"Middle Chola Temples " - Part 4 of
  • Hello Guys,
    In today's article, i am going to list the thoughts of Dr.SRB over some
    views put by other historians. His thoughts are about 2 things,
    Mahendragiri & Kandalur-salai-kalam-aruttaruli. For sake of content
    consistency i will put Mahendragiri in this posting & will post his
    thoughts about Kandalur-salai-kalam-aruttaruli in the next article.

    Mahendragiri

    Mahendragiri is in the modern Ganjam district of Orissa. It lay on the
    border between the medieval kingdoms of Vengi and Kalinga. On this hill,
    there is a temple of

    Gokarnesvarar, with shrines of Kunti & Yudishthirar. There are four undated
    inscriptions in the place. One of them is the Tamil version, in three
    fragments, of another in

    Telugu. The texts are fragmentary and no safe deductions could be drawn
    from them. They describe the setting up of two jayastambhas on Mahendragiri
    by SOME Rajendra

    after he had defeated one Vimaladitya of the Kulutas. Venkayya, and
    following him, others, identified this Vimaladitya with the Vengi price
    (son of Vishnuvardhana of the Eastern Chalukyas) and concluded that he was
    defeated by Rajendra Chola in battle and taken prisoner to the Chola court.

    Recently, B. Venkatakrishna Rao, in his 'History of the Eastern Chalukyas
    of Vengi' (written with a touch of chauvinisim), has challenged the usual
    identification of the victor Rajendra and has postulated that the
    Mahendragiri battle should be ascribed to the period of Kulottunga I and as
    part of the Kalinga expedition (A.D 1093-96) and that the victor was
    Rajendra Chola, the Velannati viceroy of Vengi and a vassal of Kulotunga I.
    This identification seems far-fetched. My own view is that the victor at
    Mahendragiri was indeed Rajendra Chola I and that the vanquished was
    Vimaladitya of Kulutas (ruling to the north of Vengi) and not Vimaladitya of
    the Eastern Chalukyas who presumably went to the Chola court of his own
    free will - and not as a prisoner of war - after being driven out of
    Vengi. The last-mentioned (Vimaladitya of Eastern Chalukyas), figures in
    an inscription of the 29th year of Rajaraja I as the donor of the eight
    silver kalasams weighing 1,148 kalanjus to the Loga-Mahadevi Isvaram built
    at Tiruvaiyaru by Rajaraja I's queen of that name. We know that he married
    Kundavai, and was restored to the rulership of Vengi, of which he was
    overlord. Another fragmentary inscription in the neighborhood mentions
    Rajendra and Madhurantaka (surname of Rajendra I), thus confirming the
    control of this region by Rajendra I.

    As the Chola victory at Mahendragiri is not found included in the
    description of the Gangetic campaign of Rajendra I's, it seems likely that
    it took place independently of and before it, in an effort to re-establish
    the Chola protege Vimaladitya on the Vengi throne and to help overcome the
    enemies on his borders. It seems safe to conclude that, at
    the close of Rajendra I's reign, Mahendragiri formed part of Vengi and of
    the Chola empire.


    Jana

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