Harsola copper plates

Harsola Grant A of Paramara king Siyaka, 949
Harsola Grant B of Paramara king Siyaka, 949

The Harsola copper plates are a set of two 949 CE Indian inscriptions that record the grants of two villages to a Nagar Brahmin father-son duo. The grants were issued by the Paramara king Siyaka II. The copper plates were discovered in Harsol (or Harsola) in present-day Gujarat state.

Besides the Paramara ancestors of Siyaka, the inscription mentions the names of two other rulers, who have been identified with Rashtrakuta kings. This indicates that the Paramaras were feudatories of Rashtrakutas in their early days. Unlike the later Paramara inscriptions, this inscription does not mention the Agnikula myth, which claims that the sage Vashistha conjured the dynasty's founder from a fire pit on Mount Abu.

One line of the inscription has been interpreted by some historians as evidence of the Rashtrakuta patrilineal ancestry of the Paramara royal house. According to others, this line only suggests that the mother of the Paramara king Vakpati I came from a Rashtrakuta family.

History

In early 20th century, the plates were in the possession of a Visnagar Brahmin named Bhatta Magan Motiram, who was a resident of Harsol. It is not known when and how the plates came to be in his possession. According to Keshavlal Dhruv, the first two plates ("Grant A") were found joined together by a ring, and the other two plates ("Grant B") were found loose. There is a Garuda symbol (the Paramara royal emblem) on only one of the plates, and the two grants were issued to a father-son duo by the same king on the same day. Therefore, it can be inferred that originally, all the plates must have been joined together.[1]

D. B. Diskalkar noticed these plates in 1922-23, and published a transcript in a Gujarati journal Puratattva. Later, he and K. N. Dikshit published a revised transcript with translation in Epigraphia Indica Volume XIX (1927).[1]

Content

The copper plates are rectangular in shape, and are inscribed only one side. The first copper plate of Grant A is 21.5 cm x 13 cm in size, and includes 16 lines. The second plate is of 21 cm x 8.5 cm in size, and contains 11 lines. Both the Grant B copper plates measure about 20 cm x 13 cm, and contain 16 and 13 lines respectively.[2]

Both the grants are written in Sanskrit language and Nagari script. The text is a mix of prose and poetry.[3]

Introduction

Minus the formal portion about the actual grant and the Garuda emblem, the contents of the two grants is exactly same. Both the grants open with a customary symbol, and a verse invoking blessings of the Varaha avatar of Vishnu.[4]

The first plate depicts a flying Garuda holding a snake in its right arm; the left hand is raised to strike the snake.[1] The beautifully incised Garuda image in human form with wings on the grants, is considered to be the earlier form of drawing which came to be known as the Jain style as used in Jain manuscripts.[5][6]

List of kings

Next, the inscriptions mention Amoghavarsha-deva, whose titles are Paramabhattakara, Maharajadhiraja and Parmaveshvara. This is followed by the name of his successor Akalavarsha-deva, whose titles are Prithvi-vallabha and Sri-vallabha.

The mention of these kings is followed by the expression tasmin kule ("in that family"), although the name of the family is not mentioned. According to scholars such as K. N. Dikshit, DB Diskalkar and H V Trivedi, the name of the family appears to have been omitted because of an oversight.[7]

Next, the inscription lists three kings with conventional descriptions:[7]

The grants

This part of the inscription records the grants of two villages in Mohadavasaka vishaya (district) to a father-son duo. The donees were Nagar Brahmins of Anandapura, who belonged to the Gopali gotra.[4]

Both the grants were issued by Siyaka, who is described as Maharajadhiraja and sāmanta-cūḍa-maṇi ("the crest jewel among the feudatories"). The grants were issued on the banks of the Mahi River, on the date 31 January 949 CE.[4]

The inscription mentions that Siyaka assembled the residents of the Kumbharotaka, Sihaka and other neighbouring villages. In their presence, he made perpetual grants of the villages for religious merit and for his family's fame. The inscription lists the instructions for the villagers to offer the donees and their descendants the shares of the produce, royalties, taxes and gold. This is followed by imprecatory verses to curse anyone who revokes the grants. The inscription states that the grants were made at the request of the ruler of Khetaka mandala, after Siyaka's return from a successful campaign against Yogaraja.[7]

The dapaka or the officer-in-charge of registering the grants was a Thakkura named Vishnu. Both the grants were written by a Kayastha named Gunadhara.[4] Each grant ends with a sign manual of Siyaka.[7]

Identification of people and places

Amoghavarsha and Akalavarsha have been identified as one of the following pairs of Rashtrakuta kings:[4]

Most historians favour the second identification. Krishna III (or according to another version, his successor Khottiga) had led an expedition to Malwa, against Siyaka. Siyaka had titled himself Maharajadhirajapati in his grants, thus proclaiming his independence. This might have caused the Rashtrakuta invasion of Malwa, which was aimed at subduing him.[4]

The next three kings mentioned in the inscription are the Paramara kings, who may have been Rashtrakuta vassals in Malwa:[8]

Khetaka is identified as the area around the present-day Kheda.[7] The identity of its ruler is not certain, but he could be the successor of Prachanda of Brahmavak family. According to the 910 CE Kapadvanj grant, the Rashtrakuta king Akalavarsha made Prachanda the in-charge of the Khetaka mandala.[9]

The identity of Yogaraja is also uncertain: he may be a Chavda chief or the Chalukya (Solanki) chief Avantivarman Yogaraja II. Both Chavdas and Chalukyas of Gujarat were vassals of the Pratiharas, and Siyaka may have led an expedition against either of them as a feudatory of the Rashtrakutas.[7]

Mohadavasaka (the district in which the donated villages were located) is identified with present-day Modasa. The villages - Kumbharotaka and Sihaka - are identified with the modern villages of Kamrod and Sika. Anandapura, the native place of the donees, is identified with Vadnagar.[9]

Inferences

The inscription explicitly mentions Siyaka as a samanta (feudatory), thus establishing that the Paramaras started out as vassals of the Rashtrakutas of Manyakheta.[10] This establishes that the legend of the agni-kunda origin came much later.

Some historians such as D. C. Ganguly theorize that Siyaka's grandfather Vakpati I was a patrilinear descendant of the Rashtrakutas.[11] Others believe that only his mother was from a Rashtrakuta family. The supporters of the latter theory include Dasharatha Sharma,[12] Kailash Chandra Jain,[11] and HV Trivedi,[7] among others. Sharma notes that Padmagupta (the court-poet of Siyaka's son Sindhuraja) described the Agnikula myth. He argues that the Rashtrakuta royal origin of the Paramaras could not have been forgotten within a generation.[12]

Also notable are the last names of the donees, which indicate that these were not hereditary surnames in the 10th century. The donees had two different last names - "Upadhyaya" and "Dikshita" - although both were Nagar Brahmins from same locality and gotra, being a father-son duo.[4]

References

  1. 1 2 3 Trivedi 1991, p. 1.
  2. Trivedi 1991, pp. 1-2.
  3. Trivedi 1991, pp. 1-3.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Trivedi 1991, p. 3.
  5. More Documents of Jaina Paintings and Gujarati Paintings of Sixteenth and Later Centuries, Umakant Premanand Shah, L. D. Institute of Indology, 1976, p.
  6. Early Indian miniature paintings (c. 1000-1550 AD), p. 22, Rashmi Kala Agrawal, 2006
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Trivedi 1991, p. 4.
  8. Trivedi 1991, pp. 4-5.
  9. 1 2 Trivedi 1991, p. 5.
  10. Rāshṭrakūṭas and their times, p. 120, Anant Sadashiv Altekar, 1967
  11. 1 2 Jain 1972, p. 327.
  12. 1 2 Yadava 1982, p. 36.

Bibliography

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