the demise of the empire in the second half of the 13th century. This dynasty was the product of decades of alliances based on marriages between the Cholas and the Eastern… …   Wikipedia

  • Maravarman Sundara Pandyan — I (Tamil: முதலாம் மாறவர்மன் சுந்தர பாண்டியன்) was a Pandyan king, who ruled regions of South India between 1216–1238 CE[1]. He laid the foundation for the Pandya revival, after being dominated by the Cholas for several centuries. Contents 1… …   Wikipedia

  • Pallava — The Pallava kingdom Tamil: பல்லவர்) was an ancient South Indian kingdom. The Pallavas who were feudatories of Andhra Satavahanas, became independent after the decline of that dynasty in Amaravati. Initially they ruled southern Palnadu (Guntur… …   Wikipedia

  • Sendamangalam — Infobox Indian Jurisdiction native name = Sendamangalam | type = Town | Block HQ latd = 11.3000 | longd = 78.2333 locator position = right | state name = Tamil Nadu district = Namakkal leader title = leader name = altitude = 240 population as of …   Wikipedia

  • Chola Dynasty — Infobox Former Country native name = சோழர் குலம் conventional long name = Chola Empire common name = Chola Empire continent = Asia region = South East Asia country = era = Middle Ages status = event start = year start = 300s BC date start =… …   Wikipedia

  • Telugu Cholas — Many Telugu Choda kingdoms ruled over many regions including the cities on the banks of Krishna River in the period between the seventh and the thirteenth century. It is not known much about these family origins. Some of them claimed descent from …   Wikipedia

  • History of Tamil Nadu — A temple from the Chola period. The Cholas united most of the south Indian peninsula under a single administration during the tenth and the eleventh century CE. Part of a series on Histo …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”