Suvar Advīpa (R.C. Majumdar, 1937)
Suvar Advīpa (R.C. Majumdar, 1937)
Suvar Advīpa (R.C. Majumdar, 1937)
DRENCHED
CO
u< OU_158628>5 CO
itp
.
library.
Collection
Accession No..
Call No.... Q.
THE
FAR EAST
VOL.
II
SUVARNADVIPA
PART
I
Political History.
BY
Dr. R. C. Majumdar, M. A., Ph. Professor, Dacca University,
D.,
Author of Corporate Life in Ancient India, Outline of Ancient Indian History and Civilisation, Qurjara-Pratlharas,
DACCA
1937
Published
1937
To be had
1.
Chuckervertty Chatterji
&
Co.
Book Company
4/4A, College Square, Calcutta.
3.
Lahore.
4.
Badnr Pagan
Eoiv, Calcutta.
5.
Asutosh Library
5, College
Square, Calcutta, or
PRINTER
A8UI08H
PKJS88,
DACCA
To
The Dutch Savants
whose labours have unfolded
a
new and
glorious chapter
of the
volume
is
dedicated
in token of
PREFACE
The first volume of Ancient Indian Colonies in the Far East, dealing with the colony of Champa, was published
in 1927.
Various causes have delayed the publication of the second volume. One of them is a change in the planning of the different volumes. Originally I had intended to deal with
the history of
Kamboja (Cambodia)
in the
second volume.
As
the wonderful monuments of this kingdom were to constitute an important part of the volume, I paid a visit to Cambodia
in
in
order to obtain a first-hand knowledge of them. There, conversation with the Archaeological authorities, I came my
first
time that
many
monuments
of
the publication of
Angkor Thorn. I was advised to put off my book until these had been fully explored.
Acting upon
advice I took up the history of Malayasia which was to have formed the third volume. My knowledge
this
of Dutch being very poor at the time, I had to spend a long time in mastering the contents of relevant books and Journals which are mostly written in that language. Hence it has taken
nearly nine years to prepare and bring this volume before the public. The interval between the first and the second volume
me
on the
difficulty
of working
on the
India, without any possible help or advice from any competent authority, and without any adequate library. It would be hardly an exaggeration to say that the small
subject in
collection
of
patiently
acquired for Dacca University during the last seven years, is the best in India, but it is still very far from being adequate or satisfactory. The study of the Indian Colonisation in
the Far East
is
still
The
recent
Journal
are
notable
PREFACE.
enterprises, but the establishment
facilities for
At
the study of the subject is still a great desideratum. the time when I took up the task of writing a series of
Society had not yet come and there was no book, big or small, on the into existence, As regards Java, the remark subject in English language.
studies on Indian Colonisation, the
holds good, save for a small pamphlet published by the Society, and a book on Indo-Javanese literature, published by
still
book was ready. I state these facts, not with the motive of claiming any special credit, but with a view to craving the indulgence of the readers
one of
my
first
draft of this
for the
will
be found in
this
pioneer
work.
When
two
was completed,
it
it
advisable to
into
The
first
part,
now
system
published, deals
of
with the
political
history
part,
and
in
the
administration.
society,
The
art,
second
now
press,
deals
with law,
religion, literature,
I have experienced considerable difficulty in the spelling of proper names. As regards the Javanese names of persons and places, I have followed the Dutch spelling, substituting y,
ch and
y
^^
respectively,
for dj\
?/>,
ij,
and
names are
spelt exactly as in
names, I have
followed
the English, French, and Dutch the source from which I derived my
Originally I intended to insert in this volume a complete collection of Javanese inscriptions on the lines followed in
j
But while this volume was in progress, my pupil Volume Mr. Himansu Bhusan Sarkar, M. A., a research-scholar working
I.
this
work,
and
has
now
practically
Inscriptions'
will shortly
it
necessary
to
inscriptions.
this volume,
As
Second Part of
and the other the collection of inscriptions. I hope these will be out before the end of 1939. Volume IV, forming the sixth book of the series, and containing a general review
of
will,
I hope,
be published by 1941.
task of writing these volumes has been a painful and laborious one, particularly as I have to work, for the most
The
part,
in
administrative
and
other
duties.
generous readers for the many errors which must necessarily have crept into this book. My sole excuse for the choice of this difficult undertaking is the general
indulgence of
my
apathy and ignorance in this country about this important branch of study. If I succeed in removing them even to a small extent, I shall consider my labours amply rewarded.
Ramna, Dacca.
1
>
R. C.
MAJUMDAK
The 7th
of December, 1936.
TABLE OF CONTENTS.
Page
Introduction
...
... ... ... ... ...
...
... ...
Abbreviations
xi
xvii
f
.
Maps
1. 2.
Malayasia
\
J
lacln
P'
Book L
Chapter
The Dawn
of
Hindu Colonisation.
L
II.
...
...
...
...
III.
Civilisation in Malayasia
... ...
26
37
IV.
V. VI.
Early Hindu Colonisation in Malay Peninsula ... Early Hindu Colonisation in Java
Early Hindu Colonisation in Sumatra
...
65
91
VI T.
VIII.
... ...
116 125
132
138
IX. X.
to the
...
Book
I.
II.
up
to the
...
end of the
149
II.
... Tenth Century A.D.) The Struggle between the Sailendras and the
Colas
III.
...
...
...
167
191
...
Appendix
ii
...
...
204
11
Book
Chapter
I.
III.
Rise and
fall
Page
of Matarfim
...
The Kingdom
...
229
II.
...
... ...
...
255
276
292
III.
IV. V. VI.
VII.
VIII.
The Kingdom of Kadiri ... The Dynasty of Singhasari ... The Foundation of Majapahit The Javanese Empire ...
Downfall of the Empire
...
...
308
319
339
...
... ...
Sunda
...
356
Book IV.
in
I.
II.
III.
IV.
End of Hindu Rule in Sumatra End of Hindu Rule in Malay Peninsula End of Hindu Rule in Java ... End of Hindu Rule in Borneo
The Bali Island
Political theory
...
...
363 378
... ...
...
401
412
V.
VI.
419 429
INTRODUCTION
in
I propose to deal in this volume with the Hindu colonisation Malay Peninsula and the Malay Archipelago. For this entire region, now known as Malayasia, I have used the name
Suvarnadvipa.
in this
My
is
name
wide sense
Chapter IV.
in the case
In this volume I have followed the same plan as was adopted I have tried of the earlier volume on Champa.
we
regions
constituting
Suvarnadvlpa,
and have
social
and administration,
I have not discussed
art.
of of
Indian
civilisation,
of
the
Pallavas
or
South
India on
the
civilisation of
of
these
pertinent
Sumatra and Java, the origin of art and alphabet regions, and similar other questions which are the subject. These will be discussed in a to
subsequent volume.
Although Suvarnadvlpa is a mere geographical expression and a congeries of states, it came to be on two occasions,
at least, almost a political
entity.
First,
kings from the end of the eighth to the beginning of the eleventh century A.D., and, secondly, in the palmy days of the Empire of Majapahit. Even in other periods, there has
almost always been a close political relationship, be or hostile, between its constituent parts, such as
it
friendly
we do
not
meet with
between any of
them
Even now
all
the predominance of the Malay-speaking over the area serves as a bond of unity, which
also
artificially
to
the
maintained to a large extent by common subjection Dutch. Those considerations would be a further
Suvarnadvipa as a
historical unit,
11
INTRODUCTION
colonies in the
Our knowledge regarding the Hindu various small islands which dot the Pacific
and
this
is
settled
in
Borneo.
The
Malay Peninsula, Sumatra, Java, Bali, and sources of information on which the accounts
in detail in the
body
of the book,
but
it
The
may be broadly
divided
into
two
classes,
indigenous and foreign. Among indigenous sources, again, the two most important sub-divisions are (1) archaeological, and
(2) literary.
The
and
monuments, as
coins play
but
little
the history of these countries. As regards inscriptions and monuments, Java offers the richest field, and those in tho
The Sanskrit inscriptions of Java were studied by Kern, and may now be conveniently consulted in his collected works (Kern V. G.). The Kavi inscriptions have been collected in two works by Cohen Stuart (K. O.) and Dr. Brandes
(O.
J. O.).
Other inscriptions have been noticed or edited of the Dutch Archaeological Department,
V.
of
The
(2)
monuments
(3)
Java
are
principally
described in
(1)
m%^
Rapporten
O. V. and
Arch. Ond.
The last named series really consists of three monumental works on Candi Jago, Candi Singasari, and Barabudur. While one volume is devoted to each of the first two, that on Barabudur consists of five big volumes. Two of these contain only plates, and of the three volumes of texts, two give the the archaeological, and one, the architectural description of monument. It may be noted that the two volumes on great archaeological description have been translated into English,
INTRODUCTION
Ul
As
regards the
in
island
of Bali,
we have
a collection of
inscriptions
Callenfells.
Epigraphia
results of
Balica, Vol. I,
by P. V, Stein
7
.
The
more recent
archaeological investiga-
by Stutterhcim in 'Oudheden Van Bali The monuments of Sumatra and Borneo, which are in For those Dutch possession, have been described in O. V. of Malay Peninsula we have got a preliminary account by
M. Lajonquierre
in B. C. A. I, 1909
and 1912.
regards the literary sources of history, there are two works in Java which may claim the highest rank
:
As
Nagara-Krtiigama, a poem written during the reign of Hayam Wuruk, by Prapanca, who held the high office of the Superintendent of the Buddhist Church in the
first is
The
court of
that
king.
It
was composed
in
career of
other historical
Kern
is
informations of high value. It has been (V. G., Vols. VII, VIII) and re-published
It
by Krom.
Ken Angrok, and continuing the history of Java down to the end of the Hindu rule. It gives dates for most of the events, but these have not always proved to be correct. The book has no doubt a genuine historical background, but the incidents mentioned in it cannot always be regarded as historical The book was originally without further corroboration. edited and translated by Brandes (Par.), and a revised edition has been published by Krom.
There are other modern historical works in Java arid Bali, and Sajara which have preserved traditions regarding their ancient history. These have been referred to in detail in the chapter on Literature, Similar
called Kidung, Babads,
a prose work called Pararaton. of historical chronicle beginning with the life of
The second
is
a sort
works
exist in Malay Peninsula, e.g., Sajarah Malayu. Besides historical works, Java and Bali are rich in literature of all kinds to which a detailed reference will be found in
IV
INTRODUCTION
comprehensive catalogues of Javanese manuscripts by Vreede, Brandes, and Juynboll. Among the published texts may be mentioned, Rainayana, Mahabh&rata (portions only), Bharatayuddha, Arjunavivaha, Kunjarakarna, VrttasaScaya, Bhomakavya, Galon Arang, Tantri Kamandaka, Megantaka, Dreman,
Lingga Peta, Nitisara, and various Kidung works, in addition to several religious texts and one law-book. The former
Sang hyang KamahaySnikan, a MahaySnist text, and Agastya Parva, Brahmanda Purana, and Tantu Panggelaran, nature of Purana, containing theology, all works of the cosmogony and mythology. The law-book is Kutara-manava, edited with notes and translation by Jonkcr. A fuller account of these will be found in the chapters on Literature and
include
Religion.
The
the
foreign sources
may be
western.
eastern
and
the
belong the Chinese, and to the latter, the Indian, Greek, The Indian, Greek, and Latin Latin, and Arabic texts.
sources
contain
parts,
stray
references
occasionally,
to
Malayasia
as
in
and
case
its
constituent
and
the
of
The Arab information. texts, geographical of travellers' accounts, arc also very consisting principally valuable for a knowledge of the trade and commercial
geography of the whole region. But these western sources do not offer much material for reconstructing the history of Malayasia. For this we have to turn to the Chinese texts which contain very valuable data for the political and cultural
history of the entire region.
Ptolemy's valuable
Geography
and
Marco
Polo's
accounts,
some
opportunities for obtaining first-hand informations about the different regions of Malayasia,
special
and trade
relations
with
China.
these lands
and th$
accounts of the
Chinese
ambassadors
excellent
who
visited to
them,
official
must
have
furnished
materials
the
incorporated accounts of these foreign lands number of in the histories of the Imperial dynasties.
Chroniclers
who
Chinese travellers also visited these far-off lands and recorded short accounts of the countries visited by them. The traders
from these
imparted valuable information to Thus the Chinese annals possess a store Chinese officials. of information about Malayasia, which in quality and quantity
lands
also
sources.
In view of
this,
what we know from other foreign and as frequent references have been
text,
made
relied.
to these
First,
we have
the
famous
Dynastic
official
As
is
wellknown, deal with the history of China from the earliest time up to the end of the Ming dynasty (1643 A.D.). The first book, Che-ki, deals with the history of the country from the earliest time up to 122 B. C. The other books deal separately with
the history of every dynasty which has since reigned in China. The history of each dynasty was written after its downfall
Histories
which
with
the
help
of
of
the
Government
at hand,
archives.
It
contains
accounts
foreign
countries
"which
have
always been
therefore
and
may
be considered to refer to the time when the dynasty still existed, even if the time of their compilation and publication
falls
The
list
principally
The
date,
2. 3.
by each. Sung Dynasty (420-478 A. D.) History of the Liang Dynasty (502-556 A. D.) Old History of the T'ang Dynasty (618-906 A. D.)
Groeneveldt
Notes, p. VII.
I,
VI
4.
E. 6.
INTRODUCTION
7.
History of
Yuan (Mongol) Dynasty (1206-1367 A.D.) the Ming Dynasty (1368-1643 A. D.)
those of
Among
Fa-hien
and
Memoire) belong respectively to the fifth and seventh centuries A. D. After a long interval we come across These regular accounts from the twelfth century onwards.
I-tsing (Record,
Ling-wai-tai-ta,
by Chou
kii-fei,
Assistant Sub-Prefect
It
in
Kui-lin, the
capital
of Kuang-si.
was composed in
1178 A. D.
Chu-fan-chi by Chau Ju-kua, Inspector of Foreign Trade in Fu-kicn. The date of this work has been discussed
2.
on
p. 193.
obtaining information
sailors
and on
who frequented
his
port.
Though he has
relied
Liug-wai-tai-ta for several sections of his work, those dealing with San-fo-tsi and its subordinate states (which alone are
mainly used in this book) seem to be based exclusively on the information gathered by him from Chinese and foreign traders 1
3.
Isles"
by
Tao-i Chih-lio or "Description of the Barbarians of the Wang Ta-yuan with the cognomen of Huan-Chang.
for purposes of trade,
He
visited,
a considerable
number
of
foreign localities during the period 1341-1367 and recorded what he had seen in this work. It is a personal and, consequently, trustworthy record.
which we may conclude that the author was already travelling in 1330, and
that he probably put the last touches
to
his
work
after the
summer
4-5.
of 1349.
Ying-yai Sheng-lan by Ma Huan and Hsing-Cha Shenglan by Fei Hsin. Both Ma Huan and Fei Hsin accompanied
I.
Chau Ju-kua,
INTRODUCTION
the famous
Vll
eunuch Cheng Ho in some of his voyages. These voyages were undertaken at the command of the Emperor with a view to exploring foreign lands for commercial purposes and demonstrating to them the might and prestige of the Chinese Some idea of these voyages may be obtained from Empire the fact that in one of them Cheng Ho is said to have taken
1
.
forty-eight vessels
Ho made
and
and 27,000 Imperial troops with him. Cheng altogether seven voyages between 1405 and 1433 AJX,
thirty-six (or thirty-seven) countries,
in Malayasia,
visited
India, Arabia,
and Africa.
and Fei Hsin must have gathered materials work from the voyages they undertook. Ma Huan was attached to the suite of Cheng Ho as "Interpreter of foreign languages and writing to the mission ." Fei Hsin was 'presumably a secretary or clerk'. Both of them had thus
Both
Ma Huan
for their
splendid opportunities of gaining first-hand knowledge about these foreign lands, and this invests their chronicles with a
special importance.
The original text of Ma Huan was revised by Chang Sheng, and Rockhill has made a confusion between the original and
the revised text.
set forth
has, however,
been clearly
by Pel Hot.
of
Rockhill assigned the first publication to a date between 1425 and 1432 A. D.
Ma
Huan's work
is,
Pelliot
however,
of opinion that the first edition of the work really appeared in 1416, the date given in the preface to the work, soon after Ma
Huan's
first
voyages in 1413-15 A. D.
evidently enlarged after the two subsequent 1421-2 and 1431-3, and completed about 1433. But
its final
not necessary to refer in detail to the other Chinese works to which occasional reference has been made in the
following pages.
1.
For
Cf.
iii
full
discussion
on
this
point
ff.
cf.
T'oung Pao.
ft.
2.
T'oung Pao,
viii
INTRODUCTION
Excepting the Indian
texts,
it
me
to
consult the
translations
other
sources in original.
reliable
by able and
Latin texts
),
competent
been
available for
most of them.
have
translated
by
Ccedes-Textcs
),
Ferrand-Textes
I.
Translation.
1.
2.
of
I-tsing's
works
by
).
Takakusu
and
Chavanncs
3.
Hirth and
Rockhill
Chau Ju-kua
II.
).
Translation of Extracts.
4.
W.
P. Groeneveldt
(
and Malacca
[
Batavia 1877
Supplementary
ff. ].
Jottings
T'oung Pao,
Scr.
I,
Vol. VII,
pp. 113
5.
Notes on the relations and trade China with the Eastern Archipelago and the coasts of the Indian ocean during the Fourteenth Century. T'oung
Rockhill
of
W. W.
Pao, Serie
II,
ff.
Vol.
XVI
(1915), pp. 61
ff.,
236
ff.,
374
ff.,
435
ff.,
604
III.
Critical Discussion.
Itineraires
6.
P. Pelliot
sifccle
Deux
(
la
fin
du VIII 8
7. Schlegel Geographical Notes. T'oung Pao, Ser. Vol. IX. ( pp. 177 ff, 191 ff, 273 ff, 365 ff ) Vol. ( pp. 33 155 ff, 247 ff, 459 ff ; Ser. II, Vol. II ( pp. 107 ff, 167
;
I,
ff,
ff,
329
ff. )
INTRODUCTION
8.
IX
J. J.
L.
Duyvendak
Amsterdam,
Ma Huan
1933.
)
re-examined
Lettcrkunde,
Verhand.
der.
Kon. Ak.
no
3,
N.
RM d.
XXXII,
9.
P. Pelliot
Maritimes
Chinois
1933,
au Debut du
pp. 236-452
[
;
XV
sifecle
XXX,
Vol.
XXI,
pp. 274
This
is
of Ferrand
Before leaving this subject we must also mention the works who has collected all the sources of information
articles
).
about Sri-Vijaya and Malayu-Malakka in two J.A. II, XI-XII Journal Asiatique ( J.A. II,
in
XX
4
works dealing with the subject, Of the modern those by Raffles, Fruin-Mees, With, and Veth have all been cast into shade by Kroni's Hindoe-Javaansche Geschiedenis'
historical
which
work,
is
bound
Java
history of
for
many
years
to
come.
Inleiding tot
de Hindoe-Javaansche Kunst,
equally
It is with pleasure valuable for the history of Javanese art. and gratitude that I recall the fact that these two books formed
study of Javanese history, and I have The second edition freely utilised them in the following pages. of the first named work reached my hands after the first draft
the foundation
of
my
Although I have
utilised the
new
are
the
revision
of
my
book,
references given
mostly to the
first edition.
Java the works of Goris and and the numerous articles by various scholars, Pigeaud (Tantu), have been of the greatest assistance to me as they are sure
For the
religious history of
to prove to others.
As regards
Cat.
II, III
Literature,
the
Catalogues
of
Manuscripts
), and the works by Berg (specially I, ( Hoofdlijrien, Mid. Jav. Trad, and Inleiding), Pandji Roman by Rassers, and several articles, notably the one by Berg in B. K. I., Vol. 71 Not being 556-578 ), have been most useful to me. ( pp. the Kavi language, I had to derive my acquainted with
INTRODUCTION
knowledge of Javanese literature mainly from these and the few translations of texts that have been published so far.
Of
of
most important are the learned articles contributed to T. B. G. and B. K. I, the organs of the two famous institutions that have done yeoman's work in
Malayasia,
by
far the
rescuing from oblivion the glorious past of Java and the neighbouring islands. These articles touch upon every aspect of the subject and are of inestimable value to anyone who
seeks to study the history of Indonesia.
It will
we
possess,
of Java,
Between these
adequacy of
Sumatra.
two
historical
of
would be wrong, however, to imagine that the degree importance, which should be attached to the different regions,
It
any way proportionate to the extant evidences regarding them. The absence of evidence available to us may be quite
is in
accidental.
The
to the
archaeological evidence
is
mostly perishable,
as
monuments such
we
find
in
Chinese evidence, the Chroniclers could only record events when there was any intercourse with one of these
states.
As
state
it
would come
in
according as
The absence
ABBREVIATIONS
A. B.
I.
A.
= Annual
Bibliography of
Indian
Leyden).
Archaeology
(Published by
Kern
Institute,
Ann. Rep. Arch. Surv.= Annual Report of the Archaeological Survey ot India.
Arch. Ond.=Archaeologisch Onderzock op Java en Madura (By the Commission appointed in 1901), 3 volumes
dealing respectively
Singasari,
with
and Barabudur.
dc
la
commission
Archaeologique de
Wndochine.
of the Western World, Translated from the Chinese of Hiuen Tsiang by Samuel Beal
(London, 1906).
B. E. F. E. O.=Bulletin de 1'Ecole Frangaisc d'Extr&me-Oricnt,
(Hanoi).
Berg-Hoofcllijnen
= Hoofdlij nen
der
Javaansche
Litteratuur-
Bib-Jav=Bibliotheca Javanica
B. K. I^=Bijdragen tot dc
taal-,
land- en
Volkenkunde van
Nederlandsch-Indie, uitgegcven door het Koninklijk Instituut voor de Taal-, land- en Volkenkunde van
Nederlandsch Indie
Cat.
L= Supplement
VoLI
op den Catalogus van de Javaansche en Madoerecsche Handschriften der Leidsche Universiteits-Bibliotheek by Dr. H. H. Juynboll. Leiden,
(1907), Vol. II (1911),
ABBREVIATIONS
Handschriftcn en
teits-Bibliotheek
Cat. III.
by Dr. H. H. Juynboll
(1912).
= Catalogus
schriftcn
Leidsche
Universiteits-Bibliotheek
Cat. IV.=Juynboll-Catalogus
by
and W. W.
Eockhill.
Petersburgh
Coedes-Textes=Textes d'auteurs Grecs et Latins relatifs a e 1' Extreme-Orient depuis le IV stecle Av. J. C.
Kecueillis et traduits sifecle. jusqu'au George Coedfes (Paris-Ernest Leroux, 1910).
XIV
par
(Berlin, 1923)
Congres I=Handelingen van het eerste Congres voor de taal-, land- en volkenkunde van Java, 1919 (Albrecht
& Co-Weltevreden).
Coomaraswamy=Ananda K. Coomaraswamy
and Indonesian Art
(1927).
History of Indian
Crawfurd-Dictionary=A Descriptive Dictionary of the Indian Islands and Adjacent Countries by John Crawfurd,
London
(1856)
van
Nederlandsch-Indie,
Ep. Carn.=Epigraphia Carnatica. Ep. Ind.=Epigraphia Indica. Fa-hien=A record of Buddhistic Kingdoms by Fa-hien. Translated
by
J.
Legge (Oxford,
1886).
van
zijn
150-jarig Bestaan
1778-
XVHP
Friederich-Bali=An account of the Island of Bali by Dr. R. Friederich (Miscellaneous Papers relating to IndoChina and the Indian Archipelago, Second Series,
Vol. II, London, 1887).
Fruin-MeesGeschiedenis
Gerini-Researches= Researches
on
(1909).
Goris=Bijdrage
Tot
de
kennis
der
Oud-Javaansche
en
Groenevcldt-Notes= Notes on
Malay Archipelago and Malacca compiled from Chinese Sources by W. P. Grocneveldt. V. B. G. Vol. XXXIX, Part I.
the
(Batavia, 1877)
I.
I.
A.
Letters.
I.
(Calcutta).
Ind. Ant,
= Indian
Antiquary.
Influences of Indian Art. Published by the
Indian
Art=The
I-tsing-Memoire=Memoire compost a 1'epoque de la grande dynastic T'ang stir les Religieux Eminents qui
allerent cherchcr la loi
dans
les
pays d'occident
par I-tsing.
1894).
XIV
ABBREVIATIONS
I-tsing-Record=A
671-695)
Record
of
the
Buddhist
religion
ad
by
I-tsing.
(Oxford, 1896).
J.
J.
J.
A. S. B. N.
S.-Do, New
(Letters,
Series (1905-1934).
J.
J.
A.
S.
B.
L.=Do
from 1935).
Bombay Branch
and
of the Royal
J.
B. O. R.
S.= Journal
Society.
of
the
Bihar
Orissa
Research
J. F.
J.
M.
I.
S.
M.= Journal
of the Federated
Malay
States
Museum.
G.
8.= Journal
J. I.
H.= Journal
of Indian History.
J.
Jonker
vergeleken C. G. Jonker
J.
R. A. S.
J. Str. Br.
Javanese
(Leiden)
K.
I.
Vol.
K.
O.=Kawi Oorkonden'in
Facsimile
Met
Inleiding en Trans-
Krom
1931
is
indicated by
Krom-
Geschiedenis
ABBREVIATIONS
xv
Krom-Kunst=Inleiding tot de Hindoe-Javaansche Kunst by Dr. N. J. Krom (Martinus Nijhoff, Hague, 1923).
Levi-Texts= Sanskrit
Mid.
Jav.
Texts
from
Bali
by
Sylvain
Levi
(Gaekwad Oriental
Trad.==Bcrg
Traditie (1927).
Series).
De
Middeljavaansche
Historische
Nag. Kr.=Nagara-Krtagama Edited by H. Kern (V. G. Vols. VII-VIII). N. I. O. N.=Nederlandsch Indie, Oud en Nieuw
Not. Bat. Gen.=Notulen
van dc Algemecne en Bestuursvan het Bataviaasch Genootsehap vergaderingen van Kunstcn en Wctcnschappen.
W.
F. Stuttcrheim (Singradja,
O.
J.
O.=Oud-Javaansche Oorkonden.
ties
Nagelaten Transcripvan Wijlen Dr. J. L. A. Brandes. Uitgegeven door Dr. N. J. Krom V. B. G. Vol. LX. (Batavia and the Hague, 1913.)
;
O. V.==Oudhcidkundig Vcrslag (Rapporten van den Oudheidkundig Dienst in Nederlandsch Indie, 1912-1919 Scries II. 1920 etc.)
;
Series
I,
Par=Pararaton
N.
Hot Bock der Koningen van Tumapcl en van Tweede Druk door Dr. Majapahit door Brandes
of
;
J.
Krom
The History
Raffles,
of Java
of Het Hinduismc in het Oosten van onzen Archipel door Dr. D. W. Horst (Leiden, 1893).
iv
ABBBEVIATIONS
Sarkar-Literature= Indian Influences on the Literature of Java
and
Sastri-Colas='The Colas'
by Prof. K. A. Nilakanta
Sastri,
Madras, 1935.
S. I.
S. I.
Ep. Rep.
Epigraphy.
Tantu=De Tantu
T. B. G.=Tijdschrift
5.
Mr. Oldham
with the
has definitely
village
identified
"existing
of
northern extremity of the Gaiijam district, about 6 miles N.E. of Ganjam town/' (J.B.O.R.S.,
Vol.
XXII,
:
pp. 1
ff.).
Page
25, f.n. 2.
Reference
statement
may be
"The
made
to the
following
Page
27,
11.
is the Malay fatherland of the Malays who colonised centuries " ( Toung Pao 1898, p. 370.). ago Sumatra 8-16. For a recent example in the neighbourhood
Peninsula
of
Vanasari
ff.
Jogyakerta
:
),
cf.
T. B. G., 1935,
pp. 83
Page
29, f.n. 1.
Add
The
seal
at the
I."
Chapter
Page
81,
1.
5.
scholars
to
now
p.
inclined to
J.
refer the
Vol.
p.
XII
;
1934
),
173
110
Pages 96-7.
(J.A.S.B., Vol.
XXIX,
17-21)
that
as
a result
of the
conquests
of
Skandagupta, a large body of Sakas from Gujarat, under a local chieftain, probably Aji
Saka by name, emigrated to Java and introduced the Saka Era. The arguments in support of this theory do not appear to me to be very
convincing.
Page
Dr.
ancient
that
'the
most
clear
make
distinction
Sumatra,
between the islands of Java and and these two great islands formed the continent of Yava. Probably for Ptolemy and for all the ancient geographers Yava is
(J.G.I.S., Vol. I, p. 93)
Java-Sumatra/
XVlii
Page
9-11.
below the foot-prints of king Parnavarman. Dr. K. P. Jayaswal reads it as "Sri Purnnavarmanat" ( Ep. Ind., Vol. XXII, p. 4 ), but
it is,
at best, doubtful.
Mr. F. M. Schnitger draws attention to a reference to Tarumapur in an inscription of Kulottunga (S.LI., Vol. Ill, Part 2, p. 159). It is about ten miles north of Cape Comorin, the region from which Agastya worship spread to the Schnitger finds in the name Taruma an Archipelago.
additional
(T.B.G., 1934,
Page
142,
4-5.
Cf.
also
Schlegel's
ff.
views
).
Toung
Pao,
Book
SUVARNADVlPA
Chapter
I.
THE LAND
The Malay Peninsula and the Malay Archipelago constitute together the region known as Malayasia. Although this name is not in general use, we prefer to adopt it as it very nearly
coincides with the group of ancient Indian colonies in the Far East with which we propose to deal in this volume.
the most
southerly part of
a long narrow strip of land into the China sea and connected with the mainland projecting by the Isthmus of Era. In spite, however, of this connection
with land, the peninsula belongs, geographically, to the Malay The Malay Archipelago and not to the Asiatic continent.
Archipelago
Indies,
is
also
island of Sumatra which lies to the west of the Malay Peninsula and is separated from it by the Straits of Malacca. The narrow Sunda Strait parts Sumatra
its
south-east.
Java
the beginning of a series of islands lying in a long chain in the direction from west to east. These are Bali, Lombok,
New-Guinea.
little
the south of
this line
lies to the north, along a line of Sumatra towards the east. It centre
THE LAND
largest
island in the
archipelago.
Next comes Celebes, and then the large group known as the Moluccas or Spice islands. Beyond
lie
of
islands
all
the large island of New of islands known as the Philippines to the north.
more than six thousand, Guinea to the east and the group
The Archipelago is separated from Indo-China in the north by the South China Sea and from Australia in the south by the Timor Sea. To the west there is no large country
till
we reach
intervening
sea being dotted with hundreds of islands. of these, beginning from the cast are
As Wallace has
dimensions
lands' End,
pointed out,
it is
of the
Archipelago are
continental.
"If
New-Guinea would
extends over
one part of
Bali
is
part, including
New
Lombok
is
similarly
separated from Australia. Between these two parts, however, the depth of the sea has been found to be from 1000 to 3,557
the two
fathoms, although in some places, as between Bali and Lombok, separated by a strait not more than regions are
15 miles wide.
difference
The study
between these two regions, and we might accordingly divide the Archipelago into an Asiatic and an Australian Zone.
Wallace, who has gone more deeply into this question than any other scholar, postulates from the above premises that Sumatra, Java, Bali and Borneo formed at one time a
part of the continent of Asia. into separate islands as follows
:
He
SUVAENADVlPA
and
then
afterwards
Sumatra,
elevations
many
other
since
taken
place."
other
parts of the Archipelago. As we arc mainly concerned with that part of it alone which includes Sumatra, Java, Bali and
Borneo,
we need
any
further.
A
given
detailed account
of the
separately
when we
Here
deal with
subsequent
chapters.
we
The equator
passes
almost
through the
centre of the
Archipelago, and, excepting the northern half of the Philippines, nearly the whole of the Archipelago lies within ten degrees
of latitude
on cither
side.
In
consequence
warm summer
the year and the only change of seasons prevails throughout to wet. The whole of this region is within is that from dry
The Archipelago
volcanic
five
band
thousand miles long, marked by scores of active and hundreds of extinct craters. It runs through Sumatra and Java, and thence through the islands of Bali, Lombok, Flores to Timor, curving north through the Moluccas, and again north,
from the
Philippines.
end
of
Celebes
is
through
;
The zone
narrow
New
Guinea have np
THE LAND
volcanoes,
1
known
disturbances/'
geographical position of Malayasia invested it with a high degree of commercial importance. Situated on the highway of maritime traffic between China on the one hand and western
The
Rome and Arabia on the other, bound to develop important centres of trade and it was commerce. The route to China from the west lay either through the Straits of Malacca or along the western coast of Sumatra and then through the Sunda Strait. Thus Sumatra and
countries like India, Greece,
Malay Peninsula, and, to a certain extent, Java also profited by this trade. The main volume of this trade must always have passed through the Straits of Malacca, and sometimes, perhaps,
the goods were transported by land across the Isthmus of Kra in order to avoid the long voyage along the eastern and western
coasts
of the
Malay Peninsula.
Malayasia has been famous in all ages for its timber and minerals and almost enjoyed the monopoly in spices. This was undoubtedly the main reason why the western nations
were attracted to this corner of Asia from very early times. This was particularly true of India and China which were the
nearest countries to the Archipelago that possessed a highly
There was a regular maritime intercourse between India and the Far East as early at least as the first century A. D.
This
proved by the statement in the Periplus that from Indian ports regularly sailed to Chrysc, and there ships
is definitely
I,
The
is
based on the
following works
(a)
(b)
Major C. M. Enriquez Malaya ( Hurst and Blackett, 1927 ). John Crawfurd Dictionary of the Indian Islands and adjacent
).
A. Cabaton
Java, Sumatra
islands
of
the
Dutch East
Unwin, 1911
SUVARNADVlPA
1 As we was a brisk trade relation between the two. later Chryse was a vague name applied to Malayasia.
5
shall see
further statement in the Periplus, that after Chryse "under the very north, the sea outside ends in a land called
The
This,"
is
As
out,
this
tends
to prove "that the sea-route to China via the Straits of Malacca even though it was not yet in general use, was no longer
unknown
This
is
confirmed by
the fact that not long afterwards the sailor Alexander sailed to the Malay Peninsula and beyond for, to quote again from Clifford, "it may safely be concluded that the feasibility
;
had become known to the China long before an adventurer from the west was enabled to test the fact of its existence through the means 2 of an actual voyage."
of this
south-eastern passage
of
sea-farers
The author
any
seem
to have possessed
knowledge of the Far East. The reason seems to bo that there was no direct communication between the Coromandcl coast and the Far East, but the voyage was made from the Gangctic region either direct or along the coast of Bay of Bengal. This follows from the fact that
definite information or accurate
whenever Chryse
is
it
is
invariably
As
this
may
quote
below
the
the ships put in from Damirica (Tamil land) and from the north, the most important are, in order as they lie, first Camara, then
in
The
Periplus of the
)
Erythraean sea
edited by
W.
H. Schoff
Longmans, 1912
2,
pp, 45-48-
Ibid. p. 260.
THE LAND
coasting along the shore as far as Damirica ; and other very large vessels made of single logs bound together called sangara ;
but those which make the voyage to Chryse and to the Ganges are called eolandia^ and are very large." (p. 46)
2.
and
"After these, the course turns towards the east again, with the ocean towards the right and the sailing
into
east,
shore remaining beyond to the left, Ganges conies view, and near it the very last land towards the
Chryse."
3.
(p.
47)
just opposite this
"And
in
is
an
island
toward the
Chryse."
(p.
it
is
called
48)
is
hardly any doubt that to the author of the Periplus Chryse is closely associated with the Gangetic region. The last sentence in the first passage may be taken to imply
Thus there
it
is
Periplus
1 It is voyage to the west coast of India from African shore. difficult to believe that the author would not have referred to
if
known
in
his
time, at
least in passage
No.
1.
quoted above.
is confirmed by Ptolemy. He refers to the immediately to the south of Paloura, where the aplieterium, vessels bound for the Malay Peninsula "ceased to follow the
This
view
and entered the high seas"*. 8. L6vi has shown that the city of Paloura, which played such an important part in the eastern ocean trade of India was the same as the famous city of Dantapura, in Kalinga, which figures so
littoral
i.
Ibid. p. 45.
3.
Ptolemy.
M'c. Crindle
),
SUVARNADVfPA
prominently
in
the
Buddhist
literature.
Thus
even
in
therefore, to
accept the view, generally held on the authority was a direct voyage between
first
century A. D.
between South
Indian
impossible one. All that we learn from Ptolemy is that the usual point of departure for the Far East was near Paloura. It is possible, however, that occasionally ships sailed direct from
cast,
8
Andaman
the
),
The
was no
fame
doubt
of
Paloura or Dantapura,
in Kaliiiga
coastal region
and
the
Godavarl
its great extent, to That as the point of departure for the Far East. importance probably also explains why the Chinese referred to Java and
to
other
islands
of the
Archipelago
in India
abbreviation of
Kalinga.
which
connected, through
its
ports
on the
we have Kala by Arab writers and to Singapore and Malacca by the Portuguese. In Sumatra the most important
Malay
Peninsula
classical
writings, to
A. 1925, pp. 46-57. G. Jouveau-Dubreuil held the view that the apheterium was situated near the mouth of the Godavarl (Ancient History of the Deccan pp. 86-88)
1.
J.
2.
3.
Cf. e. g.
in
Geschiedenis, p. 53.
in pre-historic
times
cf.
Chap.
II.
THE LAND
port was Srl-Vijaya. Others will be referred to in due course. On the whole, therefore, we can easily visualise Malayasia
as a fairly extensive region between the continents of Asia and Australia, enjoying peculiar advantages of trade and commerce, both by its geographical position as well as by its native products. From a very early period it had intercourse
south and
with China on the north, Australia and the Pacific islands on the east, and India and various islands in the Indian
It
inhabitants
own.
Chapter
II
THE PEOPLE
discussion o the people or peoples that inhabited before the advent of the Hindus belongs to the Malayasia domain of anthropology. It is beyond the scope of the present work to dwell upon this question at length and I propose,
A detailed
merely to give in broad outline the salient facts on which there is a general agreement among scholars.
therefore,
It is usual to divide the
(1)
The
1
primitive races
population into three main strata : (2) the Proto-Malays and (3) the
Malays.
(1) The Semang and the Sakai may be taken as fair specimens of the
of the
Malay Peninsula
to the
the region in primitive times. The Semang Negritos belong earliest stratum of population which has survived in
the peninsula. They now occupy "the wooded hills in the north of the peninsula, in Kedah, Pcrak and northern Pahang :
Temo
in
Ulu Rompiii
hair,
and
:
everted
"They are dark, with woolly spreading noses, feeble chins, and lips often and sometimes they are almost pigmies in size.
in south Pahang".
flat,
But
are naked
live
They have no
The account
of the tribes
is
excellent
The
this
detailed
people is given by I. H. N. Evans in "Ethnology and Archaeology of the Malay Peninsula" (Cambridge, 1927) and by R. J. Wilkinson in "A History of the Peninsular Malays" 3rd Edition
primitive
Singapore
(1923).
10
is
THE PEOPLE
the bow and poisoned arrow. They live under over-hanging rocks or leaf-shelter and build no houses."
north-west Pahang. They resemble the Semang in many respects and the two have interbred to a considerable extent.
"In colour the Sakai vary from brown to yellow, and are lighter even than Malays. The hair is long and black, the nose finely cut and tilted, the eyes horizontal and half-closed and the chin sharp and pointed. They tattoo the face in certain districts
nose.
and sometimes wear a ring or a porcupine's quill through the Their distinctive weapon is the blow-pipe with which
they arc extremely skilful. As a rule they live in huts sometimes placing them up trees at a height of 30 feet from the
ground."
(2)
all
over Malayasia
the
type.
are
called
Malay. The Jakun who occupy the south of Peninsula may be taken as a fair specimen of this
are
Malay "They
in colour, with straight smooth black hair of Mongolian type. The cheek-bone is high, the eyes are slightly oblique. Though inclined to be nomadic, they usually practise
coppery
some form of
agriculture,
and
live in fairly
good houses."
The Proto-Malay type is met with all over Malayasia. The Batak, Achinese, Gayo and Lampongs of Sumatra, the Dayaks, Kayan, Kenyah, Dusun and Murut of Borneo, and the aborigines
of Celebes, Ternate
and Tidore all belong to this type. Some of them are cruel and ferocious. The Batak, for example, are said to be cannibals who eat prisoners and aged relatives. The Kayan and Kenyah are noted for their frightful cruelty and their women seem to have a genius for devising tortures for captives, slaves and strangers. Others are more civilised.
The Dayaks
tractable and purposes, are described as 'mild in character, when well used, grateful for kindness, industrious, hospitable honest and simple ; neither treacherous nor cunning, and so
SUVARNADVlPA
truthful that the
11
safely taken
word
of one
of
them might be
the Malay Peninsula and the coastal regions of Sumatra and Borneo (2) the Javanese of Java, Madura, Bali and parts of
;
(3)
and
(4)
the
follows
"In character
impassive.
He
is
exhibits
in
a reserve, diffidence
attractive,
bashfulness,
which
sonic degree
observers to think that the ferocious and blood-thirsty qualities imputed to the race arc grossly exaggerated. He is not
demonstrative.
His
feelings,
of surprise
or fear,
arc
never
openly manifested, and arc probably not strongly felt. He is in slow and deliberate speech. High-class Malays are and have all the quiet ease and dignity of exceedingly polite,
well-bred Europeans.
cruelty
their character."
Yet all this is compatible with a and contempt for human life, which is the dark
reckless
side of
Having given a short description of the various peoples, to trace their origin and affinities from Both these questions racial and linguistic points of view. are beset with serious difficulties and the views of different We must, scholars are by no means in complete agreement.
by merely quoting the view of one
of
study, referring the readers,
who
1.
Wallace
II, p.
439.
of
2.
Roland B. Dixon
The
Racial
History
p. 275.
Man
(Charles
cribner's Sons,
New
12
THE PEOPLE
"The oldest stratum of population was the Negrito PalaeAlpine which survives to-day in comparative purity only among the Andamanese. With this was later blended a taller Negroid
mixed Proto-Australoid and Proto-Negroid types, the Semang. This Negroid population is still represented among some of the hill-folk in Burma, such as the
people, of
to
form
Chin,
is
in
in the
Subsequently to the formation of Semang a strong immigration came into the Peninsula from the north, of the normal Palae- Alpine type, of which perhaps some of
the
From
the
Semang was derived the Sakai the Jakun the later and less modified
;
portions of this wave forming the older Malay groups of to-day. Finally in recent times came the Mcnangkabau Malays from
earlier
last
The statement
is,
in the
we
shall
see
As regards language, it has been recognised for a long time that the language of the Malays belongs to the same family as that of Polynesia and the name Malayo-Polynesian
was applied
to this group. Since then, however, Mclanesian, Polynesian, Micronesian and Indonesian (Malay) languages have all been proved to belong to the same family to which
the
of
new name Austro-nesian has been applied. The discovery human skulls and the pre-liistoric stone implements in
cultural affinity
1
and
languages.
hardly any doubt that the primitive wild tribes of Malayasia belonged to the palaeolithic age. Discoveries of human skulls and other pre-historic finds establish a sort of racial and
is
I.
There
For
pre-historic finds
cf.
Tijdschr.
PP- SS 1
"^;
O. V. 1924
SUVARNADVIPA
cultural affinity
13
among
large groups of
Indo-China,
Indonesia,
They
the gradually ousted by peoples speaking Austro-nesian group of languages and belonging to the Neo-lithic period. The time and nature of contact between all these
were
we have no means to determine. So far as we can judge from the analogy of similar events and the few facts that present themselves to us, the result of the conflict seems to be, that the original inhabitants were partly exterminated, partly incorporated with the new-comers, and partly pushed back to hills and jungles where some of them maintain a precarious
races
existence upto the present day.
with the fact that their languages were derived from one stock, and it is also supported by prc-historic finds, as noted before.
Be
may, there is hardly any doubt that they must have lived together in close bonds of union, before they were scattered
that as
it
easily
postulate
common home
for
this
Austro-nesian group of peoples. Kern made a critical study of the question by considering the fauna and flora of this home-
land as revealed by the common elements in the various languages of the group. By this process of study he placed the home-land of the Austro-nesians on the coast of IndoChina.
skulls
1
This view
is
human
finds
which
in
V. G. Vol. VI, pp. 105-120. Kern calls it "Secundaire for he traces their origin further back to India, as will appear later (V. G. Vol. XV, p. 180). R. O. Winstedt has further supported this view by noting the occurrence of identical tales in
I.
Kern
the Indo-nesian
pp. iiQff).
(J.
Str. Br. R.
A. S. No.
76,
14
ffiE
PEOPLE
Ferrand has traced the early history of these peoples still further back, mainly on the authority of an account preserved by Ibn Said (13th cent.). He thinks that they originally lived
in
upper
Asia
as
driven by the
latter,
neighbours of the Chinese, and being about 1000 B. C., came down to Indo-
China along the valleys of the Irawadi, Salwin, Mekong and Menam rivers. Nearly five hundred years later they migrated again from this region to Malay Peninsula and
various islands of the Indian Archipelago.
1
Of
late,
another
theory
been advanced by Van Stein Callenfels. He infers from the remains of. their metallic objects that the
has
original
home
Altai mountains.*
must be remembered, however, that considering the scanty which the above conclusions are necessarily based, they can only be regarded as provisional.
It
Nor
process of a body of people from the mainland to each of the migration of There must have been currents and cross-currents islands.
from
and we have to and emigrations, not only many in number postulate migrations but probably also varied in character. It will be outside the
different quarters that swelled the tide,
scope of this book to pursue the ramification of this fascinating problem any further. But there is another point of view
regarding this question which
subject-matter of this
is
virtually connected
with the
length.
at
some
Recent
linguistic researches
definite
connection
between the languages of some primitive tribes of India such as Munda and KhiTsi with Mon-Khmer and allied languages including those of Semang and Sakai. The great philologist
Schmidt has
thus established
the existence of
a linguistic
1.
J.
I 9 I 9>
P- 201.
2.
SUVARNADVlPA
family,
15
1
which
is
now
called
Austro-Asiatic.
Schmidt
which
now
is
definitely
established,
)a
among
this
them
point
lacking yet.
seeks to establish a "larger linguistic unity between AustroAsiatic and Austro-nesian and calls the family thus constituted
Here, again, Schmidt indicates the possibility of an ethnic unity among the peoples whose linguistic affinity
'Austric*
is
"
peoples of Indo-China and Indo-nesia as belonging to the same stock as the Munda and 3 allied tribes of Central India and the Khasis of North-
Schmidt thus
regards
the
eastern India. He regards India as the original home of all these peoples from which they gradually spread to the east
and
south-east.
The
this respect.
'In the
my
investigations
same way as I have presented here the results of on movements of peoples who, starting
etc.
1. I
Die Mon-Khmer-Volker
(1906) pp. 35
ff,
in B. E. F. E.
O.
Vol. VII.
(pp.
213-263), VIII
good exposition
of
Schmidt's view,
is given in the introductory ''Pre-Aryan and Pre-Dravidian in India" by Dr. P. C. Bagchi chapter (Calcutta University, 1929) from which I have freely quoted. (The page marks within bracket in the text refer to this book).
concerned,
2.
Schmidt, op.
cit. cf.
specially, p. 233.
The Muncla group of language includes Kol, the more eastern 3. Kherwari with Santali, Muncjarfc Bhumij, hirhor, Kocla, Ho, Turi, Asuri,
and Korwa dialects and the western Kurku ; Kb aria Juang and two mixed languages Savara and Gadaba. (Dr. P. C. Bagchi, op.
;
the*
cit.
p. VI.)
16
THE PEOPLE
from India towards the east, at first spread themselves over the whole length of Indo-Chinese Peninsula, and then over all the islands of the Pacific Ocean upto its eastern extremity,
my
attention
in
which,
my
more
directly
western fringe
drawn to another current opinion, also started from India, but turned towards the south and touching only the of the Pacific Ocean proceeded, perhaps by
1
way
of
New
But
several
other scholars have supported this view on entirely different the names of 8. grounds. Among them may be mentioned The relevant articles on L6vi, J. Przyluski and J. Bloch.
this
by these eminent scholars have been published English version by Dr. P. C. Bagchi. The together following summary is derived almost entirely from this book entitled "Pro-Aryan and Pre-Dravidian in India/'
subject
in
'Prof.
Thomson
first
maintained that
Munda
influence can
be traced in the formation of Indian vernaculars. Recent studies have tried to establish that this influence can be
traced further back.
certain
Prof.
number
of
languages.
Munda
be explained by
1.
is
admitting
cit,
an
Austro-Asiatic
element.
of
In
Schmidt, op.
pp. 248-249.
critical
summary
Schmidt's
"From Central India to Polynesia" (J. Str. view given by Blagden Br. R. A. S. No. 53 p. 63). W. F. de Hevesy 2. Recently Schmidt's view has been challenged by
who
(J.
denies
the existence
of
B. O. R. S. Vol.
XX
pp. 251
Slf^AKNADVlPA
1923 Prof.
S.
1?
some
geographical
names
of
ancient
Kosala-Tosala,
Auga-Vanga,
Kalinga-Trilinga, Utkala-Mekala, and Pulinda-Kulinda, ethnic names which go by pairs, can be explained by the morphological
system of the Austro-Asiatic languages. In 1926 Przyluski name of an ancient people of the Punjab, the Udumbara, in a similar way and affiliate it to the Austrotried to explain the
In another article, the same scholar discussed some names of Indian towns in the geography of Ptolemy and tried to explain them by Austro-Asiatic forms (pp. XII-XIII).
Asiatic group.
'In
to
another scries of articles, Prof. Przyluski is trying prove a certain number of Indian myths by the Austro-
Asiatic influence.
He studied the Mahabharata story of and some legends of the nagl, in Indian literature, Matsyagaiidha compared them with similar tales in the Austro-Asiatic domain, and concluded that these stories and legends were conceived in societies living near the sea, societies of which the civilisation and social organisation were different from those of the neighbouring peoples, the Chinese and the Indo-Aryans/
(p.
XIII)
The bearing
by
S. L<$vi.
whether the legends, the religion and philosophical thought of India do not owe anything to this past. India has been too exclusively examined from the Indo-European It ought to be remembered that India is a great standpoint.
maritime country, open to a vast sea forming so exactly its Mediterranean, a Mediterranean of proportionate dimensions
which for a long time was believed to be closed in the south. The movement which carried the Indian colonisation towards the Far East, probably about the beginning of the Christian Era, was far from inaugurating a new route, as Columbus did in navigating towards the West. Adventurers, traffickers and
missionaries profited
IS
THE PEOPLE
and followed under the best condition of comfort and efficiency the way traced from time immemorial by the mariners of
another race
whom
the
to
first
phase
Far East
of India.
not perhaps be rash to imagine that, that colonisation was, at least partly, the result of Dravidian and Aryan settlements in India which dislodged the primitive
peoples and forced them to find a
It
new home
however, that conclusion of an almost has been arrived at by certain scholars. opposite character Krom, for example, believes that the Indo-nesians had colonised
may be
noted,
India in primitive times, and the later Aryan colonisation of the 2 This is in Far East was merely the reverse of that process. contradiction to the views of Schmidt and Lvi, and flagrant
seems to be based mainly on the theory of Mr. J. Hornell. In u his Memoir on thc Origins and Ethnological significance of the
Indian Boat Designs" Mr. Hornell "admits a strong Polynesian influence on the Prc-Dravidian population of the southern coast
Malayan immigration must have arrived later, after the entrance of the Dravidians on the scene, and it was a Malayan people who brought from the
of India.
He
thinks that a
wave
of
XVII)
Two
other observations by different scholars probably lend In the first place, Prof. Das Gupta "has
of the
Central
XVII)
also held similar view; cf. V. G., Vol. XV, p. 180. held that they came from India, their ultimate home being Central Asia. This is not in conflict with his original view that the homeland of the Malayo- Polynesians was the eastern coast of Further India,
Kern
He
2.
Krom
Geschiedenis, p. 38,
SUVARNADVlPA
Secondly,
of
19
we
have
the
following
remarks
made
by
monoliths
monoliths
"The method of erection of these very important, as it throws some light on the
erection of pre-historic monoliths in other parts of the world. Assam and Madagascar are the only remaining parts of the
world where
continues
that
it
the
The
to
stones still practice of erecting rough origin of this cult is uncertain, but it appears
be mainly imputed to the Mon-Khmer intrusion In his opinion these monoliths take the from the east." forms of Ufigam and yoni, and he thinks that they possibly
is
XVII-XVIII)
In all these cases the similarity that undoubtedly exists may be explained by supposing either that India derived the practices from Indo-ncsia or that Indo-nesia derived them from India.
however, prove the existence of the cult of Linga and Yoni in the Indus Valley at least in the beginning of the third mUlenium B. C. Thus the migration of the cult towards the cast seems most probable. Considering the whole course of Indian history it seems more
recent discoveries at Mohenjo-daro,
The
probable that the migration of the people and ideas was generally from India towards the east, and no tangible evidence has yet been obtained that the process was just the reverse.
the whole, therefore, the views of Schmidt and Sylvain Lvi appear far more reasonable than those of Horncll and Hutton.
On
In view of a possible pre-historic connection between India and Malayasia, it is necessary to say something on the word Malaya which has given the name to the dominant race and the dominant language in Malayasia. It is a well-known fact
that
an
Indian
(var.
tribe
is
called
Malava
var.
Malava
or
Malaya
Malaya)
ancient times.
The
common
also
form, of course,
Marshall
The Indus
Civilisation, pp. 58
20
tribal
THE PEOPLE
name.
rests chiefly on the Greek form "The Greeks" says he "called them the Malloi. Had the name Malava been in common use at that time, I feel sure that the Greeks would have transliterated the word as the
His conclusion
of the name.
Malluoi.
of the
This seems to
me
to
tribal
1
name
at the time
Malaya."
Nasik.
common use. The form Malaya occurs and Malaya in an inscription found at The interchange of y and v is also attested by the
names of
a
alternative
Satavahana
Pulumavi.*
The
antiquity
of the Mftlava
it
Panini's reference to
(ftyudhajivin).
as a clan living
is
There
Malaya tribe is proved by by the profession of arms no doubt also that the Malavas were parts of India. Alexander met them
in the Punjab, but their settlement in Rajputanfi is proved by the discovery of thousands of their coins at Nagar in Jaypur 5 and the reference in the Nasik inscription mentioned State
above.
Malavas.
in
The Indian literature also makes frequent references to the The Mahabharata knows of various Malava tribes 6 The Eamayana and Matsyathe west, north and south.
7 while purana include the Malavas among the eastern tribes various other texts refer to them as a people in one or other
parts of India.
i.
J.
A. S.
B.,
N.
S.,
Vol.
XIX
(1924).
Numismatic supplement
20.
Rapson
Ibid, fn.
of the
Andhras
etc
p.
LVII.
4. 5.
V. Smith
Catalogue of Coins
in the
Indian
Museum,
pp. 161
ff.
I7off.
6.
7.
cf.
Mahabharata
RamSyana
IV-4O, V-22.
Matsyapurana Ch.
14 V. 34.
SUVAKNADVlPA
21
The wide spread of the Malavas may also be guessed from Indian dialects or toponyms connected with them. Mr. Grierson
has referred to a Malavia dialect extending from Perozcpur to Bhatinda in the Punjab, and we have also the well-known
Malayalam language of southern India. The well-known Indian provinces of Malava in northern India and Malaya-bar or Malabar in southern India still testify to the influence of that
tribal
is
name.
referred to in Purftnas
as
one
Kulaparratas or boundary mountains in India. the famous era, beginning in 58 B. C., has been associated Lastly with the Malavas from the earliest times.
of the seven
The Buddhist literature also refers to Malaya country. The famous Lankavatara Sutra is said to have been delivered by
the
Buddha
in
the
city
of
of the
Malaya mountain on the border of the sea. The Buddhist reference to Malaya has been regarded by some as purely imaginary but the existence of a Malaya mountain in Ceylon is proved by Ptolemy and MahSvarnsa. That of a Malaya country and a Malaya mountain in the south of India also rests
on
definite
grounds.
The
is
to China in A.
D. 719
country adjoining mount Potalaka, his father being preceptor of the king of Kancl. Hiuen Tsang places the country of
Malakuta, 3000
li
its
mountains
Alberuni also places Malaya 40 farsakhs (about 160 miles) south of KaSci. Thus we have both a Malaya country and a Malaya mountain in the extreme south of
the Indian Peninsula. 1
There
is
no doubt that
this
name
is
i.
S.
L6vi
in J.
A. CCVI, pp, 65
ff.
Walters
On Yuan
Chwang,
Vol.
II,
pp. 229-231.
Ptolemy
Geiger
cf.
Mahavarhsa,
p. 60.
I,,
p. 200;
also B. E. F. E.
Q.
22
THE PEOPLE
Geographers
1 Malaya-bar or simply Malay.
tribal
or geographical names all over India, upto its north-western, eastern and southern extremities, the spread of this name across
the sea
is
no
less
conspicuous.
On
the
east,
the
famous
Malays of Malayasia, the place names Malay and Malacca in 8 Mala or Malava for Laos the Peninsula, Malayu in Sumatra,
and perhaps even Molucca islands in the eastern extremity of the archipelago, and on the west Maldives (Maladvlpa), and
8 Malay the ancient name of Madagascar testify to the spread of the name in Indo-China and along the whole range of the
southern ocean.
Now
Ferrand
has- drawn
Indo-nesian language, mixed with Sanskrit vocabulary, was other fact with current in Madagascar. Combining this
traditional
the
times
conclusion
that
Madagascar was
Indo-nesians.*
ancient
by
Hinduiscd
not necessary for the present to discuss the further implications of this theory as enunciated by
It is
Ferrand, and I must rest content by pointing out the bearing of the account of Malava Malaya, as given above, on this as well as several other theories.
Now
above,
1.
(as modified
all
by the discoveries
at Mohenjo-daro) referred to
Ferrand
"The name Malayu is very common in Sumatra. there are five villages mountain and a river of that name
2.
;
There are a
called
p. 115.
Malayu
and a
tribe of that
3.
name."
T'oung Pao,
II,
Ferrand
J. J.
4.
A. II-XI1 (1918) pp. 121 ff. A. 1I-XIV (1919), pp 62 ff., pp. 201
ff.
Krom, however,
thinks
that the Indo-nesian people colonised Madagascar before they came into contact with the Hindus. He attributes the Indian element in the
language
of
Madagascar
SUVABNADVIPA
south-east, to
23
Assam, Burma, Lido-China and Malay Archipelago, both by land and sea. The migrations of the Malava tribe, so far as we can judge from the occurrence of geographical names,
as
follow,
we have
trace
seen above, exactly this course, as we can to Assam on the one side and to
trace the
name
Ceylon (Malava mountain in Lanka) and Sumatra (Malayu) to Malay Peninsula, perhaps even to Moluccos. On the west we can trace it from Malabar to Maldives and Madagascar. It is, no doubt, more reasonable to explain the linguistic facts
observed by Ferrand in Madagascar by supposing a common centre in India, from which the streams of colonisation
proceeded both towards the east as well as towards the west, than by supposing that Hindu colonists first settled in Malayasia and then turned back to colonise Madagascar. The people of
their ancestors
came from
Mangalore.
of
This place
is
Malaya Peninsula, but it should not be forgotten that Mangalore is the name of a well-known place in Malabar Coast and is referred to by Arab writers as one of the most celebrated
towns of Malabar.
2
I do not wish to be dogmatic and do not altogether reject But the known facts about the Malavatribe
Malaya
in India
seem to me
of
to
offer
explanation
not
only
the
problem
of
Madagascar but also of the racial, linguistic and cultural phenomena observed by Schmidt, Hutton and Hornell. It is
interesting
to
note
the
in
this
connection
the
that
various words
inscribed
on
coins
of
Malavas which
tribal
have
been
non-
provisionally explained as
Sanskritic.
1.
names of
leaders, are
J.A. Il-XiV
Ferrand
2.
Textes, p. 204.
24
THE PEOPLE
Mapaya, MagajaSa, Magaja, Magojava, Gojara, MaSapa, Mapaka, Pacha, Magacha, Gajava, Jamaka, Jamapaya, Paya. Whatever the language may be, it shows one peculiar Austro-nesian
characteristic,
in certain
geographical nomenclatures of ancient India, viz., the existence of a certain number of words constituting almost identical pairs, differentiated between themselves only by the nature of
their initial
consonants.
Among
easily
Malava
of this
we may
two
series
2.
Malava-Malaya has played great part in the history name is associated with an old language, the most ancient era and two important provinces of India. The tribe has played an equally dominant part in the Indian Malaya It has been the dominant race in the Indian Archipelago seas.
of India.
Its
The
language are spread over a wide region almost from Australia to African coast. I have extending
its
and
name and
shown above enough grounds for the presumption and it must not be regarded as anything more than a mere presumption that the Malava of India may be looked upon as the parent stock
of
the
Malays
who played
such
leading
part
in
Malayasia. It may be interesting to note here that Przyluski has shown from linguistic data that Udumbara or Odumbara
of an
The Odumbaras were country. designated of the Malavas and the coins of the two peoples neighbours
belong
facie
period.
Thus,
prima
in
nothing
inherently
objectionable
also
the
may
be the name of
an Austro-Asiatic people.
I.
P.
C.
Bagchi
Pre- Aryan
pp. 160
and
Pre-Dravidian
in
India,
pp. 149-160.
a.
V. A. Smith
op.
cit,
ff.,
p. 166.
SUVABNADVIPA
If the presumption be held a reasonable one, we to Ptolemy's account as an evidence that the Malays
25
may
refer
to the
Far East before his time. Ptolemy refers Malaia in Ceylon and cape Malcou Kolon in the Golden
:
Khersonesus.
follows
that this
Regarding the latter, M'c. Crindlc remarks as "Mr. Crawford has noticed the singular circumstance name is pure Javanese signifying "Western Malays."
so
old
is
a question
but I
Takkhala
is
Siamese extracts the foundation of the Malays." Thus indications are not ascribed to
wanting that various branches of the Malay tribe had settled in Malayasia before the second century A. D. There is a general
tradition
stock
among the Malays of Minankabau that their parent came from India and settled in the western coast of
it is
Sumatra. 1
impossible to arrive at any definite conclusion in this matter, pre-historic migrations of Austro-nesian tribes
Thus while
from India to Malayasia appear very probable, and if this view be correct, we may regard the Indian Malaya-Malava people as
one of these
tribes.
8
1.
Cf.
Ferrand
I
in J.
A. il-XII,
p, 77.
2.
Although
have
of the
to
the
is
only
fair
note that
made
same suggestion
in
his 'Researches
I
ff).
mixed up with
of fanciful
rest
a great deal of extraneous matters and some amount as I can see, his views etymological derivations. So far
Gerini explains
tribal
Maleou-Kolon as referring to two prominent Indian names- Malay and Kola (Cola) of south India, and he traces many
names
in
the
He
the
holds that
Malacca was
either
modification of
Malayaka (meaning
name
I
of a southern
the country of the Malays) or identical with Malaka, Indian tribe mentioned in the Mahabharata
this
(p. 105).
view
in
and Moluccos,
With
Chapter
III.
for a pretty long time before they came into contact with the Hindus and imbibed their civilisation. In order, therefore,
to
estimate properly the influence of this new element we must have some idea of the civilisation which these indigenous
Unfortunately the materials for such a study are very scanty. The actual remains left by these races do not difier
very much from what is usually termed as 'pre-historic' and met with in various other countries. We may start with a brief 1 where a more account of them, beginning from Java
,
other places.
Laos is referred to as Malava (p. n?) I have not borrowed from Gerini any views or statements recorded in this chapter.
without sufficient I must also state that it is usually held, though reason, that the term Malaya as designating the Malay Peninsula came in the seventeenth century A.D. ( J. Mai. Br. R. A. S. 1930, into use
only
p. 85),
of a large number presumably in consequence of the migration in the fifteenth century A. D. ( B. C. A. of Malays from Sumatra,
Iv
Q09, p.
that
Blagden refers to I-tsing's Malayu and infers Malaya country par excellence* was in Central Sumatra, a fact on the subject which derives very well with native Malay tradition
184
)
many
of the
Malays
of
(
Sumatran
213).
state of
Minangkabau
Br. R. A. S.
name
Malaya being
Dictionary
Crawford
pp. 250-252).
i.
The
on
(a)
Krom
following sketch of the pre-historic remains of Java is based Kunst Vol. i. pp. 121-26 ; (b) Krom-Geschiedenis, pp. 42-45.
SUVAKNADVlPA
The
I.
27
pre-historic archaeological
:
remains in Java
may be
classified as follows
Palaeolithic
and
neolithic implements
such as axe-head
chisel, pole
II.
These
The stone coffins, consisting of a long and deep (b) rectangular chest with a cover curved like an arch on the outer side. Both the chest and the cover have thick walls, which
are rough outside (probably due to long exposure) but polished within. The dead body was introduced through a hole at one
end which was then closed by a flat stone. The hole was sometimes surrounded by decorative designs. The chest was also sometimes painted with straight and curved lines and of men and animals (tiger, birds etc). primitive pictures
(c)
constructed
by placing one
upright in the
ground.
articles arc found in these graves, such as beads, stone implements, copper rings for arms and legs, iron lance-point or short swords. Bronze articles are not,
Various
neolithic
however, found in these tombs, though sporadic finds of chisels and axe-heads, made of bronze, by their likeness with neolithic
Hindu
colonisation.
In some places in western Java are found rough scratchings under human figures, engraved on rock. These scratchings have been regarded as pre-Hindu Inscriptions. IV.
stones,
occasionally along with very rude and almost monstrous human figures in stone, known as Pajajaran or Polynesian images.
Although
people
or
all
these
to the
peoples
who
settled
in
28
to
be
They continued to be built throughout the Hindu period, particularly in those regions where the Hindu influence was comparatively weak.
dated before the introduction of that civilisation.
not be without interest to note that even to-day the megalithic tombs of the types II (b) and II (c) described above
It
may
are
in
use
On the whole, among the people of Sumba. monuments described above may justly be
regarded as characteristic of the pre-Hindu settlers, they cannot all be described as remains of the pre-Hindu period.
Attempt has been made to classify the pre-Hindti settlers Java into distinct groups on the basis of the different types But as sometimes the monuments described above. of different classes of monuments arc found together in the same
in
locality,
such
attempts
cannot
lead
to
any
satisfactory
conclusion.
The
same
detail.
classes
pre-historic remains of Sumatra mostly belong to the as those of Java and need not be referred to in
megalithic dolmens or inscriptions with as well as rock-scratchings In respect of this last alone Sumarta offers
We
meet
with
and
menhirs
figures.
human
some
striking
peculiarities
as
we
occasionally
These are characterised by large eyes, human broad jaws and thick lips. They have got a head-dress of the form of a cap, and a bag hanging from the shoulder. Their wrists and legs are covered and they are represented as either
figures in stone.
elephants or engaged in. fighting with them. rectangular back-pieces of some of these figures show 1 they were used to support a structure.
riding on
The
that
I.
Krom-Geschiedenis,
to
possible
not evidence at our disposal it would, perhaps, be safer to regard these as belonging to the megaiithic period of culture. figures
and
It is not 44 ; O. V. 1922, pp. 31-37that these figures are really pre-historic prove definitely From the influenced by the later Hindu civilisation.
p.
SUVABNADVlPA
The
pre-historic remains of the
29
Malay Peninsula have not yet been studied to the same extent as those of Java and Sumatra. But enough has been discovered to show their 1 A number of caves containing palaeolithic general nature. some of them of Sumatran types, have come implements, to light. But the great majority of the stone implements
hitherto
Most
of
adze heads, and there is a total absence of knives, spear-heads or arrow-heads. Probably bamboo and hardwoods were used for
these
purposes. Among implements of rare type may be mentioned a hand-axe and quoit-shaped objects figured in plates XXXVI-VII of Evan's book. Rough cord-marked pottery,
in imitation of
ware made in a basket, and often with diamondshaped reticulations, has also been found with the stone
implements.
Certain tools of bronze or copper have been discovered, but they are distinctly rare, and it is doubtful whether there was any
bronze age in
built
the
Peninsula.
occasionally discovered,
and we have some specimens of graves of large granite slabs and 'cists' closely resembling the
dolmen.
On
very primitive
Mention may also be made of what are popularly known as Siamese mines. These are circular pits, sometimes more than hundred feet deep and about two feet apart, and connected with
one another by galleries at the base.
Primitive stone implements have been obtained from various
islands in the
i. is
The account
of
Malay Peninsula
based mainly on "Papers on the Ethnology and Archaeology of the Malay Peninsula" by Ivor H. N. Evans M. A. (Cambridge, 1927). For a detailed account of the neolithic and palaeolithic implements, cf.
R. O. Winstedt
pp.
I ff,
'Pre-history of Malaya',
in
J.
Mai. Br. R. A.
S.
1932
30
Moluccas.
such as
dawn
of civilisation.
On the whole the actual archaeological finds in different parts of Malayasia lead to the conclusion that at the time of the first
contact with the Hindus the people of Malayasia were in a and that in some regions primitive state of civilisation,
they had not yet emerged from the state of barbarism. But the very fact that they had spread over so many different islands
in the Archipelago forces us to
developed a high degree of skill in navigating the open sea, and it is only reasonable to hold that a people who could do this must have passed beyond the elementary stage of civilisation.
serious attempt to
this
civilisation. By a comparative study of the different Indo-nesian languages he has hit upon a number of roots or words common
them all. These may be reasonably regarded as been in use when the Austro-nesian races lived together having
among
in Indo-China.
With the help of these words, as well as by a study of those islanders who have been least affected by foreign intrusions, Kern has drawn a picture of the life led by the
common
ancestors
of the peoples
of
Malayasia.
It
cannot,
moved
to
the
it
various
islands,
for,
according
to
local
must have made further progress, or even circumstances, received a set-back. But the picture of civilisation drawn by Kern may be regarded as a general background of our study. Without going into unnecessary and controversial details,
we may
give
the
following sketch
of
this
civilisation
on
The Austro-nesians
SUVAENADVlPA
certainly acquainted with it
31
Among
other articles of
turtle,
food
which they got from the sea. They tended buffaloes, pigs, and probably also cows, which were employed for cultivation and supplied them with meat and milk. Hunting and fishing were very popular with them, and they were acquainted with iron weapons. Their clothes were made of barks of trees and they knew
may be mentioned
lobster,
prawn and
the
art of
rattan.
weaving.
They
built houses
of
bamboo, wood
and
About
their
intellectual
attainments
it
may be mentioned
and
possessed
an
in open sea.
tribes,
elementary knowledge of astronomy, indispensable for navigation Their religious beliefs, like those of all primitive
may be
characterised as Animistic.
Everything in nature
which excited their curiosity or apprehensions and before which they felt themselves powerless to act, such as storm, thunder,
earthquake, conflagration
etc.,
spirits
who must be
satisfied
with
They
also
and other natural objects as abodes of spirits. But the most important classes of spirits were those were of the ancestors who were regularly worshipped and exercise great influence on the lives of their to supposed
descendants.
either
thrown to the
sea, or left
in the
forests, to be devoured by wild animals, or to undergo a natural decomposition. For it is only when the bones alone were left
could the soul of the dead leave the body and go back to
its
proper realm, there to enjoy an eternal 1 same way as on the earth below
.
life
very much
in the
may be noted that the picture drawn above is in accord with what we know of the primitive tribes in India.
It
i.
full
It
The summary
is
taken from
it
linguistic discussion
on which
is
"Fruin-Mees", pp. 5-6. For the based, Cf. V. G., Vol. VI, pp. 107-120.
As
to
p. 24.
navigation and the knowledge of astronomy Cf. V. G., Vol. VI., For general account cf. V. G., Vol. XV, pp. 180-81.
32
may
Indo-nesian settlers in
although
The monuments,
described above, undoubtedly show that their method of disposing of the dead bodies had undergone a great change, and that they
improvements in the art of stoneIt may also be presumed that the people of Java cutting. made further notable progress. It appears that the Javanese
1
had
developed various
industries
and
excelled in
making
ivory,
It is to
be remembered
that tortoise and elephant are not to be found in Java and that
was found there only in small quantities. The work tortoise-shell and gold, therefore, indicates active trade-relations with foreign countries from which they must have been imported. The rich fertility of the soil must also
gold, too,
in ivory,
have made Java an emporium of grain. It is perhaps for this very reason that the Hindu traders who probably replenished their store of food from this fertile country on their way to
China named the island 'Yava-dvlpa' or 'Island of Barley', a name which completely superseded in later times the indigenous name Nusa Kendeng. Thus we must hold that on the whole the Javanese possessed a high degree of civilisation. As to
their religious beliefs
and
and
ancestors seems to have played a dominant part in their everyday life. They built statues of these ancestors either of wood
A
By
class of
men
called
Zaman was
ancestors.
suitable
which dance,
Fruin-Mees believes that some of the graves described above belong to the primitive races who settled in Java before the immigration of the Indo-nesians (p. 7). This may be true, and in that
may
may
SUVARNADVlPA
33
formed the chief part, the Zamans became the medium through whose mouth the spirits of the ancestors gave their blessings to, and directed the undertakings of, their descendants. The
Zamans
The Javanese
They
calculated a
made
distinct progress
in astronomy.
month
phases of
the moon, and their year consisted of 12 months. The year was again divided into two parts, ten months of work and two
of rest.
Five days, or rather nights, formed a unit, and two such units formed the week, of which there were thirty in the
much
is is
sometimes drawn of
it. We may, for example, refer to the views of the great scholar Brandes who held that the pre-Hindu Javanese had the knowledge of the following. 1
1.
The Wajang,
Gamelan,
Metre.
modern Java.
2.
modern
Javanese
music
accompanying
Wajang.
3.
4.
5.
cloth.
6.
7. 8.
9.
Astronomy.
Cultivation by means of
artificial irrigation.
10.
8,
knowledge of some of these, for example, nos. 5, 7, and may be accepted without discussion and has already been
to.
referred
The
i.
34
by eminent
scholars.
regards Wajang, I have discussed the question in some It is admitted by details in an Appendix to Bk. V., Chap. III.
As
to any other Indo-nesian where it was imported in later (except times from Java), that we first come across it in Java when the Hindu colonists were established there for centuries, that similar play called Chaya-nataka was undoubtedly known to
all
known
tribe
outside Java
the Hindus, and that the plot of the earliest type of Wajang in Java is invariably derived from the Hindu epics. Against
pointed out that the technical terms in Wajang are Javanese and not Sanskrit, and that Wajang is very closely connected with the ancestor-worship of the Javanese.
this
it
is
But
it is
to be
custom, or import a foreign article, they not only sometimes also adapt them to their own give them their own names but
peculiar needs.
ancestor-worship in
it
Although Wajang is closely associated with Java to-day, there is nothing to show that
so.
when
it
secured
wide popularity in Java, it came to form an essential element in the ancestor-worship which played such a dominant part in
the
this
life
of Javanese people.
It
may be urged
is
in favour of
view
that
all
feature of
a characteristic
outside Java.
Gamelan, which is essentially bound up with Wajang may, on similar grounds, be regarded as Javanese adaptation of an Indian original. As to Batik the researches of Rouffaer and
have established the facts that the industry is not known to any other island outside Java (except where it was that the first reference to directly imported from Java) and
*
Juynboll
1.
The
observations
that
follow
Krom
Geschiedenis, pp. 45- 52. De Batik-kunst in Ned.- Indie en haar geschiedenis (1914-) 2.
SUVAKNADVlPA
35
the industry in Java belongs to a very late period, while from a much earlier period India has been a well-known centre for
the mass-production and wholesale export of the commodity. Here, again, the only argument for a Javanese origin seems to
Javanese.
As Krom has
rightly pointed out, even to-day the Javanese give indigenous names to new articles imported from America and Europe,
and hence no weight should be attached to arguments based on indigenous character of the name.
As to Javanese metric and system of coinage, Brandes himself puts forward the claim with a great deal of hesitation, and Krom has pointed out that there is absolutely no evidence
in support of it. What Brandes claims as Javanese metre, and Javanese coins proper, make their first appearance after the Indian metre and Indian coins had remained in use for
centuries.
According
to Brandes, these
undoubtedly later
phenomena are developments of old pre-Hindu state of things. We have, however, as yet had no evidence that there was any
metre or coin in the pre-Hindu period. Besides, even if there were any, we are to suppose, that they absolutely went out of
use
during
the
many
centuries
of
Hindu
influence,
only
suddenly to
years.
come
Nothing but the very strongest positive evidence would induce us to believe in such an explanation, and such evidence
is
the last two points, cultivation by means of and developed political organisation, Brandes bases irrigation, his conclusions on the use of indigenous technical terms. As
As
regards
this
is
by no means a
satisfactory
unknown
other hand, the irrigation system was not to the other Indo-nesian tribes and might well have
On the
developed independently in
I.
Java
even
prior to the
Hindu
Berg points out the close connection between the Javanese metrics and Javanese phonetics, and regards it as an evidence of the high
metre (Berg-Inleiding, pp. 67-69). antiquity of Javanese
36
colonisation.
we may
well
conceive that political system, however rudimentary, though it is difficult to estimate the nature and degree of the organisation, as data for such estimate are
there
lacking.
was a certain
sum up
in
Thus, of the ten points of Brandes, by which he tried to the civilisation of the Javanese before they came
contact
may
with the Hindus, Wajang, Gamelaii and Batik two others, metrics and be dismissed as improbable
; ;
monetary system, are most unlikely while two others, irrigation and highly developed state-organisation, are, at least, doubtful. The remaining three, viz., metal industry, sea-voyage, and
elementary knowledge of astronomy, undoubtedly true.
may
alone be accepted as
Chapter IV.
SUVARNADVIPA
as
SuvarnabhGmi (gold-land) and Suvarnadvipa (gold-island), names of over-sea countries, were familiar to the Indians
from a very early period. They occur in old popular stories such as have been preserved in the Jatakas, Kathakoa and BrhatkathS, as well as in more serious literary works, mainly
Buddhist.
1 prince Mahiijanaka Thus, according to a Jataka story, sailed with some merchants in a ship bound for Suvarnabhumi, Another Jataka story 8 in order to get great riches there.
refers
The
a sea-voyage from Bharukaccha to Suvarnabhumi. same journey is described in great detail in the Supparakato
8
Jataka.
The
partially
original
Byhatkatha
in
is
lost,
but
its stories
have been
preserved maSjarl and Brhatkatha-61oka-samgraha. The Byhatkatha-llokasamgraha gives us the story of Sanudasa, who sails for SuvarnabhGmi with a gang of adventurers, and undertakes a
perilous
the
KathSsarit-sagara,
Brhatkatha-
The by land after crossing the sea.* contains a few more stories of the same type. Kathasarit-sagara First, we have the adventurous story of the great merchant
journey
1.
Jataka
2.
3.
Jataka
Vol. IV. p. 86. Jatakamala No. XIV. Both give the same details of the journey, but the latter adds that practically the journey was undertaken at the instance of the merchants of who had come to Bharukaccha, It may be inferred that
Jataka
of the
voyage.
et
la
Lacote
Essai sur
Gugatfhya
p. 131.
ff
English translation
by Tabard,
38
SamudraSdra,
of
SUVAENADVlPA
who
sailed
chief city trade, and ultimately reached its purposes 1 was shipwrecked on Another merchant, Eudra, Kalasapura. 9 It also relates the story his way back from Suvarnadvipa.
Svarnadvlpa for the purpose of to trading voyage to We have trade. Suvarnadvipa in the romantic story of YaSahketu.* There is, near again, the story of a princess of Kataha being shipwrecked
of ISvaravarma
8
who went
also
to
references
Suvarnadvipa, on her
way
to India.
relates the story of Nagadatta. Being to go to a foreign land, in order to acquire wealth, anxious
The KathakoSa
he went on a sea-voyage with five hundred ships. His ships fell into the hollow of the snake-circled mountain and were rescued
by the
to
efforts
know
of Sundara, king of Suvarnadvipa, who came of the danger of Nagadatta from a letter fastened to
6
serious
refer,
to
SuvarnabhQmi,
we may
II,
place, to
Kautilya's
(aloe)
ArthaSastra (Book
refers to
Aguru
of Suvarnabhumi. following passage in MilindapaSha makes an interesting reference to a few centres of the over-
The
"As a ship-owner, who has become wealthy levying freight in some sea-port town, will be by constantly Takkola or able to traverse the high seas and go to
sea trade of India
:
Clna
congregate."
1.
ff.)
(Bombay
edition
of 1867, p. 276).
2.
Ibid,
Tarahga Taranga
Taranga
Taranga
54, vv.
86
ff.
3.
4.
57, vv. 72
ff.
(p. 297).
5.
123, v.
no.
6.
KathSkosa
Tr.
7.
Milindapafiha,
359,
Translated
in
S.B.E.
Vol.
XXXVI,
p. 269.
SUVAKNADVIPA
39
The Niddesa, a canonical work, also refers to sea-voyage to Suvarnabhflmi and various other countries. 1 The Mahakarmatravel)
Vibhanga illustrates des&ntara-vipaka (calamities of foreign by reference to merchants who sailed to Suvarnabhumi from Mahakosali and Tamralipti. 8
Mahavamsa
which describes the missionary activities of Thera Uttara and Thera Sona in Suvarnabhtlmi. 3 The Mahakarma-Vibhanga attributes the conversion of Suvarnabhumi to Gavampati. The voyage of Gavampati to Suvarnabhumi is also related in the Sasanavamsa.* We learn from Tibetan sources that
Dharmapala
(7th
cent.
A. D.)
and Dlpankara
5
Atisa
(llth
travelled far
of Suvarnabhumi and Suvarnadvipa beyond the boundaries of India, and we find reference to both in Greek, Latin, Arabic, and Chinese writings.
of
his
Pomponius Mela was the first to refer to the island Chryse (gold)- a literal translation of Suvarnadvipa in
'De Chorographia', written during the reign of the emperor Claudius (41-54 A. D.). 6 The Chryse island is referred to 7 in the Periplus of the Erythraean Sea (1st century A. D.)
,
and
is
mentioned
(2nd.
by
A.
Pliny
9
(c.
8 77 A. D.)
Dionysius
10
Periegetes
1.
cent.
D.),
This passage
is
2.
3. 4. 5.
Mahakarma-Vibhanga
Geiger
p.
50
ff.
Mahavarftsa, p. 86.
p.
Mahakarma-Vibhanga
Sarat Chandra Das,
62
Sasanavamsa,
in
p. 36.
Indian Pandits
p. 130.
the
Land
of
Snow,
p.
50
Kern
6.
Manual
of
Buddhism,
Coedes
Textes, p. 12.
7.
8.
Coedes
Coedes,
century
Textes, p. 15.
9.
Textes, p. 71.
The
date of
Dionysius
is
given as
second
by Coedes. Tozer in his History Geography (p. 282) assigns him to the first century A.D. Coedes Textes, p. 86. jo.
A.D.
of Ancient
40
Martianus
(7th.
SUVAKNADVIPA
Capella
(5th. cent.
A.
D.),
Isidore
of
Seville
cent.
A. D),
of
(7th cent.
A.
D.),
Theodulf
(8th. cent.
,
Nicephorus
authors
Periegctes.*
(13th.
cent.
A. D.) 8
in
addition
several
who reproduce
by Dionysius
Ptolemy (2nd. cent. A. D.) does not refer to the island of Chryse, but mentions, instead, Chryse Chora a literal translation of Suvarnabhfimi and Chryse Chersonesus, or Golden 7 The Chryse Chersonesus was evidently known Peninsula. 8 mentioned Marinos of Tyre (1st. cent. A. D.) and is to
by Marcien
refer
to
it
(5th. cent.
ar';
A. D.).
The
who
(6th.
cent.
A. D.
who
quote respectively
(1st. cent.
Marcien.
Flavius Josephus
as a land in
India and
identifies it
with Sophir.
The Indian
the
tradition of Suvarnadvipa
refers
was
also
known
to
Arabs.
Albenini
to
both
Suvarnadvipa
the
and
18
Suvarnabhumi.
"The
by
the
Hindus
Suvarnadvipa
e.
gold
islands".
1.
Ibid, p. 116.
He
writes the
name
as Chrysea.
2.
3. 4.
5.
Ibid, p. 149.
Ibid, p. 150.
He
6.
Etienne
(6th.
cent.
A.D.),
cf.
Coedes
7.
8.
Textes, pp. 132. 157. 159Coedes Textes, pp. 38-43, 53. 56, 60, 66. Ptolemy refers to Marines' estimate of the distance between
Textes, p. 38.)
Coedes
Ibid,
Ibid, Ibid,
p.
11.
p. 132.
12.
13.
Vol.
I,
p.
210.
'Zabaj*
is
also written as
Zabag.
SUVARNADVIPA
Elsewhere he says
:
41
"The
Gold
Country because you obtain much gold as deposit if you wash 1 Although the only a little of the earth of that country".
translator of Alberuiii has
put, within brackets, Suvarnadvlpa after the expression, 'Gold Country', the phrase used by Alberuni
is
undoubtedly
equivalent
to
In
another
list
2
of countries in
as to
Many given in Brhat-Samhita. Zabaj as the 'Golden land' or 'land of gold'. Among them may 3 Yakut (1179-1229)*, be mentioned Haraki (died 1138 A.D.)
,
other
Arab
writers refer
Sirazi
(died
1311
A.D.)
6
,
and
Buzurg bin
Sahriyar
Nuwayri (died in 1332 A.D.) calls Fansiir (Pansur or Baros on 7 It may the western side of Sumatra) as the land of gold .
be noted
also
that
one place
it
calls
Mankir the
Zabaj
8
.
with
The
Chinese.
his
name
I-tsing
Suvarnadvlpa was also not unknown to the twice mentions Kin-tcheu (gold-island) in
famous "Memoir on the pilgrimage of monks who visited in search of law", and uses it as a
of Che-li-fo-che or Sri-Vijaya.
synonym
Having thus rapidly surveyed the wide prevalence of the knowledge of Suvarnadvipa and Suvarnabhumi in many
1.
2.
p. 303.
3.
CCII,
p. 6.
4.
5.
The date of this author is uncertain. Van der Ibid, pp. 10-12. Lith places him in the loth century A.D., but Ferrand doubts it (Ferrand Textes Vol. II. pp. 564-5).
6. 7.
8.
9.
pp, 10-
1 1.
I-tsing
Memoire
42
countries, extending
SUVAENABVlPA
over
its
many
centuries,
to discuss
colonisation
in detail
precise location
by the Hindus.
between SuvarnabhQmi and Suvarnadvipa, i.e., the Gold-land and the Gold-island, which we meet with in the Indian sources, is also faithfully
It is a striking fact that the contrast
some
of
them
calling
it
an
island,
we have seen, refers to both and Chryse Chersonesus (Golden Chryse Chora (golden land) Peninsula). He distinguishes them as two different regions, evidently lying close to each other, as both of them adjoined
or a peninsula.
Ptolemy, as
Besyngeitai.
We
note a
similar
distinction
even
in
the
Chryse
is
called an island.
'land'
referred to both as a
just opposite that river.
In para 63, however, Chryse is near the Ganges, and 'an island'
Alberuni, as
we have
from
this,
we may
"Marinos of Tyre and Ptolemy are the first to speak of Golden Khersonese. The as the Peninsula the Malay
among whom Eratosthenes, Dionysius Periegetes, and Pomponius Mela may be named, all the "Golden refer to it instead as Khryse or Chryse Insula and so does long before them the Ramayana, under the Isle",
geographers
that preceded them,
:
name
of Suvarnadvipa,
been
laid
1.
2.
This
is
"Doubtless
Eratosthenes had heard of them (Chryse and Argyre) although no allusion in that sense is likewise met with in the surviving fragments of
his
work."
(Ibid, p.
670
f.n. i).
SUVABNADVlPA
43
that region on the one part as an island and on the other as a peninsula. I believe, therefore, that I am the first to
proclaim, after careful consideration, that both designations are probably true, each in its own respective time ; that is,
that the
has
Malay Peninsula, or rather its southern been an island before assuming its present
portion,
highly
pronounced peninsular character. The view I now advance is founded not only on tradition, but also upon geological
evidence of no doubtful nature."
Gerini then proceeds with the details of what he calls the
geological evidence.
Gerini's explanation, however, cannot be seriously considered.
In the
first
place, it is to
primarily
*a
be noted that the word dvlpa* means Thus land having water on two of its sides'.
sometimes
Doabs
also.
As
information from Indian source, they might have taken 'dvlpa' in the sense of 'island', whereas it was really a peninsula.
Further,
it
is
a well-known
fact,
that
represent one and the same country as consisting of a number of separate lands or islands for, as the journey was made from
;
one port to another by open sea, the continuity of the region was always a difficult matter to ascertain. The Arabs,
late period, represented Sumatra as consisting a number of separate islands. As to Malay Peninsula, the subject of Gerini's discussion, Chavannes has pointed out
even down to a
of
it
The
to
As we
i.
mainland, and the other, an island or peninsula. have seen above, this is the case with Ptolemy and the
Edited by S, N. Majumdar,
Appendix
3.
p. 751.
I-tsing
Memoire,
44
SUVARNADVIPA
author of the Periplus. The question, therefore, naturally whether we should take Suvarnabhumi and Suvarnaarises,
dvipa as corresponding exactly to these two regions, both called Chryse by the western authors, one denoting a portion of the mainland (bhQmi), and the other, an island or a peninsula (dvipa).
However tempting such a solution might appear at first, we must definitely reject it. As we have seen above, Albenmi
applies the term
Suvarnabhumi to the
islands of
Zabag which
he elsewhere designates Suvarnadvlpa. Besides, the island of Sumatra, which is called Suvarnadvlpa in Chinese sources and
is
undoubtedly referred
1
to
by
this
name
in
later
Indian
literature, is
in the island
compound
should not be taken in the sense of mainland, as opposed to island or peninsula, but simply in the general sense of land or territory.
'Suvarnabhumi'
This brings us to the question of the exact meaning of the term Suvarnabhumi. Pomponius Mela explains the name Chryse (gold) island by referring to an old tradition that the
soil of
the country
is
made
of gold.
Ho
derived from this legend, or the legend is invented from the name. In any case he took Suvurimbhilmi to signify 'the
name
is
country whose
soil
was
gold'.
2
number of ancient
view.
writers,
This view was shared by a large but Pliny takes a more rational
:
Referring to
Chryse he says
"I think
the
country
abounds in gold mines, for I am little disposed to believe the report that the soil of it is gold/' Pliny's view is upheld by
later
authors, though
soil
some
of
them
tradition of the
being gold.
1.
N.
J.
II.
2.
Krom
Een Sumatraansche inscriptic van koning Krtanagara by Med, K. Akad. Weten Lctterkunde 5* reeks (Vers.
A. ii-XX, pp. 179-80.
deel
of authors (Coedes
SUVAKNADVlPA
to explain the
45
sun which
name
as
due
makes the
soil
Among
view
the
Arab
Yakut take
the
the
name
There
soil
is
hardly any doubt that the old tradition of the golden For the Puranas actually refer India.
outside Bharatavarsa, the mountain
3
,
to a country,
and
soil
of
which consist of gold the difficulties which one has to surmount in order to reach that 3 There is equally region of the earth where the soil is gold
.
little
in
Suvarnabhuim,
therefore,
originally stood for soil or land in general, and there was no idea of contrasting it with \lvlpa', island or peninsula.
It
may be noted
entitled
of)
here, that
we have
Suvarnapura.
is
image
Lokanatha (AvalokiteSvara)
is
in Sri-Vijaya-pura
in
Suvarnnapura. Srl-Vijaya Sumatra. So Suvarnapura should be located there, and seems to be used as a designation for a region, rather than a town*.
the old
name
of a capital city in
The Kathasarit-sagara
also refers to
Kaficanapura, a synonym
of Suvarnapura, where the merchant ISvaravarman stopped on 5 In Sana's Kadambarl also we his way to Suvarnadvlpa 6 not far from the eastern get a reference to "Suvarnapura,
.
1.
p. 157.
pp. 7i"73
2. 3.
Matsya Purana. Ch. 113, vv. 12, 42. Mahantam Sauvarnabhumim prthivipradesarh
A. ii-XX, pp. 42-4357, v, 76.
(Divyavadana
Cowell, p. 107).
4.
5.
J.
Tarahga
6.
46
SUVARNADVlPA
Thus, in addition to the generic name Suvarnabhdmi, or goldland, we have references to gold-island, gold-peninsula, and
gold-city.
It seeins to
be quite
clear,
therefore,
that Suvarnaof an
extensive region, but, in course of time, different parts of it came to be designated by the additional epithets of island, peninsula
or
city.
The
original
altogether, for
we
definitely
name, however, never went out of use know that, even at a much later
period,
used to denote Sumatra and portions of Burma. In order to have a general idea of the extent of the region to which
it
name Suvarnabhumi was applied, it is necessary to make a of territories which we know on definite grounds to have borne that name in its primary or derivative form.
the
list
The
Periplus makes
it
beyond
attention to the facts, that the region consisted both of a part of mainland as well as an island, to the east of the Ganges, and
that
of
it
was the
region
tliis
it
according to this authority, has the same connotation as the Trans-Gangetic India of Ptolemy, and would include Burma,
Indo-China, and Malay Archipelago, or rather such portions of this vast region as were then known to the Indians.
Ptolemy's
Cliryse
his
Now, we have
Burma was
to the
known
in later ages
as
Suvarnabhumi.
According
Kalyani inscriptions (147G A.D.), RamaSSadesa was also called 1 which would then comprise the maritime Suvannabhumi
,
i.
Suvanijabhumi-ratta-saiiikhata
Ramaflfiadesa
Ind.
Ant.
SUVARNADVIPA
47
According to Po-U-Daung Inscription (1774 A.D.), 'SuvannSparanta, a designation usually syncopated into Sunaparanta or Sonnaparanta, included the country between the Lower Iravati
and Chindwin and the Arakan Yoma. Now, AparSnta means 'western end or extremity', and hence the region denoted as Suvannaparanta may be taken to denote the western end or extremity of Suvarnabhumi. Thus these two place-names
would authorise us
portion of
to apply the name Suvarnabhumi to a large both maritime and inland, and this would Burma,
Chryse Chora
1
.
There can
of
also be hardly
any doubt, in view of the statement writers, and the inscription found in
Sumatra itself, that that island was also known as Suvariiabhumi and Suvarnadvlpa. Ferrand points out that even now Sumatra
is
Pulaw
Ernsts
or the
Alberuni
is
quite clear
Suvarnadvlpa on this
"The
says he,
"are called
by
an
Ibn Said 2
is
13th century A. D.
definitely
that
Zabag
islands
archipelago
consisting
of a large
number of
which
produce excellent gold, and says that Sribuza (Sri-Viyaya in The Sumatra) is the greatest of the islands of Zabag. same view is implied by other Arab writers both before and
after him.
is
strictly speaking, the name Suvarnadvlpa the Arabs, on the authority of the Hindus, to applied by
Thus,
1.
Gerini
Researches pp. 64
for
ff.
to
be any
excluding the maritime region, as Gerini has done, in locating Chryse Chora. Of course we must always bear in mind that it is a fruitless task to attempt to define the exact location of
adequate reason
of this
writers, cf.
Ferrand
J.
A.
ii
XX,
48
a large group
Archipelago
of
of
StVARNADViPA
islands,
roughly
day.
corresponding to Malay
the
present
Even
as
late
as
the
Budhagupta,
two islands
There
evidences that Burma, Malay thus definite and Sumatra had a common designation of Peninsula, Suvarnabhumi, and the name Suvarnadvlpa was certainly applied to Sumatra and other islands in the Archipelago. This does
are
however, take away the possibility of other territories being designated by the one or the other name. Thus, on the
not,
whole,
we
shall not
if
we take Suvarnaof
bhumi and Suvarnadvlpa as general designations Malay Peninsula, and Malay Archipelago, as hinted
a
Burma,
at in the
Periplus.
word
But, keeping in view the literal meaning of the dclpa, we should restrict the use of the name Suvarnadvlpa
to the last
two
alone.
We
known
shall
now proceed
Hindus
to
discuss
briefly
some of the
definitely
important
localities
in Suvarnadvipa
in ancient times.
which
were
to the
As we have seen
of Chryse
(gold) in the
above, there
Periplus.
is
This
associated with
classical authors,
the
island
as
of
Argyre
(silver)
by many other
such
Pomponius Mela, Pliny, Solin, Martianus Capella, Isidore of The origin of the name 'silver island' Seville, and Theodulf.
explained in the same
is
way
This close association naturally induces us to look for the two islands near each other. Now, as the name Suvarnadvipa,
for the island of Sumatra,
is
well established,
we might
look
1.
1.
2.
the
name 'Kouen
S. Le*vi
is
louen' to denote
Indo-China
a Chinese-
Recently
in
term
rendered by
has
B.
K.
I.
SUVARNADVIPA
upon the island
of
49
are several facts which speak in favour of this supposition. It is somewhat singular that Ptolemy does not refer to the
name.
large island of Sumatra, at least under any easily cognisable The fact seems to be, that, like the later Arab writers,
he regarded
it
as a series of islands,
which he called
(2)
(1)
the
group of
and
the
group of three
Sabadeibai Ptolemy places "the island of labadios (or Sabadios) which means the island of barley." It is said
to
Next
to be of extraordinary fertility
and
no
to have its
capital
it/
called
extreme west of
The explanation
the
name
leaves
doubt
1
that
Yavadvlpa.
Now, Ptolemy nowhere refers to the islands of Chryse and Argyre which figure so prominently in the writings of other western geographers both before and after him. 8 His Chryse
writers,
may possibly represent the Chryse island of other but we cannot say anything definitely on this point. The reference to an island with capital called Argyre, which is not far from his Chrysc Chersonesus, and situated quite
close to
Chersonesus
Sumatra that undoubtedly bore the name Suvarnadvipa (equivalent to Chryse island), justifies us, therefore, in
identifying labadios as the Argyre island of other writers. Thus the islands of Chryse and Argyre, referred to by classical writers, would correspond to the well-known islands of
Sumatra and Java or the Malay Peninsula and Java. This view is in full accord with what we find in the Periplus.
The author
thus describes the coastal regions of Bengal. "After towards the east again, and sailing with
the ocean to the right and the shore remaining beyond to the left, Ganges comes into view, and near it the very last land
1,
2.
50
SUVARNADVlPA
east,
towards the
Chryse.
There
is
a river near
it
called the
Ganges
And just
an island in
the ocean, the last part of the inhabited world towards the east,
itself
it is
called Chryse." of
it
Now, although
Peninsula
is
the
island
Sumatra
is
or
the
Malay
at a
great distance,
the Ganges, in the sense, that if the south from the mouth of that river, he would reach the
island or the
land.
peninsula direct without coming across any other That the author meant a somewhat remote region is
itself/
It
may be
a vague reference to the equatorial region, but, in any to indicate a sufficiently remote locality. It is case, seems
note that Pliny and other writers
locate
also interesting to
mouth
Thus
sense in which
only,
or
employ Sumatra
it
way
corresponds to the position fairly well. Apart from the general and somewhat vague use
Suvarnadvlpa, we may
this kind,
The
earliest reference
of
in the
as given in the been argued with great plausibility that of these nine divisions, one alone corresponds roughly to India
Puranas.
what may be
Mr.
S.
N. Majumdar
one of these
who propounded
idea
definitely
identified
divisions, Indradvlpa, with Burma, and suggested that another, 1 But the question is Kaserumat, might be Malay Peninsula.
difficulties
as
B. Chaudhury.*
1. Cunningham Ancient geography of N. Majumdar, Appendix I. Sp. cf. pp. 752-754.
India,
Edited
by
S.
2.
ft.
SUVARNADVIPA
substitute
51
But when the later Puranas like Garuda and Vamana Katsha and Simhala for Saiunya and Gandharva
we have a
definite
is
reference
3
to
the well-known
name
The name represented by Keddah. which was thus raised to the dignified position 'Kataha-dvlpa'
now
of one of the great divisions of Bharatavarsa or Greater India may be taken as roughly denoting the same region as
Suvarnadvipa, Puranas.
which
name
is
entirely
absent
from the
The Kataha-dvlpa figures applied to particular localities. prominently in the Kathasarit-sagara, as a rich and flourishing country, but is distinguished from Suvarnadvipa for, as already
;
noted above, a story relates how the princess of Kataha-dvlpa was ship-wrecked near Suvarnadvipa on her way to India. The
same story
sister
tells
of the
king
Suvarnadvipa.
This leads to
the
conclusion
that
the Kataha-dvlpa
and
Suvarnadvipa were
too
much
upon exact
geographical knowledge of a
story-writer.
We
have also the famous story of Devasmita, in which her husband, the merchant Guhasena, sails from Tamralipti to Kataha, and she follows him there after a short period. 4 The story of the foolish merchant also leads us to Kataha. 5
that of Candrasvamin
is
Geographically, the most interesting story in this connection who lost his son and younger sister
in the wood.
merchant named
1.
to
Having
Puranas
learnt
runs
I
that
follows
the
Ibid.
The
the
two
V,
as
Katahagca
Sirhhalo
13,
Varunastatha
10.)
(Garuda
Purana
See Book
Chap.
II.
ff.
3.
Tarahga
Tarafiga
4.
.
ff.
Taranga
61, v. 3.
52
SUVARNADVlPA
merchant had
sailed for Narikela-dvipa, Candrasvamin embarked a ship and went across the sea to that island. There he in Candralearnt that Kanakavarman had gone to Kataha-dvlpa.
svamin followed him there, only to learn that Kanakavarman had gone to Karpura-dvlpa. In this way poor Candrasvamin
Kataha-dvlpa, Karpura-dvipa, 1 Suvarnadvipa and Simhala-dvlpa. The Narikela-dvlpa is mentioned both by Chinese and Arab 8 writers. According to Hiuen Tsang the people grew no
visited in turn Narikela-dvlpa,
grain but lived only on cocoaimts, which evidently gave the name to the island. He places it 'thousands of li' to the south
of Ceylon.
It has
3 been identified with Nicobar island.
The Karpdra-dvlpa
is
is
also
named by Arab
writers.*
It
side
of
Sumatra, where
the port
to this
day the
Malays name the true camphor, Kapur Barus. Blagden considers 5 this latter identification as more probable.
A similar knowledge
be traced even in the
a chapter
India.
6
may
describing
the
Although there is much that is imaginary or mythical, there seems to be a kernel of fact. It describes in particular a group of six islands named Anga-dvipa, Yama-dvlpa, and Vnraha-dvipa. Malaya-dvlpa, Sankha-dvlpa, Ku5a-dvipa
1.
Taranga
56,
VV.
is
54
ff-
2.
(Beal
mentioned, among others, by Hiuen Tsang Narikela-dvTpa Vol. II, p. 252) and Ibn Said (i3th cent. A. D.). The latter also
it
refers to
3.
as a dependency of Ceylon (Ferrand-Textes Vol. II, p. 339). For the identification and other details, cf. Yule- Marco Polo,
Book
Vol.
III,
Chap. XII
it
Beal,
II,
4.
cent,),
Ibrahim bin Wasif Sah (c. 1000 A. D.), Ibn Ai Wardi (i4th cf. Ferrand Textes, pp. 157, 422, Thousand and One Nights
;
570-5735.
Cf.
N.M.
edition
of
Tawney's English
i
Translation of Kathasarit-sagara
6.
- Ocean
Chapter, 48.
SUVABNADVIPA
Among
these,
53
Malaya-dvlpa
is
may be
and
is
identified with
Malay
Peninsula.
well
with Malay
of Lanks, Chap. V).
Peninsula.
Besides, reference
made
to the
city
(see
may The Sankha-dvipa may be identified with the island of Sankhay, frequently mentioned by Arab writers. According to them it was three days' voyage from Malaya and was included within It the gave the name to the empire of Sri-Vijaya.
neighbouring
1
which
with
Lenkasuka
sea,
and
there
was
also
town
called after
it.
of the
The Anga-dvipa may be identified with the Angadiya Arab writers, which is named immediately after a
Siamese
coast
of
place on the
and
three
is
located in the
islands,
In the
group
we can
Vayu Purana.
from
3
farsangs
Fansur,
Baros
on
the
coast
of
Sumatra.
to the east of Laftka.* which was regarded as being 90 Now, even admitting that these identifications are merely conjectural, the fact that most of these names are mentioned
by Arab writers
the Puranik
as
names
without importance.
writers
presumption that
had some
real
mythology and
the geographical knowledge of the Another Hindus regarding the Far East is supplied by a passage in the Ramayana. M. Sylvain Levi has pointed out that this
indication of
Edrisl,
(194),
(395).
2.
3.
4.
The
Ibn Said (346), Dimaski (377, 381) and Nuwayri pages of Ferrand Textes.
Textes, p. 523).
Ferrand
Sachau
Alberuni, Vol.
I,
p. 305.
54:
SUVAKNADVlPA
in HarivarhSa
and the Buddhist Sfltra called SaddharmaSmytyupasthSna. For a critical study of the passage in all its bearings, we must refer the reader to the original article of
that scholar
. Here we shall content ourselves with only a relevant to our present study, which emerge clearly points,
few
from
as follows
li
Unfortunately this passage appears in radically different forms not only in the different texts of Bamayana but also
in
Yavadvlpa
Bengali
the
Bombay
edition
the
edition
substitutes
other
Similarly the first and parallel passages omit it altogether. the third words in the first line, given above on the authority
of
the
Bombay
and
version,
are
replaced
respectively
by
'ratnavantam'
'phalabhojyopaSobhitam'.
'Yavadvipam' is undoubtedly to be preferred, sure about the two others. Thus we cannot be quite certain with seven kingdoms as the if 'Yavadvlpa' was adorned
The but we
'
separate
island
the
Bengali
version,
but
Ramayana-maiijarl and HarivamSa substitute Stivarnakitdyaka. The latter reading is supported by the Snrrtyupasthana-Siitra, of the as both the Chinese and the Tibetan translations render the name as 'island called 'wall of gold', an passage
exact translation of Suvarnakudya-dvlpa.
Now, Suvarnakudya
a
in Kautillya
is
and on
this
ground
He
J.A.n-XI.,pp.
Book
II.
5-160.
3.
Chap. XI.
SUVARNADVtPA
55
name, the Chinese Kin-lin by which they designate a country, 2000 li to the west of Fou-nan (Cambodia), and situated along a bay 1 This would locate it in the Malay Archipelago.
.
to be noted here that Siivarna-rnpyaka-dvlpam is an exact equivalent of the island of Chryse (Suvarna) and Argyre (rupyaka-stiveT) of the classical writers. Further, the Smrtyupasthana-Sutra says that the soil of the island which
It is
it
calls Suvarna-kudyaka is gold. This supports the reading Suvarnakaramanditam which we get in the Bombay version and Harivama, but which is replaced by Ganadvlpam, a third
we accept this reading, here the origin of the classical tradition about the Chryse island referred to above. On the whole it seems that we have here a reference to both a gold and a gold-cumisland,
in the Bengali
version.
If
we may have
though the two have been confused. The next important passage, which is practically identical in both the versions of Ramayana, runs as follows
silver island,
:
iti smytjltt
II
The Ramayana-MaSjarl
following
;
of
Ksemendra
substitutes
the
Thus the same two adjectives arc applied, in the one case the Kiratas, and in the other, to the people of Samudra-dvipa.
the Kiratas have already been described in the preceding passage in Ramayana, the reading of Ramayana-manjarl is
preferable.
As
Now,
In any case it presents a new name Samudra-dvipa. may mean either 'island of the sea' or the 'island called Samudra/ The first meaning is, of course, pointless, so we may
this
it a reference to Samudra, which, being corrupted to 'Sumutra', has given the name Sumatra to the great island in the Archipelago.
It is interesting to note in this connection that Kautilya's refers to a country called 'Para-samudra', and Arthafifistra
i.
II,
p. 36.
56
SUVARNADVlPA
1
states of
made by
mediaeval writers.
Further, the geographical chapter under discussion describes various barbarians in the Eastern Sea more or less in the
in his
The Buddhist
writers
show a more extensive knowledge The Milindapafiha, as we have Suvannabhumi, Takkola and Cma. The
word "torment"
in
the Sutta-
nipata, describes the various kinds of torments which a sailor experiences, while, overpowered by desire for wealth and
enjoyment, he
(2)
sails in
(3)
(1)
Gumba,
Takkola,
Takkasila,
Kalamukha,
(5)
Maramipara,
Vesunga, (7) Verapatha, (8) Java, (9) Tamali, (10) Vauga, Suvannakuta, (13) Suvannabhumi, (12) (11) Elavaddhana, (14) Tambapanni, (15) Suppara, (16) Bharukaccha, (17) Surattha,
(6)
(18)
(22)
(25)
Anganeka, (10) Gangana, (20) Paramagangana, (21) Yona, (24) Marukantara, (23) Allasanda, Paramayona, (26) Ajapatha, (27) Mendhapatha, (28) SaiikuJannupatha,
(29)
patha,
This
interesting
passage
subject of
and the readers are Sylvain Levi to his scholarly article for a detailed discussion of referred 8 Its chief importance, the various points arising out of it.
learned dissertation by
1.
M.
is explained as Ceylon in a late no importance should be attached. It places commentary to which Suvarnakutfyaka in Assam. Dr. H. C. Raychaudhury has supported this identification by equating Para-Samudra with Palaesimundu of the
2.
Periplus.
Palaesimundu
Para-Samudra
is
not very
obvious.
3.
II,
SUVARNADVlPA
for our purpose,
is
5?
it
offers
of
the sea-going trade in ancient India. It describes twenty-four localities (Nos. 1-24) which the merchants visited by way of sea,
and ten
routes (Nos. 25-34) which they had to follow on land, apparently after reaching the harbour on the seadifficult
coast. Of the twenty-four localities, Nos. 15 to 24 evidently belonged to the western side of India and do not concern us here. Suvannabhumi (No. 13), Vesunga (6), VerSpatha (7),
Ptolemy's Chryse Chora, and Takkola, the first mart in the Chryse Besyngeitai, Berabai, Chersonesus. As such, Suvannabhami may be located in Burma and the same is perhaps true of Suvannabhumi, mentioned
(2)
and
Takkola
correspond to
in the
(4)
is
MilindapaSha along with Takkola. The Kalamukha mentioned as the name of a tribe both in Ramayana and Mahabharata, and the country is to be placed on the Java (8) can be easily identified as the Arakan coast.
of
well-known island
Java.
Tamali
(9)
is
the
same
as
Tambralinga, referred to in a Sanskrit inscription discovered at Caiya in Malay Peninsula, and has to be placed in that
Suvannakuta (12) has been equated by Levi with Suvarnakudyaka which we have already discussed above. Tambapanni (14) is, of course, Ceylon. Gumba (1), Maranapara are not known from any other (5), and Elavaddhana (11), and cannot be identified for the present. source
region.
There remain now Takkasila (3) and Vanga (10) which and are both well-known places, one in the north-west,
the
other,
fication
of
Takkasila
with
is
Taxila
named
in a list of
While, therefore, nothing definitely can be said in this matter, Levi has drawn our attention to the river Tokosanna, mentioned by Ptolemy, near Arakan coast, and the Takkasila of the text may be located here.
The
i.
identification of
Cf,
Vanga
II.
with
Bengal
seems equally
Book
II.
Chap.
58
objectionable,
SUVAENADVlPA
particularly
when we remember
in
that
it is
both
Malay preceded and followed by other places and the Indian Archipelago. Lvi has pointed out that the
Peninsula
Manuscripts also give an alternative reading vankam, and this can be easily identified with the island of Banka to the
east of Sumatra.
The
the
list
part
of
we have named Suvarnabhumi and and of all the Indian texts available to us it Suvarnadvlpa, shows the most detailed knowledge of the oversea centres of trade in the East. Levi has drawn attention to the points of agreement between this list and that given by Ptolemy, and has drawn the conclusion that both must belong to approximately the same period. The knowledge of the Far East possessed
region
which
the author of the Periplus makes it highly improbable that such an extensive and detailed knowledge of the Far East, as is shown by the author of Niddesa, existed
by
Pliny and
in India in
On the other hand, the the first century A. D. absence of any reference to Cambodge or Champa makes it equally improbable that the list was drawn up in the third century
A. D. when those countries were certainly known to India. Thus the list of Niddesa must have been drawn up between the end of the first and the beginning of the third century A. D.
about the ten extraordinary routes mentioned at the end of the passage in Niddesa. The meaning of these has been made clear, partly by the commentary
some
of
Saddhammappajotika, and partly by the occurrence of them in the story of the merchant Sanudasa as narrated
story of Sanudasa
1
in Brhatkatha-Slofea-samgraha.
thus summarised by Lacote . 'Sanudasa joins the gang of the adventurer Jcera, who is preparing an expedition to the land of Gold (Suvannabhflmi). They cross the sea and land at the foot of a mountain. They
The
is
Vetra).
This
(Vetrapattta).
On
SUVARNADV1PA
is
it.
59
falls
into
by holding on to the bamboos which overhang They 1 This is "the bamboos' path" (Vamspatha). the banks Further on, they meet a narrow path between two precipices.
it
They
light a fire
the
Earatas
to sell
adventurers get on those goats, the only animals sure-footed enough to be able to follow the narrow edge without feeling giddy. This is "the goats' path" (Ajapatha). The adventurers do not come to the end of it without some difficulty as another
approaching from the opposite direction. struggle ensues, but Accra's troops are able to pass through after having thrown their enemies into the ravines. Sanudasa begins to feel
gang
is
indignant at the fierceness of the gold-seekers. Acera orders his followers to slay the goats and to put on their skins with the inside out. Huge birds will mistake those men for a heap
of
to their aerie.
It is
but his companions are pitiless. Everything takes place as Acera had foretold, but the bird which carries off Sanudasa
attacked by another bird which attempts to steal his prey. The goat's skin bursts open and Sanudasa falls in a tank which
is
is
is a hermitage from which a hermit comes out.' The story thus explains Ajapatha (26) and Vamsapatha (30), and the episode of Sanudasa being carried aloft by a huge bird evidently explains the Sakunapatha (31). Mendhapatha (27) obviously is to be explained in the same way as Ajapatha,
substituting
ram for a goat. The Vetrapatha is added in the and may correspond to Vettadhara or VettacSra (No. 34). story
I.
the other bank of the river are bent by strong catches hold of the top of one of them as soon as it is winds, and a man within the reach of the bank on which he is standing. Then, when the
The bamboos on
its
old position,
it
to the other
bank,
60
SUVARNADVlPA
The commentary
explains Jannupatha (25) as the
way where
Sankupatha gives a long the means by which a man could explanatory note, describing ascend a mountain. An iron hook, attached to a rope of skin,
(28) it
is
On
thrown up
till
the hook
is fixed
up
in the
mountain.
Having
climbed up the rope, the man makes a hole on the hillside with a diamond-tipped iron instrument, and fixes a spear. Having
caught hold of
again,
till it is
this,
again fixed up in
he detaches the hook, and throws it aloft the mountain. Then he ties
the rope to the spear, and having caught hold of the rope with one hand, strikes it by a hammer with the other till the
spear
spear,
hill.
is
detached.
Then he climbs up
till
again,
Chattapatha (29) is explained in the commentary as the way where one jumps down from a precipice with an open parasol,
(chatta=chatra)
made
In other words,
it
The Masikapatha
(32)
and Daripatha
References to these extraordinary routes are not confined two texts mentioned above. They are met with in the
the
VimSnavatthu,
Jatakas,
Milindapanha,
Vayu Purana,
.
1 None Matsya Purana, Kfttyayana's Vartika and Ganapatha of these, however, mentions a large number of them, and the
Puranas alone add a new one, Kharapatha, which is evidently to be explained in the same way as Ajapatha, substituting ass
(khara) for goat (a/a). It is to be noted that Katy5yana associates these ways with
merchants,
cf.
in a
way,
substituting
;
to Vimanavatthu
(p.
LXXXIV
Tittirajataka (Jataka
;
541),
Milindapafiha
Vayu Purana, Ch. 47, v. 54 Matsya Purana Ch. 121, v. 56 ; on Panini's Sutra V, 1,77 Patafijali's comment Ganapatha on Panini
280)
; ;
V. 3. ioo f
SUVAKNADVlPA
seekers of wealth for merchants.
associates
61
definitely
The Vimanavatthu
them
The Puranas
them
It is quite clear that from a very remote time the Indians in the Far East across possessed a vague idea of the countries the sea. The relation, no doubt, originated in trade, and the
tradition of fabulous
rise
The
Puranik accounts of the varsas and dvlpas, which represent this also mingled stage, were based on vague sailors' reports, but were with a great deal of fancy and imagination.
steady development of this trade is reflected in th Kautillya ArthaSastra and MilindaJatakas, Brhatkatha, paSha, where we have not only a more definite idea of the
The
region,
now
called Suvarnabhunii,
but also
a knowledge
of
localities
within
it.
may
During the
first
era, the
mercantile relations led to colonisations on a fairly large scale. This is evidenced both by the popular stories as well as the by
many
localities
Ptolemy and Niddesa represent this stage of development which may thus be regarded as an accomplished fact by the second
century A. D.
The
literary
Missionary and
political
activities
if
must have
wake
of trade.
Indeed,
literature
fair reflex
of popular mind,
been a supreme passion in India in the centuries immediately preceding and following the Christian era, perhaps very much
in the
same way
as
it is
in
Europe
to-day.
The
extraordinary
62
SUVABNADVlPA
perils
and
numerous
stories, are
but a
faint echo
and explorations. If the history of that wonderful epoch of new discoveries had been preserved to us, we might possibly present it as a not
unworthy
parallel of the similar period in
stress
modern age. lay the background of our fact, particular study of ancient Indian colonisation in the Far East.
on
this
We
as
it is
Indeed, the evidence of a commercial origin of tliis intercourse with the Far East meets us at every step. In the first
place,
almost
stories of
all the literary references given above deal with merchants or seekers of wealth. Secondly, the geo-
graphical names, applied by the Indians, all refer to minerals, metals, or some industrial and agricultural products. may
We
Suvarnadvipa
and
its
variants
Hemakdta
dvlpa,
Narikela-dvlpa, etc.
Thirdly, Kautillya ArthalSstra knows of foreign countries only in connection with their industrial products.
Fourthly,
we may
refer to
Chinese ambassador to Fou-Nan about the middle of the third century A. D., which runs as follows
:
"Formerly, during the reign of Fan-Chan, a man called KiaSiang-li came from India to Fou-Nan for purposes of trade. He gave a short account of India to Fan-Chan who then asked
him
"What
li
is
How
long does
:
it
take
to go to that country
Kia-Siang-li replied
"India
is
about
30,000
from
here.
would
require,
three or
This passage and another statement of K'ang T'ai" shows that the earliest intercourse between India and the Far East was through adventurous merchants, and it
four years'' l
was well
i.
B. E. F. E.
Vol.
Ill,
pp. 277-8.
II,
9.
pp. 249-50.
SUVAENADVlPA
Some
traditions,
63
no doubt, represent Ksatriya adventurers from India as having conquered territories in the Far East>
but they must have followed in the wake of merchants.
It
is,
l
of course,
motives of intercourse.
to
There
expansion
to
it
or
religious
propaganda
Chronicle
until
is
we come
the Ce.ylonese
refers to
As
well-known,
tho
conquest of Ceylon by Vijaya at the time of Buddha, and the despatch of a Buddhist mission to Suvamiabhnim in the time
of ASoka.
Whether
events can
in
be accepted as true
if
a matter of dispute.
But
any case,
and they would constitute the only exceptions, even then we should remember that the path had already been paved by the merchants.
true,
On
the whole
it
only incentive to the perilous voyages across the sea. Tho traders spread Indian culture along with their wares, and as
But
opportunities offered, they might have seized the political power. it is only at a comparatively later age, that adventurous
princes came to seek their fortune, or individual or bands of missionaries came to propagate their religious
Ksatriya
monk
doctrines.
We
possess
all
belong
to a later period.
The subsequent
fusion
and the evolution of a new culture which partook of elements of both. The dominant race imposed its language, religion and social customs, but
all
traces
As
years went
referred to in
my work
'ChampS,' pp. XI
fi"
64
SUVARNADVIPA
less
grew
and
less,
colonies
All these will be illustrated by the detailed history of the Indian in the Malay Peninsula, and the islands of Java,
we now
proceed.
Chapter V.
IN
MALAY
The Malay Peninsula or the Peninsula of Malacca is tho name given to that long narrow strip of territory which,
southwards from Judo-China, divides the Bay from the China Sen, and forms the most southerly extremity of the mainland of Asia. It is called by the natives Tanah Malayu, the land of the Malays. It is now generally regarded as beginning at the Isthmus of Kra, in Lat. 10, but, in the widest sense, the peninsula extends from the parallel of the head of the Gulf of Siam, in Lat. 13-30'. The peninsula runs at first south, and then in a south-eastern direction, for about 800 miles. The distance from the Isthmus of to
projecting of Bengal
Km
Cape Rumenia
exactly,
east of Singapore
),
as
Cape Rumenia is nearly, though not the most southerly point in the peninsula, Tanjong Bulus ( l-lt>i'N. ), a little to the west, occupying that position. The peninsula is bounded on the north by Siam, and is surrounded by the sea in all other directions by the China Sea
be about 750 miles.
;
and the Gulf of Siam on the cast, by the Strait of Singapore on the south, and by the Straits of Malacca arid the Bay of Bengal on the west. There are many islands along the shores of the peninsula, the most notable being Langkawi and Penang on the west, and Singapore, Batan and Biritang on the south. The islands on the eastern coast are fewer and smaller.
is
The most characteristic physical feature of the peninsula the long range of granite mountains which runs along its
9
66
MALAY PENINSULA
descending
east,
somewhat abruptly into a wider and more gently into a narrower plain on
the main chain, there are also isolated spurs and limestone buffs. The highest peak in the main range, Gunong Kerbau,
has
an
altitude of 7,160
(7,
ft.,
is
Gunong Tahan
186
ft.)
on the eastern
of the peninsula
is
both alluvial
forests,
plains
covered by evergreen
is
human
foot.
The
forests
yield
excellent
including
durable,
but more frequently used, materials of Malayan architecture, such as rattans, bamboos, the nibung, and the nipa palms. Guttapcrcha, rubber, oils, and resins are also obtained from
the forests.
The
There sago, pepper, spices, and rubber. are also some excellent fruit trees such as the mango-steen,
durian, pomegranate, jack-fruit, custard-apple, cocoa-nut, arecanut, sugar-pahn,
and banana.
are numerous,
The
mouth.
rivers
most
cases
the
The more
on the west, and Patani, Talukin, Kelantan, Bcsut, Trengganu, Kuantan, Pahang and Rompin on the east. On account of the impenetrable forests, the rivers have always formed
the chief highways of communication, and of the rivers that the main centres of
it is
on the banks
have
civilisation
grown.
The chief mineral products are tin, iron, The peninsula, with the islands adjacent to
far the
gold,
and
coal.
it, by and supplies nearly one-third of the world's output of that metal. Gold mines exist in Pahang, Kelantan, and Perak, and they are known to have been worked even in very ancient times. Among
contains
most extensive
SUVARNADVlPA
other mineral products
lead, silver, zinc,
67
copper,
may be mentioned
1
mercury,
and
is
coal.
Although
it
existing political
its
not within the scope of the present work condition of the Malay
political
geography
isthmus
is
nece-
The northern
running
part of
the
peninsula,
forming a narrow
nearly due north and south to the length of 140 miles, is inhabited by the Siamese or a, cross between them and the Malays,
known
to the latter
This portion,
subject to
Siam and
on the west forming practically so many Siamese provinces coast, beginning from north, are Eanong, Takua Pa, Takuatung,
:
Junk Ceylon, a corruption of the Malay name of Ujong Salang), Palian and Satul on the east coast, Patavi, Chumpaun, Caiya, the island of Samui, Nakonsitamaraj (Nakhon Sri Tha(dha)mmarat), Patalung, Sengora, Ghana Tepa, Nongchik, Tani Jaring, Jala, Sai Ranga, Raman, and Patani. To the south of these lie the states of Perils and Keddah on the west and
Pukct
(
or
over which the kingdom of Siam exercised suzerainty until recent times, but which now
cast,
States, protected
and advised
In spito of numerous works on the Malay Peninsula, it is not I. easy to get a simple and accurate description of the physical features of the land. The statements in different authorities also do not always agree, particularly as regards distance, area, and the height of mountains. The above account is based on the following books :-
Islands
John Crawfurd A Descriptive Dictionary of the Indian and Adjacent Countiies (London 1856) (s. v. Malay Peninsula). Notices of the Indian Archipelago and Adjacent b. J. H. Moor
a.
;
ff.
Major C. M. Enriquez
1927).
d.
Encyclopaedia Britannica
68
MALAY PENINSULA
British. The southern part of the peninsula consists of states which are more directly under the British authority. The regular British territories, forming the Crown Colony of
by the
Straits Settlements,
map
a little way Malay Peninsula. One dot is Singapore still following the coast, the the coast, Malacca is another up Bindings form a third Penang and Province Wcllesley are
of the
; ;
two more."
The
in
other states
known
as Federated
Malay
States are
all
not,
but
name by
Selangor,
and the group of nine states, collectively known as Negri SernTo the bilan, on the west, and Pahang on the east coast.
is the important State of Johore forming the southernmost portion of the Malay Peninsula. Since 1914 it has been included among the Non-Federated States, being protected
south of these
British.
( taking it in its narrower significance, south of the Isthmus of Era ) has a population of about
This includes
1,600,000
Malays,
or primitive tribes. The racial elements among the original discussed above. people of Malay Peninsula have already been The Chinese and Indian colonists have settled there since the
Christian era. During the last four and Americans have formed a small centuries the Europeans
early
centuries
of the
colony,
numbering
at
present
about
15,000,
with
12,000
Eurasians.
It has
already been
shown above
that the
Malay Peninsula
held a very important position in respect of maritime trade in the Far East from a very early period. Indeed, its geographical
j.
The account
In
is
of the Far East" by Sir Henry Peoples and Politics respects Unwin, 1907). and Encyclopaedia Britannica, i^\\ Edition,
Norman
(T. Fisher
some
it
is
SUVARNADVlPA
position
69
made
it
and the western world. must have been known to India from very early times. has already been mentioned above, the names of both Malaya-dvlpa and Kataha-dvlpa occur in the PurSnas, and some
It
As
known world
definite
is
divided.
The
earliest
made by
Ptolemy. He calls it 'Chryse Chersonesus', an equivalent of the Indian name Suvarnadvlpa, and expressly refers to an active
fair
Malay
(2)
;
Takkola, a mart;
Peninsula.
He names
;
(6) (8)
the
(10)
river Attaba
mouth of Sabana, a mart (5) (7) mouth of cape Maleu Kolon and Koli, a town (9) Perimula
; ;
Bay
of Perimula.
In a supplementary
list
does not take away the great importance of Ptolemy's writings. Levi has shown that Ptolemy's account regarding the S.
Far East possesses a striking agreement with that given in 8 This proves, in his opinion, Niddesa, a Pali canonical book. not only the general accuracy of the Greek account, but also
that
the
Indians
of the
knowledge nor the author of the Pcriplus could gain anything but a vague In report of Suvarnabhiimi from his Indian informants.
other words, the century 50-150 A. D.
1.
had acquired a far greater amount of Far East since the days when neither Pliny
witnessed a remarkable
M'Crindle
Gerini's
2.
long
the identification
of
Ptolemy's
(cf.
Researches,
3.
pp. 81-115).
S. LeVi
II,
pp.
i if.,
specially
cf.
p. jo.
70
MALAY PENINSULA
growth in the trade and maritime activity of the Indians in the Far East. This is further corroborated by the fact, that
not only the general name Suvarnabhflmi, but also local placenames such as Takkola, Java, and T&mralinga, and the nameIt may ending 'nagara' in Kokkonagara, are purely Indian. there was a also be noted that by the second century A. D.
1
regular intercourse between India and China, either 8 the Isthmus of Kra, or the Straits of Malacca.
through
be regarded
For, Fou-nan
in the
ancient
Kamboja
,
by the Hindus
later
first
s century A. D.
4 century A. D.
It,
therefore,
stands
Malay Peninsula, which lies on the route countries, must have been colonised at an
is
also
The History
of
(
the
or Lang-ga-su
Svhich,
the
people
Now the king say, was established more than 400 years ago/ extols the emperor of China by saying, among of this country other things, that the precious Sanskrit was generally known in his land. This leaves 110 doubt that it was a Hindu colony.
Chinese history, containing the account, refers to the sixth century A. D., the traditional date of the foundation of the colony would be more than four hundred years before that,
the
or, in
As
It is generally
agreed that
1.
Lang-ya-su was
cit, pp. 5.
situated
in
Malay
Peninsula,
Levi (op.
ff.)
was the
first
to
Takkola
B. E. F. E. O., Vol.
refers to trade
A passage in Tsien-han-Shu Ill, p. 291. between China and Huang-tche during 140-86 B.C. Huang,
Kaficf in
;
South
J.
(T'oung Pao, 1912, p. 457 ; J. A. n-XIII (1919), p. 451 A. n-XIV, p. 4 5 ; Tijd. Aard. Gen, Vol. 45, p. 589.) Ibid, p. 290. 4. Champa R. C. Majumdar, p. 21, 3.
India.
91
this colony is
somewhat by
difficult.
The same
place
is
referred to as Lang-kia-su
I-tsing
and
Kama-laAka by Hiuen Tsang, and both enumerate it in a list of countries between Sri-Ksetra (Prome and DvSrfivatl (Siam). On this and other grounds, Pelliot held that it must be placed
)
either
preferred the latter view. Pelliot further held that this Lang-ya-su
is
the same as
Coedfcs
Ling-ya-sseu-kia mentioned by
Chau Ju-kua.
M.
has
proved that this latter is the same as Lenkasuka, mentioned in 'Keddah Annals' and Nilgara-krtagama, and is to be further identified with Gimong Jerai near Keddah. Coed&s
the
showed that the same place is referred to, in the form Ilangafiogam, in the Tamil inscriptions of Rajcndra Cola, as one of the
vassal states of Srl-Vijaya conquered
Coedfcs points out that Pclliot's
by him.
of Lang-ya-su
identification
or Lang-kia-su with Ling-ya-sseu-kia or Lenkasuka cannot be upheld, as the latter is certainly near Keddah, whereas the
former
is
Coedfcs,
was a very hypothetical one, resemblance with Nankasi, the old name of
it
should be located in
Tenasserim or Malay Peninsula, because it is inserted between Sri-Ksetra (Prome) and Dvaravati (Siam). As a matter of fact
Isthmus of Kra as a probable location, as, according to I-tsing, the Chinese pilgrims frequently passed through Lang-kia-su on their way from China to India
he
himself
suggested
the
or back.
Even, therefore,
if
Lenkasuka
is
there does not seem to be uny insuperable objection in placing Lang-ya-su or Lang-kia-su also in that locality. It must be
to the
History of the
identification
E. F. E.
O.,
Vol.
IV, pp.
406-8.
The
with
(Ibid, p. 475).
6,
pp. 11-13.
?2
MALAY
PEtfINSULA
Liang Dynasty, 'was 30 days' pacing from east to west and 20 days' pacing from north to south/ It may, therefore, be
regarded as having comprised the northern part of the Malay Peninsula extending as far south as Keddah. Rouffaer, however,
places
both
Lang-kia-su and
Leiikasuka
1
.
in
Johore in the
Malay
Peninsula.
On
the
name
in
an
Arabic work, in the form Lang-Saka, and has identified it with Marco Polo's Lochac. On the strength of these and fresh
Chinese evidences, he has located Lang-kia-su on the eastern 2 coast of the Malay Peninsula, in the Isthmus of Ligor. Indeed
the passage which Ferrand has quoted from Chavannes' 'Eeligieux Eminents' (pp. 78 and 100), seems to leave no doubt on the point.
If,
therefore,
Coedfcs'
identification
of Leiikasuka
with Gunong Jerai be accepted as definitely proved, hold that it was different from Lang-kia-su.
Coedfcs' view,
we must
however, rests almost solely on the Hikayat Maron Mahawa&sa, a late work of no authentic character. It
of an old site was given has further relied upon the popular traditions about Leiikasuka or Langkasuka, noted by
is also quite possible
that the
name
Coedfcs
explained
that
name
On
the other
hand,
M.
Sylvain Levi's
identification of
MevilimbaAgam, mentioned in Rajendra Cola's inscription, with 8 of Hiuen Tsang, differentiates the latter from KSma-lanka
Le&kasuka, mentioned separately as Ilangasogam in the same inscription. This would support Coedfcs' view. Thus, while it is
difficult to identify definitely
the former
may
In any case we are fully justified in regarding Lang-kia-su as an old Indian colony in Malay Peninsula, dating probably
1.
B. K.
J,
I.,
1931, pp. 89
ff.
2.
A. H-XII
3,
J. A., Vol.
CCIII, p. 44.
SUVAKNADVlPA
from the second century A. D.
this
73
Some
interesting accounts of
1
The manners
show a
and customs of
people, as described
by the Chinese,
indigenous influence.
annals give us some information about the political condition of the country during the fifth and sixth centuries A. D. The passage is thus translated by Schlegel
:
The Chinese
"The people of this country say that their state was founded more than 400 years ago ( A. D. 100 ), but that it got weaker under its successors (sic) and as there was among the rela;
tions
of the king one who was an excellent man, the people turned towards him. When the king heard of this, he put him
snapped spontaneously.
On this
the
king thought him to be a supernatural being and dared not hurt him any more, but only drove him from his territory, whence he took refuge to India, and was married there to tho eldest
daughter ( of its king ). When on a sudden the king of Lang-ga su died, the great officers called back the prince and made him king. He died more than 20 years later, and was succeeded by his son Bhagadato. In A. D. 515 he sent an envoy named
Aditya with a
letter to the
emperor of China.
"These embassies were repeated in A. D. 523 and in 531 and then seem to have been dropped."*
in A.
was a further embassy to China D. 5G8. 3 In course of a highly interesting and instructive philological disquisition, M. Sylvain Levi* has demonstrated that KSmalanka, the
i.
name given
to the colony
by Hiuen Tsang,
translated
also occurs
(Notes, pp.
200).
by Groeneveldt
IX., pp. 191-
Serie
I,
Vol.
3,
4.
B. E. F. E. O.
38$
translated
by Bagchi
"Pre-
in India*, pp.
104
ff.
10
74
MALAY PENINSULA
Karmaranga. The MaSjuSrlmfllakalpa "names the islands of Karmaranga with the island of (p. 332) Cocoanuts (Nadlkera) and Vsrusaka (Baros, Sumatra) and the
in Indian literature as
islands of the
Naked
is
(Nicobar), Bali
indistinct,
abunding in the letter r" Karmaranga with Harikela, Kamarupa, and Kalo&a (see below). Bana, in his Haracarita, twice mentions the shield of Karmaranga, and his commentator
skins of the country.
without clearness, rude, and The same text again (p.648) mentions
On this M.
"The reputation of the skins of Karmaranga appears to explain Ptolemy's note on the population of the "Brigands" "Lestai" which he locates exactly in the surroundings of
Karmaranga, on the southern shores of the great gulf, i.e., the "It is said that the natives of Gulf of Siam (VII, 2, 6 and 21)
:
like
that
of hippopotami
region had some centres of impenetrable by arrows." "Samara(n)de, population and even a port of commerce. Pagrasa, Pithonobaste which is a market, Akadra, Zabai which It can be is the city." supposed that Samara (n)de is an
alteration
The
of the
finally
alternate forms Carmaranga and Karmarafiga". M. Levi further points out that India received from this country the fruit which the Europeans call carambola and which
is
named
in Sanskrit,
origin,
Karmaranga
(Bengali-KSmranga). Now the Malaya name of this fruit is balimbing or belimbing, which has made its way in all parts of South India along with the Sanskrit name. This has supplied
to
M. Levi
of a geographical problem.
Among
name Mevilimbangam which has not been hitherto identified. fruit, M. Levi remarks as
Mevilimbangam
:
"Mevilimbangam
it
SUVAKNADVlPA
is clear
75
that Vilimbangam
is
is
belimbing which
The Indian
Thus
name
become
Sylvain
Lvi thinks
that Mevilimbaiigam
Kama-lanka=s Lang-kia-su.
As
mean
that
Lang-kia-su was different from Langkasuka or Leiikasuka. But even if it were so, "the two countries", as Levi remarks,
"are certainly very near each other".
in
pointed
local
out
1
,
"Langkasuka
It has
still
lives
Malays.
developed into
myth, being evidently the "spirit land" referred to as Suka by the peasantry of the Patani states".
Lokon
three names
may be
compared to
to
Karmaranga (or Carmaranga) of the ManjuSrlmnlakalpa referred above. Vrsa is possibly the same as Varusaka (Baros, Sumatra), and Carmadvlpa may be presumed to be the same as Cannaranga= Karmarafiga == Kama-laAka = modern Ligor.
Carmaranga
Kalalavarapura
is
mentioned
in
MafijuSrimalakalpa
;
with
233).
(Kalafiahva p.
206
KalaSamukhya,
p.
referred to as a city in Suvarnadvlpa in the Kathasaritrsagara (54, 108). In the collection of Nepalese
KalaSapura
is
miniatures
studied
at
in
by
M.
Foucher,
the
representation of
follows
that
Bhagavat
Dipankara
KalaSavarapura
immediately
of
Yavadvipa.
of the
i,
J.
R. A.
S.,
1906, p. 119.
Op.
cit.,
p, 106.
76
MALAY PENINSULA
All the
three forms correspond to KalaSapura. As to the location of the kingdom, the Chinese accounts place it to the north of
Tou-ho-lo, which was to the north of P'an-p'an.
Now Tou-ho-lo
has been identified with DvarSvati, in the lower valley of the Menam river. If Kalafiapura is to be placed to the north of
DvSr&vatl,
it must have been an inland region far away from the sea, whereas, according to the story in the Kathasarit-sSgara, the ship-wrecked merchant SamudraSura was cast adrift at
was evidently on the sea-coast. Pelliot has shown on good grounds that the directions given in the particular Chinese passage cannot be held to be quite accurate, and
Kalafiapura, which
he, therefore, proposes to substitute Vest' for 'north',
for
which
there
is
some independent
authority.
With
this
modification
may be
river.
On
P'an-p'an corresponds to
Bandon or
Ligor in Malay Peninsula, and, therefore, KalaSapura also may be placed in the northern part of it. It may bo noted that
Kern amended the name KalaSapura to Kalapapura, Kalapa being the name for Batavia. This amendment, however, is unten1 able in view of the forms of the name in the Chinese Text.
To
called
Keddah, which was the centre of trade and commerce between the cast and the west and figures so prominently in later Arab accounts. Its ambassadors visited China between 650 and 656 A.D., and the
It is evidently the
Kala or Kora.
same
as
following
account
is
Tang Dynasty
is also
'This country
situated at the south-cast of P'an-p'an The king's family name is called Kora Fu-sa-ra.
his personal
and
Sri
Pora and
name
is
Mi-si Po-ra.
The
walls of his
stones piled
upon each
other,
whilst the
2.
Groeneveldt
Notes, p. 121.
SUVARNADVIPA
straw.
77
The country
;
is
"The
and they
and armour
of leather
their banners
fight
consists of a
mounted on elephants one division of the army hundred of these, and each elephant is surrounded
by a hundred men. On the elephant's back is a cage containing four men, armed with bows, arrows and lances. "As taxes the people pay a little silver. There are no silkworms, nor hemp or flax, nothing else but cotton. For domestic animals they have numerous cows and a few ponies.
"It is their
tie
up
their hair
Another Hindu
Malay Peninsula, of which we get the Chinese annals, is Pa-hoang (or Po-houang)
identified
is
following account
by Schlegel with Pahang. The contained in the Nan-shi and the History of
1
.
"In A. D. 449 the king of the state of Pahang, named SariPala-Varma sent envoys who presented 41 different articles of
tribute.
By
imperial decree
great historian
of his country,
Da
Emperor Wen named him "Bang In A. D. 451 and 456 he again sent his Napati to present a letter and offer products
to
when H. M. gave
its
Napati the
title
of
"Awe-
inspiring general.
In A.D.
when Ming-ti
Da Surawan
as
grand
Awe-inspiring general Da Napati, the title of Dragon-horse Generals". The kingdom of Pahang with its two state historians must
historian, the
civilisation.
The
I,
vol.
Pelliot,
however,
cf.
is
78
MALAY PENINSULA
of
its
name
Varman, leaves no doubt that he was from the above account that this Hindu a Hindu. state in the eastern part of Malay Peninsula was in close and
king, ending in
It is evident
intimate contact with the Chinese court during the fifth century
A.D.
There
is,
Hindu
state in
Malay Peninsula, but the question is unfortunately not free from doubt and difficulties. The Chinese annals of the Liang
and First Sung Dynasty refer to a kingdom called Kan-to-li or 1 Neither Kin-to-li situated on an island in the southern sea refer to the kingdom, and it is not T'ang nor later Sung annals till we come to the History of the Ming Dynasty that we come
.
across the
Kan-to-li
asserted
that
Now, on the
San-bo-tsai with
and other Sri-Vijaya and Palembang, Groeneveldt, Schlegel, scholars took Kan-to-li of the Liang and First Sung annals as
has been strongly criticised equivalent to Palembang. This view to the identification of Kan-to-li with by Gerini. Referring "This San-bo-tsai by the late Ming historians, he remarks
:
late identification looks, I need not say, exceedingly suspicious, in view of the fact that we have more than once caught
especially
and last, but not Chinese authors at fault in this sort of game there was and still exists a Khanthuli or Kanturi least, because
;
district
on the east coast of the Malay Peninsula, which may of First Sung and Liang periods." very well be the old Kan-to-li criticism of Gerini appears to be a valid one, and neither The
Pelliot
nor Ferraiid
is
willing to
later
identification identification
proposed by
proposed
by Gerini
not
found general
its
For the Chinese references to Kan-to-li and discussions about 2. Ferrand i, Groeneveldt Notes, pp. 60-62. identification cf.
i.
J.
A. n-XIV
II.
4. Pelliot
Gerini Researches, pp. 601-604. 3(1919), pp. 238-41. E. F. E. O., Vol. IV, pp. 401-2. B. 5. Schlegel T'oung
Vol. II, pp. 122-4.
Pao, Serie
SUVAKNADVIPA
acceptance.
79
Ferrand quotes a passage from the Hawiya of Ibn a Majid (dated A.D. 1462), which shows that Kandari was general appellation of the island of Sumatra. Ferrand suggests that the Ming historians really conveyed an authentic information,
little
inaccurrte
for, instead of
was
Kan-to-li.
The History
information regarding Kan-to-li "Its customs and manners are similar to those of
It
Cambodge
and Champa. and excellent arcca-nuts. In the reign of the emperor Hia-Wu (454-465 A.D.)
of
the Sung Dynasty, the king of this country, Che-p'o-lo-iia-lien-to 3 sent a high official named Tchou-Lieou-to (Srlvaranarendra) (Rudra, the Indian) to present valuable articles of gold and
silver.
In the year 502, the king K'iu-t'an-sieou-pa-to-lo (Gautama Subhadra) sent envoys to the emperor. Sometime after, the king died and his son P'i-yc-pa-mo ( Vijaya Varman or Priyavarman ?) succeeded him. In 519 the latter sent a high official called
Pi-yuan-pa-mo (Vi
1.
Varman)
to
The
translation
that follows
is
(op. cit).
Groeneveldt's translation
2. The date is given as such by Cordier (La Chine, Vol. I. 335-36). Groeneveldt gives the date as 454-464 (p 60); Krom gives 452-464 (p- 81) ; while Ferrand gives 454-454 <P- 238), evidently a misprint for 454-464-
According to
f.
Pelliot the
in
A.D. 455
(op.
cit.,
p. 197
n. 4).
3.
Pelliot, op.
cit.,
n.
4.
"The Warrior
122.
(bald)
king Narendra
of the
restored also as
Hvara Narendra.
80
MALAY PENINSULA
of the Chen dynasty refers to another embassy from the kingdom in 563 AD. 1 Now, whatever we may think of the restoration of the proper names, there cannot be any doubt that they were Indians.
.
The History
The Chinese
accounts also represent Buddhism as being held in the highest veneration in the country, and, in spite of possible
exaggerations, there
Thus
we can
hold that the Indian kingdom of Kan-to-li had been established in Malay Peninsula by the fifth century A.D., and it flourished at least from 455 to 563 A.D.
Actual remains of early Hindu civilisation in the Malay Peninsula, though scanty, are not altogether lacking. Mr. Evans
has described the remains of a Hindu temple and a few stone images at Sungai Batu Estate at the foot of Gunong Jerai
(Keddah Peak).
"Let us
They
consider what some of these specimens indicate. certainly show that some early inhabitants of Sungai Batu
now
were Hindus, and worshippers of Siva or related deities, for we have obtained images of Durga, (?) Ganefia, the Nandi on which he rides and of the Yoni, always associated with the
2 worship of Siva or with that of deities of Siva Group."
Unfortunately it is impossible to assign even any approximate date either to the shrine or to the images. But the remains of
a brick-built Buddhist
hood,
at
shrine,
discovered
in its
neighbour-
approximately in the fourth or fifth century A.D. on the strength of a Sanskrit inscription found in it. Similarly remnants of pillars, which
Keddah,
may
be
dated
2.
H. N. Evans
the
Malay
SUVAENADVlPA
engraved
figure of
81
on them.
Recently
a gold
Visnu on his Garuda, has been unearthed at Selinsing (Perak), and also, in a hole left by the roots of a fallen tree, a Cornelian seal engraved with the name of a Hindu prince
Ruins of shrines exist in the region round
Takua Pa
which has been identified by Gerini with Ptolemy's Takkola*. At Phra No hill have been discovered the remains of a small shrine, and a fine Visnu image, both probably dating from the
sixth or seventh century A.D. Tung Tuk, in the southern of Ko Khan island, was also an ancient settlement.
part
The
fifth or sixth to eighth or ninth century A.D. There are also remains of a temple which present great similarities to those in Sungai Batu Estate referred to above. At Khau Phra Narai are the remains of a small shrine, and three beautiful images of
Brahmanical gods which may be referred to the seventh or Tamil inscription, probably of the eighth century A.D.
eighth century A.D., has also been found in the same place.
Opposite Takua Pa, 011 the eastern coast, round the Bay of Bandon, are the remains of early settlements, specially in the
three well-known sites Caiya, Nakhon Sri Thammarat, and Vieng Sra. The temples and images of these places may be of some-
what later date, but the inscriptions found at Ligor and Takua Pa, and the Sanskrit inscription on a pillar at Caiya show that
these settlements could not
fifth
century A.D.
J. Mai. Br. R. A. S., 1932, p. 5- Cf. J. F. M. S. M., Vol. XV, pt. Dr. Chhabra, in J. A. S. B, L., Vol. x, pp. 27-28, where pp. 89 ft, 1 10 ff. the seal is reproduced, refers the characters of the seal to eighth century A. D. ; but this is very doubtful. For an account of the early Indian
1.
3,
settlement
near
Kuala
J.
Selensing,
cf.
'A
History
of
Perak'
by
R. O. Winstedt and R.
2.
I.
Wilkinson,
8ff.
p. 4.
3.
A.
L., Vol.
IX, pp,
Gerini
Researches, pp.
86ff.
11
82
MALAY PENINSULA
More
interesting light is
Malay Peninsula by an analysis of the large number of inscriptions which have been discovered in different parts of the
in
country.
These
inscriptions,
of
is
given in an appendix to this chapter, are mostly too fragmentary to yield any complete sense, but they lead to very important
conclusions.
They
are
written
in
alphabets of about the fourth or fifth century A.D. Two of them distinctly refer to a Buddhist creed and thus prove the
spread of Buddhism in that region. As to the distribution of the inscriptions, seven of them were found at Tokoon in the
centre of the Province Wellesley
;
same province one at Kcddah one at Takua Pa and two at Caiya. On the whole, therefore, these five at Ligor inscriptions clearly testify to the fact that the Indians had
part of the
;
of the
Malay
fifth
centuries A.D.
The palaeography
One
lit.
great sailor)
Kern
(Mahanavika Buddhagupta, an inhabitant of Rakta-mrttika". identified Rakta-mrttika (red earth) with a kingdom
called Chih-tu
latter
meant
its
red earth'.
1
.
Siam or
in
neighbourhood,
identification
this
Krorn has very pertinently asked the question that if Buddhagupta belonged to a locality in Siam or its neighbourhood, why should he come to northern part of
Province Wellesley to commemorate his
fitness
gifts.
It is
more
in the
of things, says
9
.
Krom,
be
This view seems to be eminently just. sought for in India Now, in course of his description of Karnasuvarna, the famous capital of Gauda (Bengal) under SaSanka, Hiuen Tsang refers
1.
f.n. 2.
2.
Krom*
Geschiedenis, p. 73.
SUVAKNADVlPA
to a magnificent Buddhist monastery near
83
it. "It is called by him in some texts Lo-to-wei-chih, explained as meaning "Red But the clay", and Julien restores the original as Raktaviti.
correct reading
is
Lo-to-mo-chih, that
is
.
identified
with a place
still
2
.
called Rangiiinati
(Red
clay)
12 miles
south
of
Murshidabad
Thus
place of
Buddhagupta, may be containing the famous monastery near the old capital of Bengal, which is still called by its old name. The fact that it was near
the river Bhagirathl, which served as the main channel of ocean trade between Bengal and the Far East, is not altogether without
significance in respect of the
proposed
identification.
It
may be
noted in conclusion that the stone slab containing this inscription has in the centre a representation, in outline, of a stftpa, with
seven umbrellas
3
.
The
of
report published by
Archaeological
M. Lajonquiere 4 about
the
work
the
interesting observations
land.
finds,
regarding Hindu colonisation in tliis His views, based on a study of the actual archaeological
as follows
:
may be summed up
'The colonies were large in number and situated in widely remote centres, such as Chumphon, Caiya, the valley of the Sri Dhammarat (Ligor), Yala (near river Bandon, Nakhon
1.
Walters
On Yuan Chwang,
Vol.
II, p. 192.
2.
Cunningham
Martin has
identified
this
with
Yule, who agrees with this as the Sanskrit form of the name of the place, identification, gives, Rangamrtika. Wilford, however, differs from this view and gives an
altogether different version of the text (M'Crindle
3.
Ptolemy, p. 229).
J.
A. S.
B., Vol.
IV,
PL
III.
4.
84
Patani),
MALAY PENINSULA
and Selensing
(in Pahang) on the eastern coast ; and Province Wellesley, Takua Pa, and the common delta Malacca,
of the rivers
'The most important of these was unquestionably that of Nakhon Sri Dhammarat (Ligor). It established a sort of
hegemony over the whole of the centre of the peninsula, to which belonged the colonies of Pathalung, Yala Trang, and the upper valley of the Bandon river. It was an essentially
Buddhist colony which probably built the great stupa of Nakhon Sri Dhammarat and part of the fifty temples which surrounded
it.
The mass
by the Buddhists, of which a few specimens still exist, also belonged to this colony. The inscriptions are unfortunately very rare, and only three have been discovered, belonging to the
fourth or
fifth
century A.D.
little
to the
north was
the
first
Brahmanical,
agriculturalists.
The
have
Takua
and gold-mines. They comparatively fewor traces of their civilisation, but the pits they dug in the mine-fields arc still clearly distinguished 1 It is difficult from later ones by a special technique
Pa, prospered by
left
these colonies, and some of them to assign any may be later than the seventh century A.D. But the inscrip-
date to
of
earlier
date,
though
many
Recently Dr. H. G. Quaritch Wales has made an intensive study of a few ancient sites, and has arrived at very important
and
along which
Indian colonists, and with them Indian culture, spread in Malay Peninsula. I summarise below his main conclusions, as far
i,
Ibid, p, 234.
StJVARNADVlPA
as possible in his
85
own
first
settled
in
the
Takua Pa
region.
and succeeding waves of Indians to settle. The early were probably attracted by tin which abounds in this part of the peninsula. However it may be with regard to mining, the Indians certainly also formed trading and agriculsettlers
'When
these
colonists
wanted
to
expand
beyond
the
valleys, they Some braved the courses open to them. waters of the Straits of Malacca, then swarming with Malay
somewhat narrow
pirates,
but
others,
perhaps
coast
the
majority,
followed
the
comparatively safe
natives, to the
peopled by milder
eastern
the peninsula.
For
it
is
only at this latitude that two rivers run approximately cast and west respectively from the watershed, being separated
at their sources
by only
five miles.
'Once they had reached the eastern side of the watershed, the colonists were in a broad fertile region, watered by the
Girirastra and
to have been
Luong
finest
rivers.
The
eastern
settlements seem
the
Bay
of Bandon,
the
harbour on the
east
coast,
which
To
chief Indian
routes.
The two
the Mergui-Pracuab crossing and the well-known Kra route, were used by Europeans and others in later centuries. But
neither of
them
L,,
suitable
for
early
if
LA.
I,
pp. 1-31.
86
colonial expansion,
MALAY PENINSULA
because neither offers on the east coast
large areas of well-watered territory and fine harbours, and not the slightest sign of Indian remains has been noticed on
either route.
Nakhon
Sri
There are no early remains at Trang, but, in the caves along both these routes, there were formerly large number of votive tablets, stamped with figures of Mahayanist Bodhisatvas, and
N&garl
earlier.
Inscriptions, dating
It
from tenth
therefore,
century or possibly
would appear,
were
'On
the
whole
the
available
the
around the Bay of Bandon was Eastern culture, inspired by waves of a cradle of Further Indian influence spreading across the route from Takua Pa.
assumption that the region
There
a strong persistent local tradition in favour of an early migration of Indians across the route from the west. At the same time persons of an Indian cast of features
is
are
of
common on
Indian
descent
Patalung, and trace the arrival of their ancestors from India by an overland route across the Malay
was through the country round the Bay of that the Indianisation of Fu-Nan was completed Bandon, by the second Kaundinya about the end of the fourth century A.D. The archaeological evidence shows the survival around
According to Liang-Shu,
identified
it
of P'an-p'an,
with the
region
the
Bay of Bandon of a primitive non-specialized type of Indian colonial architecture, having basic features in common
the
earlier
with
Pre-Khmer,
Cham,
and
Indo-Javancse
architecture
buildings.
at Caiya
Indian colonial
and Nakhon Sri Thammarat is supported by the latitude of the remains of almost existence in the same Indian edifices from which it could have evolved purely
;
SUVARNADVIPA
while the
sculptures found in this
territory include purely,
87
which could well have served as inspiration to the development of local forms in an Indo-nesian environment/
The above
clearly
Bandon
in
spreading
across
to
the
sea
to
less
speak of
important Indian colonies. He is not, however, dogmatic. "But while" says he, "I stress the importance of this region
as a cradle of Further Eastern culture,
do not wish
to
minimise
Hie part
remain
nor the sea route by which Indian influences must have penetrated to the cast from rcry early times"
to be investigated,
It is needless to add that the hypothesis of Dr H. G. Q. Wales opens up an interesting field of study, and invests the early history and culture of the Hindu colonies in Malay
APPENDIX
EARLY INSCRIPTIONS IN THE MALAY PENINSULA UP TO THE FIFTH CENTURY A.D.
(
of seven inscriptions now extant on the rather weather-worn and sloping side of a granite rock at
Nos.
1-7.
"A group
a place named Tokoon, lying near to the centre of the province 1 (Wellesley) or almost directly east of Penang Town."
Mr. Laidlay's reading of these inscriptions need not be seriously considered. But no attempt has since been made
to decipher them.
It
seems to be impossible
to
give a
reading
assuming that the seven fragments form a continuous inscription but several letters are quite clear. In No. 1, the first two letters are certainly sarvva and the next
three
first
may be
vayasi."
The two
letters
srame.
In the second
line the
word
'rajena*
may be
is
Nos.
3,5,6,
to interpret.
Now, although
i.
The
Low,
inscriptions
by
ff.,
Lieut.
Col.
James
Mr.
Part
J.
I,
and
X.
short
them
II,
was
published
pi.
by
1849,
W.
Laidlay
in J.
A.
S. B.,
1848, Part
refers
pp. 62
IV
p. 247, pi.
Lt. Col.
Low
to another
inscription
is
on
the
ornamented
dish,
?)
but no facsimile
1399.
published.
notices a
it
as Savita
(Sam vat
?).
He
also
SUVARNADVIPA
it.
89
In the
is
first
place,
the language is
This
Secondly, the few letters, that certainty, place the inscription not later
in No.
may be
than
fourth
century A. D.
It is to
peculiar characteristics of South Indian alphabet are not very conspicuous in this record. The lower end of the vertical in k
shows a
slight
bend
Nos. 8-11.
A group
of four inscriptions
Buddhist
temples."
1
,
These
inscriptions
,
have
8
,
been studied
Dr. R. L. Mitra 2
Dr.
Kern
and
lately
by
The
first
of these, No. 8,
may
vika-Buddhaguptasya rakta-mrttika(a)vas[/at*#as|/a] (?)." No. 9 has been read by Kern as "Sarwena prakarena sarvvasmat
third
sarwatha sarwa siddhayanasanna." Mr. Chhabra reads the word as 'sarvvasmin', and the last word as "Siddhayat (r) a (h) santu." Mr. Chhabra thinks that No. 9 is a continuation of No. 8, and the passage contains a prayer for the successful
voyage of Buddhagupta. No. 10. may be read as "ajnSnacclyate karmma janmanat karmma karana...jnanan-na ciyate (?)" As has been pointed out by Dr. Kern, this formula is also found in the Keddah Ins. (No. 12 below).
I read doubtfully as "...fiirasapragipata". Here, again, the sense of the inscription as a whole (assuming the four to be parts of one inscription) is obscure but it seems to record a gift by, and a prayer for the successful voyage
No. 11
i.
3.
2.
ff.
J.A.S.B. Vol. XVII, Part II, p. 71. J. A. S. B. L., Vol. I, pp. 14 ff. 4-
12
90
of,
APPENDIX
Buddhagupta, an inhabitant Sanskrit, and the characters century A. D. The characteristics
is
seem
the
fifth
upward bend of
/r,
r a and medial u.
9
inscription of four lines on a slab of stone "lying the centre of the foundation of a ruin of an ancient under
No. 12.
An
brick building in Keddah. It has been deciphered by Mr. Laidlay and Dr. Kern. The latter reads it a,s follows
:
L.
1.
Ye dharma
hetuprabhava
tesa(ri)
,
hetu(m) tathagato
(hyavadat) L. 2. Tesa(n) ca yo nirodha cva(m) vac)i mahaSramana(h) L. 3. Ajfianac=clyate karma janmamvli karma karanam
L.
jayate
4.
II
Jnanan=na
kriyate
karjttiiia
karmmabhava(n)=na
(11.
/
3-4) of this
As
inscription is
The
inscription
may bo
fifth
century A.D. on palseographic grounds. There are no traces of the peculiar characteristics of South Indian alphabets.
No. 13 l
Takua Pa
Inscription.
This has not been deciphered yet, but the characters are of early Indian type and show no traces of the chardofeiistics of
8
.
Nos. 14-16.
than the
Inscriptions,
discovered at Ligor, of not later These have not been edited yet,
Pa
(No. 13)
No.
or
fifth
17.
An
century A.D.
The Inscriptions Nos. 13-17 are published in B.C.A.I., 1910, 1. few other inscriptions, noted therein, are omitted, as they 147 ff. pp. are either doubtful or too fragmentary.
2.
The
XIII
facsimile of the
;
B.C.A.I.,
1910, pi.
cf.
Chapter VI
IN
of
JAVA
what are
of
the
largest
known
as the
Sunda
islands, in the
Malay
Archipelago.
between 105-12'-40" and lU-35'-38* East Longitude and S'-SS'-Si* and 8-46'-46" South Latitude. It is long but
narrow, running nearly east and west with a slight inclination to the south. Its length is about 022 miles, while its breadth The area of Java, including varies from 55 to 121 miles.
bounded
it
separates
about 51,000 sq. miles. Java on the north by the shallow Java Sea which from Borneo. On the south is the deep Indian
islands,
is
ocean, stretching as far as the Antarctic Pole without a single patch of land. On the east a narrow strait, about two miles
To
the
north-west
the
Sunda
Strait separating
Java
from
Sumatra.
its
The
strait, at the
narrowest,
is
extreme
There are many islands breadth being nearly 50 miles. to the north of Java. Madura, the chief among them, is separated
by a
is
strait
is less
Among
other islands
may be mentioned
the
Thousand
Islands, north of
Batavia, and the Karimon Java Archipelago (27 islands) to the north of Semarang. Java has a long coast-line and many
The only exception is the excellent harbour of Surabaya, at the mouth of the Brantas river and situated between the mainland and Madura. But there are good anchoring grounds
all
along the northern coast, and as the sea is generally smooth, hurricanes practically unknown, a number of ports
92
developed on the northern coast, and served the purpose of commerce quite well. There are only two harbours Chilachap and Pachitan on the southern coast, which is exposed to the
open
sea,
011 it.
An uninterrupted range of mountains, volcanic in character, runs along the whole length of the island through its centre.
The peaks
and 12000
of this mountain-range vary in height between 4000 No less than 46 of them are volcanoes, and about 20 are yet in a more or less active state. The craters of the
ft.
size,
the diameter of
the largest, at Tenger, being full three miles. Another low range of mountains, nowhere more than 3000 ft. high, runs along the southern shore.
innumerable rivers in Java, but, with two they are small and not navigable beyond a short exceptions, distance besides, they are difficult of entrance on account of or mud-bars at their mouths. The two exceptions the sand
There
are
Both of them
rise in
the low
range of mountains in the south, and, after a long and tortuous course, empty themselves into the narrow strait between Java
and Madura. The river Brantas is also known as the Surabaya river from the name of the famous harbour at its mouth. The Solo river is so called from the city of Surakerta (native name Solo) by which it passes. As a rule the rivers
in Java are
known by
the
name
on their
banks.
Although the rivers of Java are mostly useless for purposes of navigation and commerce, they are excellently adapted for irrigation. Java is one of the most fertile countries in the
whole world. Any one who travels in the country cannot fail charmed by its evergreen fields, meadows, and hills, with traces of abundant harvest everywhere around him.
to be
"Its villages and even its towns are, in a great measure, concealed from view, by the luxuriant abundance and perpetual verdure of its vegetation". Indeed, a railway journey from
SUVABNADVlPA
Batavia to Surabaya
the traveller is
is
93
apt to give rise to the impression that passing through a well-laid garden.
or six extensive plains in Java, such as those
Kediri, Malang, Bandavasa,
There are
of Bandong,
five
Surakerta, Madiun,
and Pugar. These are all girded by high mountains on the east and on the west and irrigated by the streams flowing from them. The valleys in Java are numerous, and some of them, and very fertile. e.g., that of Kedu, are fairly large
Java has a rich flora, and 'hardly any similar area in the world has one of richer variety'. It produces excellent timber, the most important of which is the famous teak-wood. About
40%
of the soil in
Java
is
is
of agriculture being
etc.
rice,
very poor in mineral products. There is indigo or silver, and only small quantities of coal, hardly any gold The discovery of petroleum in sulphur, and manganese. 1863 has added an important industry. The most well-known
Java
is
Both geographically and historically, Java falls into three Of the sixteen Residencies, or modern main divisions. administrative divisions of Java, those of Bantam, Batavia, Cheribon, and the Preangers constitute Western Java. Central
Java
comprises
the
Residencies of
Pekalongan, Samarang,
Banjumas, Kedu, Jogyakerta, Surakerta, Rembang, and Madiun. The remaining Residencies, vix,., Surabaya, Kediri, Pasuruhan and Besuki belong to Eastern Java.
Java
pelago.
is
The population
of
Java and
thirty millions
insignificant
people.
of foreigners (293,100 Chinese, 19,148 2,840 Oriental foreigners, and 64,917 Europeans and Eurasians), the rest may be broadly divided into three classes,
number
Arabs,
of
all
Malayan stock. These are Sundanese on the western, the Madurese in Madura and the eastern part of Java, and
94
the Javanese proper in the middle. As a matter of fact the western part of the island of Java is known to the natives as
Sunda.
three
millions,
have
the
eastern-most district of Java, and occur in large numbers also Pasuruhan. The remaining
part of Java, from Cheribon to Surabaya, is inhabited by the Javanese proper. All the three races appear to have a common
are
The Javanese, though less sturdy than their neighbours, more refined in manners and civilization, and are inspired by the memories of a glorious past, dating back to the period when the Hindu colonists imparted to them the elements of a 1 higher culture and civilization
origin.
.
The Hindu
colonization
of Java is
by
far the
most out-
standing event in the early history of that island. Unfortunately, the first stages of this colonization are hidden from our view,
and arc only echoed in a number of traditions current among the people in a later age. Sir Stamford Raffles has referred to
some
9
.
Many
of
these legends associate the original colonists and their leader Aji Saka with the heroes of the Mah&bhfirata ruling at Astina, 3 . modified version of i.e., HastinSpura, as their capital
to
Gujrat,
whence a further
later date
*.
wave
This introductory account of Java is based mainly on the 1. English translation of "Cabaton Java, Sumatra, and the other islands of the Dutch East Indies" ( T. Fisher Unwin, London, 1911 ).
2.
Sir
Thomas
Stamford
II,
Raffles
ff.
The
History
of
Java'.
1830), Vol.
pp. 69
Ibid., p. 71.
4.
Ibid,, pp.
87
ff.
SUVARNADVlPA
Another
colonization
cycle
95
the
credit
x
.
of
legends
gives
for
the
of Java to
In one of
were sent to Java by the prince of Kling. These people prospered and They continued, however, in un uncivilized multiplied.
that "twenty thousand families
state
till
them we read
of Javanese
era
i.e.
Saka era
the
almighty blessed them After describing three generations of kings, a total period of four hundred years, the story
with a prince,
continues
"Another principality, named Astina, sprang up at this time, and was ruled by a prince called Pula Sara, who was succeeded
by
his son
Abiasa,
;
who was
Deva Natha
amounting
the
again succeeded by his son Pandu reigns of the last three princes together
to
ono
hundred
years.
whom
this account is
Then
who removed
In the
above
story, there
is
no
difficulty
in
recognising the names of epic heroes like ParaSara (Pula Sara), Vyasa (Abiasa), and Pandu. Thus the two different cycles of
by Jaya Baya,
i.e.,
of Java, who flourished in the twelfth century A.D., and was the patron of the famous poem, Bharata-yuddha.
The legends naturally give great prominence to Aji Saka, who first civilized and gave the name Yava to the island, which was then called Nusa Kendang, and peopled by a race
of
as the chief
Aji Saka is described minister of a Pandava king ruling at Astina (Hastinapura), and is said to have landed in Java in the first 3 In some accounts, era). ( i. e. Saka year of Javan era
first
however, "it is stated, that the religion and arts of India were introduced into Java by a Brahmin named Tritresta, who
Ibid., pp.
73
ff,,
78
ff.
2.
3.
Ibid., p. 71.
96
era,
of
which he
is
observes
Some
represent him
as
a great
and
on Java, powerful prince, who established an extensive colony which a pestilence afterwards obliged him to withdraw whilst others consider him as a saint and deity, and believe
;
that on his voyage to Java he sailed over mountains, islands, and continents. Most, however, agree in attributing to him
the
first
only trace
his
the introduction of letters, government, and religion of anterior civilization being a tradition, that before
;
time there existed a judicial code, under the title of sun and moon... This code Aji Saka is represented to have reformed; and an abstract collection of ordinances, said to have been
made from
late
in use as
a
.
not necessary to refer to the different versions of these legends which may be consulted in the pages of Raffles' monumental work. It will appear from what has been said
It is
above, that very little importance can be attached to these stories beyond the fact, that they contain a vague reminiscence of what is undoubtedly a historical fact, viz., the colonization
of Java
It would be risky, without further even to deduce that Kalinga and Gujarat formed the evidence, main centres of Indian emigration to Java. But, as we shall
by the Indians.
from
Hindus from Kalinga and the Muhammadans to Gujarat may be regarded, on satisfactory grounds,
have taken the leading part in establishing respectively the Hindu and Muhammadan culture in Java. This probably the frequent reference to these two places in the
explains
to the heroes of the Mahalegends, while the prominence given the popularity of bharata should undoubtedly be attributed to
poem
in Java.
Ibid '
i.
Ibid., p. vs-
2*
P- 72i
SUVARNADVIPA
As to
the time
97
when Java emerged from primitive barbarism, we have a tradition preserved in the Chinese work Hsing"From old ch'a Sheng-lan ( 1436 A. D. ) written by Fei Hsin.
records preserved in this county ( i. e. Java)", says this author, "I learnt that this event took place during the Han dynasty,
1376 years before the present year, the 7th of Hsuan-te of our l great Ming Dynasty ( i. e. A. D. 1432 )".
This would take us to the year 56 A. D.
of the
Ming Dynasty
confusion.
"When
kingdom
first
year of the
emperor
Hsiian of the
Han
Groenevcldt has remarked, there is a discrepancy in the above account which it is difficult to explain for, counting back 1376
;
years
before
1432,
we
hold that either one of the two figures Chinese calculation, is wrong. But in view of
statement, the latter
Fei Hsin's
more probable. Thus we may take the Javanese tradition, as handed down by the Chinese, to refer the beginning of the Hindu civilisation to A. D. 56., i. e.
seems
to be
only
22 years before the beginning of the Javanese era synchronising with the traditional date of Aji Saka.
It
may
be noted here
that,
islands of Bali
and Madura
Madura
*
Kj-tagama, 5 of Bali, both the events being dated in the self-same year.
1.
it in the year 202. The formation a separate island is referred to in Nagara while a Balinese tradition refers to the separation
as
f.
n. i.
2.
3.
$.
Notes, p. 39.
4.
ff-
n. 4.
Nag,
Kr., 15,2.
98
These traditions have an indirect bearing on the question at issue. For, if we believe in them, we must hold that, at least
in Eastern Java,
;
a civilised community existed before the third for, otherwise, such an event would not have
more
tradition is a late
fabrication.
these
evidences
legends and traditions, there are more to show that India and Java must have
come
Java.
of
into contact
We
have already
But the
date
earliest reference to
He definitely mentions is that by Ptolemy. under the name of labadiou or Sabadiou. As he explains Java it as the Island of Barley/ the name is obviously a transcripknown
tion
of
Sanskrit
Yuuadclpa.
it
:
information about
"It
is
of
extraordinary
fertility and to produce very much gold, and to have its capital l called Argyre (Silver-Town) in the extreme west of it"
.
The obvious
identification of Ptolemy's
labadiou (=Yavaa
dvlpa) with Java has been questioned by some authorities. They point out that the island of Sumatra, or at least a part of
it,
was
also
argue as
known as Java. Starting from this basis they 'Now if we have to make a choice between follows
:
latter
is
undoubtedly to be preferred
on general grounds, for it being nearer to India must have been better known to the Indians, who could not have reached Java without passing by this great island, and therefore being This view is further strengthened first acquainted with it.
by
the
consideration
that
"produce very
1.
much
gold".
Java, as
at Dieng
2.
T. B.
Cf.
Krom
**
Geschiedenis,
p.
55.
Ferrand
in
J.
A.
n-XX
SUVARNADVIPA
hardly any gold at
gold,
all,
99
but Sumatra,
are really not as formidable as they appear to be. Sumatra was called Java, and never Yava, but Ptolemy's 'Barley-island'
shows that undoubtedly the latter was meant, and this has all along been the recognised name of the island of Java.
Secondly, while
it
it
is
is
times
it
1 reputation of being a gold-producing country. In an inscription of the eighth century A. D. found in Java itself, the country
is
referred to as
gold-mines. or not, it
its
richness in
well-deserved
certainly
Ptolemy's
reference to the
abundance of gold in Java, as his account must have been based on general popular notions rather than any geological
examination of the
although
quantities
soil
of Java.
The
gold,
fact
it
seems to be
imported
that,
Java
did
not
produce
large
and worked them into ornaments and articles of luxury. The countries to which these were exported naturally regarded Java as rich in gold. But whether this
of the metal,
explanation be correct or not, we have a sufficient explanation of Ptolemy's reference to gold in the inscription referred to above.
We may
thus
Hindu name.
Latitude of
chief
town
We may thus hold that by the second century A. D. there was a growing and familiar intercourse between India on the one side and Java and neighbouring islands on the other. But
neither the Indian literature nor the
account
of
Ptolemy
already
had
Cangal
Inscription,
verse 7.
p. Ji8,
100
colonised the
by the second
easily
century A. D.
The use
of a
Hindu name
it
may be
was the name given by Hindu visitors or traders to Java, and there is nothing to indicate that Java was called by that name by its own people. It is true that
natural assumption that that
Ptolemy used that name, but like other informations about the island, Ptolemy might have also got the name itself from Hindu
sources.
Fortunately
this question.
the
In
to
embassy sent
Ye-Tiao. Pelliot with Yavadvlpa, and Ferraiid has explained the name of the king as a Chinese rendering of Sanskrit Devavarman*. If
the conclusion of these eminent sinologists can be relied upon,
throw more light on Heu-Han-Shu, reference is made to an China in 132 A. D. by Tiao-Pien, king of long ago recognised the identity of Ye-Tiao
Chinese
annals
,
both the country and its king had Indian names, and no doubt can then possibly remain about the fact, that by 132 A. D. the
of Java,
on a firm footing.
that the
island
in
Further, the
of
effect
Java
was
known
by
the
name
Yavadvlpa
the
year 132 A. D., certainly supports the view that 'labadiou' of Ptolemy, who wrote shortly afterwards, refers to Java and not
to Sumatra.
to the Chinese authority, king Devavarman ambassador to the Chinese court for offering tributes. The envoy was apparently well received by the emperor, for he sent, as presents to the Javanese king, a golden seal and a
Now, according
sent his
violet ribbon.
The Chinese
historians
always
represent their
and any friendly offering, sovereign as the suzerain of the world, of produce for commercial purposes, is regarded or exchange
i.
Cf.
Pelliot
B. E. F. E. O., Vol.
J. A,,
f.
IV. (1904), p.
pp. S 2 *
266.
Ferrand
n-VIII,
&
Ferrand, op.
cit.,
p. 830,
n, 2.
SUVARNADVlPA
as tribute
1
.
101
the
also,
word
tribute
need not be taken in any other sense, and it would be a mistake to infer from this passage that the Chinese emperor exercised any sort of sovereignty over the distant island of Java.
Of
all
the
Hindu
colonies in the
kingdom
to
enter
recorded
embassies from
intercourse
This
third seems to have been continued in the century A. D. During the first half of this century two Chinese envoys, K'ang T'ai and Tchou Ying, visited Fou-Nan, and
published two books on their return. In K'ang T'ai's work named *Fou nan t'ou sou tchouan/ a country called Tchou-po
is
and
east
the
of
Tchou-po
this
the island
of
Ma-wou.
Pclliot
has
(as
corrected
its
name
as Ma-li,
and has
identified
well as
Bali.
Another
its
women know
2
cloth
floral
patterns
If
would prove the of the intercourse between China and the Hindu continuity
of Pelliot,
On
3
.
the other
hand,
Fcrrand,
it
as Jawa,
would identify
Regular diplomatic
(Cho-p'o) was
1.
intercourse between
resumed
We
R. A.
read in
S.,
For the
;
pp. 64-65
2.
3.
Hirth,
J.
1896,
Ferrand
in J. A.,
n XX
be
ff.
4.
Java seems
to
now
referred
to as Cho-p'o,
although this
identification,
identification
On
this
102
kingdom
diamond
ambassadors
red parrots, white Indian rugs and cottons, Javanese cottons, and similar articles. Four or five embassies
were sent from Ho-lo-tan between A. D. 434 and 452 one authority places these embassies in 433, 430, 449, and 452 A. D.,
;
while
452 A.D.
In the
a
another authority refers them to 433, 434, 437, 449, and In addition to the embassies from Ho-lo-tan, Chinese
annals refer to two embassies from Cho-p'o in 433 and 435 A.D.
latter year, the
king of
this country,
named Che-li-pVta-
emperor to present of the king has rendered as Srl-piida-dhara( or dharu )-varman been by Bhatara Dwaravarman by Ferrand, and Srl-pada Schlegel,
letter
Purnavarman by Rouffacr. Schlegel points out that this embassy camo from Cho-p'o-p'o-ta and not Cho-p'o, and has
nothing to do with Java, but Pelliot believes that the Chinese writers have erroneously combined the names of two countries,
Now
Ho-lo-tan
is definitely
is identified
with Java.
which,
it is
Even assuming
by the
identification,
absolutely certain,
which
Vol.
is
assumed throughout
271.
in
cf.
Pelliot,
B. E. F. E. O,.
follow
IV, p.
The
Ser.
accounts
(op.
the
embassies
271
ff
ff.
)
that
are
based
notes,
on
Pelliot's
article
I,
cit.
pp.
and and
Schlcgel's
T'oungPao,
Vol.
X,
(1899),
in
pp. 159
Ibid.
Schlegel, however,
identifies Ho-lo-tan
with
Kelantan
Malay
(
Peninsula,
;
so regards
Cho-p'o
I.
also, pp.
247
ff. )
Groeneveldt
p.
Notes, p. 9;
op. 'Enc.
is,
Schlegel
T'oung Pao,
J.
Serie
i,
Vol. X,
(1916), p.
251
Pelliot,
cit.
p.
271
Ferrand
Vol.
A.
n
p.
VIII.
367.
526.
Rouffaer
Ned.
Ind'.,
IV
(1905),
Rouffaer's
inscriptions
construction
testify
is,
no
doubt,
to
the
existence of
This identification
SUVAKNADVIPA
103
kingdom comprising the whole of the island of Java, or merely one of the many kingdoms into which that island was divided. The statement in the "History of the First Sung
Dynasty", that "the state of Ho-lo-tan ruled over the island of Cho-pV, would, no doubt, incline us to accept the former view, but certain details, preserved in the same Chinese history,
would favour
the king
of
the
latter.
Thus we read
Ho-lo-tan
named
Vaisa
or
VaiSya )-varmari
presented a letter. The kingdom was afterwards usurped by the son of Vaisavarman, of which the old king complained in a letter to the emperor of China, dated in the year 436 A. D." Now, as we have seen above, a king bearing a different
name was
We
ruling over Cho-p'o or Cho-pVp'o-ta in 435 A. D. must, therefore, presume that Ho-lo-tan and Cho-p'o (or
distinct kingdoms, and if the latter were in Java, as some scholars have hold, Ho-lo-tan could not mean the whole of Java.
there.
The first valuable and authentic account of the state of Hindu culture in Java is furnished by Fa-hien. The ship,
which that pilgrim took at Ceylon in order to return to his native land, was driven off its course by a storm, and Fa-hicn had to stop in Yavadvlpa (Ye-pVt'i) for five months, in the year 414-15 A. D. Regarding this country he observes that
"various forms of error and
Brahmanism
It appears mentioning" from this statement, that various forms of Brahmanical clearly religion were prevalent among the people of Java in general,
it is
Buddhism in
not worth
but
hold
over
them.
Fa-hicn's
Legge
Fa-hien,
of
it
p.
113.
The
scholars are
(
generally agreed
that
Ye-p'o-t'i
Fa-hien
denotes
Yavadvipa
Java
).
Ferrand,
however, identifies
with Sumatra.
104
remarks would justify the conclusion that Brahmariical culture was not confined to a handful of colonists, settled among a vast native population, but that it was the prevailing religion of
the country.
But
that
its
appears clearly from the story of Gunavarman, preserved in 'Kao seng tchouan' or 'Biography of famous monks', compiled in A. D. 519 1 Gunavarman (K'ieou-na-pa-mo), grandson
.
of Haribhadra (Ho-li-pa-t'o), and son of SanghSnanda (Sengkia-a-nan), belonged to the royal family of Ki-pin (Kashmir
orKapiSa i.e. modern Afghanistan). He was of a religious mood from his very boyhood. When he was thirty years old, the king of Ki-pin died without issue, and the throne was offered to him. But he rejected the offer and went to Celyon. Later he proceeded to Java ( Cho-p'o ). During the night preceding his arrival, the mother of the king of Java saw in
a dream that a
Gunavarman arrived
was converted
Buddhism. Gradually the king, too, was persuaded by his mother to adopt the same faith. At this time Java was attacked by hostile troops. The king asked Gunavarman, whether it would be contrary to Buddhist law,
if
Gunavarman
replied that
robbers.
it
was
king
then went
The
great
victory.
Gradually the Buddhist religion was spread throughout the kingdom. The king now wished to take to the life of a monk,
but was dissuaded from this course by his ministers, on the express condition, that henceforth no living creatures should be
killed throughout the length
Gunavarman had now spread in monks requested all directions. their emperor to invite Gunavarman to China. Accordingly the Chinese emperor sent messengers to Gunavarman and
of
i.
SUVARNADVIPA
the king of Java
105
named
Po-to-kia.
few months
later he died
In spite of its obvious exaggerations, this story may be taken -is an evidence, that Buddhism made its influence felt
in Java, almost immediately after the departure of Fa-hien. that when a Buddhist It must be remembered, of course,
book
states
that no animal
was killed throughout the length and breadth that Buddhism and of a country, it means no more than some extent in that to Buddhist practices were prevalent
country.
Fa-hien,
for example,
:
says
about the
MadhyadeSa
(Middle kingdom) in India "Throughout the whole country the people do not kill any living creature, nor drink intoxicating 1 This statement is demonliquor nor cat onions or garlic ."
strably
false,
if
it
is
taken to apply to
the whole
of that
vast region
It
in
India
which
to
is
indicated
to
by
MadhyadeSa.
may
at best
be taken
refer
Buddhist section of the community. abstention of the people of Java from the slaughter of animals can only be taken in a modified sense, as in the case of India.
Having now briefly reviewed the notices in Chinese annals, regarding the Hindu kingdom of Java, we may now turn to a The earliest epigraphic study of the indigenous sources.
evidence
about
8
.
the
kingdom
all
inscriptions
1.
'These are
Fa-hien,
p.
2.
Legge These
scholars.
43.
inscriptions
several
The
den
latest
been published and discussed by and most authentic account is that by 'The Earliest Sanskrit Inscriptions of Java"
have
'Publicaties
1
Van
I
Oudheidkundigen
15-35.
)
Dienst
in
Nederlandschinscriptions
Indie
Deel
1925,
pp.
The accounts
of the
Two other inscriptions given in the text are based on this article. discovered at Pasir Awi and Muara Ci-Anten have not yet been
deciphered.
Facsimiles of these are given by Vogel
in his article.
14
166
of
Province
or
Ecsidcncy
of Batavia,
and
at
no
Three of
lie close to
round Buitcnzorg, the residence of the Governor-General of the Dutch East Indies.
them, those of Ci-aruton, Jambu, and one another in the hilly country
site
Kebon Kopi
The
It is
now
1, 2, and 3, refer by name to a king whose capital was the city of TarumS (No. 2) POrnavarman, or TsrOrna (No. 1). He is described as 'lord of the earth', and
The
Inscriptions Nos.
*","
on
"ving obtained victories against his enemies'. But, beyond ond similar vague praises, very little, by way of definite
these
"
norma.
n,
..
an
Nos
1 and of foot-prints is actually engraved Purnavarman, and a pair No. 3 similarly refers to each case. over the inscription in of the king of Taruma, and
2 m6rely
Inscriptions ' .
u|t
foot-prints
of king
1S
actually engraved
above and below the inscription. No. 4 is dated in the twenty-second year
The
Inscription
his grandfather rS;^ Purnavarman, and describes as r^dfnraja. ancestor, perhaps his father, le) and another a canal or have dug the Candrabhaga ( Thelattoris said to the capital the ocean after passing by ^ river) which reached Purnavarman himself In his twenty-second regnal year, city. 6 122 rffem* called the Gomatl river, dug a similar canal, a thousand cows to the a daksh,* (fee) of length, and paid
as
(royal
of
Brahmanas.
inscriptions,
and
before
drawmg
general conclu^
In the
person ?
pZavarman
was Purnavarman a really hstorieal Kern, who regarded The doubt was first expressed by hero and sage of Indian ongin, as "an ancient
first
place,
SUVARNADVlPA
107
This whose worship had been introduced in Western Java/' 1 is difficult to understand. view, which is accepted by others, Perhaps the figures of his foot-prints, and those of his elephants, But the inscription No. too, inclined Kern to the above view. 4, which definitely states that a canal was dug by him in the
twenty-second year of his reign, with full details about the time when it was commenced and finished, cannot possibly The leave any doubt that he was an historical person.
his foot-print is not quite clear. Normally, it should be regarded as an object of worship, but then the same view will have to be extended to the foot-print of the king's elephant. In other words, we have to presume that both the
meaning of
is
king and his elephant came to be regarded as divine. There nothing, however, in the inscriptions themselves to indicate
that the foot-prints were objects of worship.
On
the other
hand,
we must remember
man
of a divine origin
of kings
was carried
to its logical
The next
line ?
king's
lineage.
May we
king
It
is
infer
of ancestors... that
lofty parentage ?"
Vogel
here.
1.
Cf.
Veth
I,
p. 27.
2.
Cf.
1.
Manu-Smrti,
28.
(
Chap.
VII,
vv.
4,8.
Allahabad
)
Pillar
Inscription,
3.
Fleet
Gupta
op.
cit.
For the
cf.
worship of
Vogel,
foot-prints
prevalent
among
to this
different
communities,
the
pp.
16-21.
According
scholar,
hallowed by the presence of Purnavarman'. He also suggests that the Ci-aruton rocks marks the spot of the king's cremation, and that "the foot-prints of the deceased monarch
foot-prints
'certain
marked
places
his
followers
and
to hurt
enemies."
(op.
cit, p. 20).
Stutterheim
foot-prints
I.,
were symbols
pp. 288-9).
of the king's
K.
Vol. 89,
108
The
4 refers
to
"rcijadhiraja
9
guru",
and
Vogel himself has taken the word 'guru to mean the king's the father, on the strength of a Javanese inscription in which
designated as "Bhatftraguru". Then the same inscription contains a clear reference to 'pitftmafia' or grandfather of the king who is also described as 'nxjarsi/
deceased king
is
or royal sage.
Thus, there can be no donbt, that the family Piirnavarman belonged could boast of at least three to which
generations of kings.
The
third question
is,
can
we regard
:
Purnavarman
as
at issue has been admirably Dr. Vogcl "It would, perhaps, be equally risky to conclude from Purnavarman's name, that he was of Indian birth or extraction. He may, no doubt, have been an immigrant from some part of the Indian continent,
Indian in origin ?
as
The point
by
summed up
follows
or a descendant of
such
an immigrant,
but
equally
well
may have been an indigenous prince of Malay race who had adopted Hindu culture and religion and along with it had assumed an Indo- Aryan name. A Sanskritic name in
he
itself
would prove as
little
the bearer as a
name
if
Pflrnavarman,
That in Arabic, Hebrew, Greek or Latin. not a Hindu, was at any rate Hindu-ized,
Dr. Vogel's position seems at
first
may be taken
sight to be
for granted".
quite unassailable.
But
if
we
it
little
more
deeply,
his
be
convincing enough. time show how even the four short records of Purnavarman's with Hindu civilisation. An thoroughly Java was saturated is evinced by intimate acquaintance with Sanskrit language in Sanskrit verse, the records themselves, which are written in correct Sanskrit style. Reference and, with a few exceptions, Visnu's feet and Airavata, together with the gift of a thousand
to
In the
place,
is
to
be noted that
cows as daksina or
sacrificial
fees
to
with Hindu religion, great familiarity Indian months and tithis, Reference to
standard of
and to dhanus
as
measurement, show
SUVAENADVlPA
the Indian systems had superseded the older ones.
109
Above
all,
names, such as CandrabhSgS the adoption of geographical and Gomati, not only indicate a familiarity with Indian existence of an Indian geography, but clearly testify to the the settled population. Lastly, the king bears a element in additional Javanese element, purely Indian name, without any
later
times.
We
may
add
that there
is
non-Indian
by merely
supposing that the original people of Java were converted Hinduism by bands of missionaries ? Obviously not. to Something far more powerful was necessary than mere peaceful
It will be difficult propaganda by a band of missionaries. similar changes were brought about to cite an instance, where from whom except by the political domination of the people
Now,
India over Western Java could bo exercised in two ways. That region might have been conquered by an Indian king and included in his empire, or a band of Indian adventurers and authority there by might have seized the political power means or other. All that we know of the history of the some time tells against the first assumption, and the latter view
alone seems to be probable. If, then, we are convinced that Indians over Java nothing but the political domination of can explain all the facts we know about its culture and
civilisation,
we must presume
the
royal
dynasty
the
of
Java,
culture
origin.
when
Hindu
be of Indian
not,
of course, intended to
itself strictly aloof
dynasty kept
On
Hindu
with the natives, and intermarried with them, with the result that there was a fusion of blood between the two races. But that Parnavarman's family was Indian in origin, seems to be
the most reasonable presumption, and nothing but the very it. strongest evidence would rebut
110
date.
is his
to
solution
is
furnished
by
palaeographic study of his inscriptions. By comparing these with the Kutei inscriptions of Mulavarman, Dr. Vogel concluded
that Piiriiavarman is to be placed in the middle of the fifth century A. D. But as the date of Mulavarman (400 A. D., according to Dr. Vogel) is itself a matter of conjecture, this
On conclusion cannot be regarded as a very satisfactory one. the other hand, if we compare the alphabets used in the
Purnavarman with those, respectively, of of inscriptions Bhadravarman and Sambhuvarman, rulers of Champa, it is
apparent that they fully agree with the latter in all distinctive of the (1) upward curve of the end characteristics, viz.,
vertical
(3)
stroke
in
A,
s,
r,
and
medial
(2)
looped
advanced form of
verticals,
is
in
modified to a loop attached to the base ; a circle. All these characteristics (4) medial i denoted by are absent in the inscription of Bhadravarman, Jmt make their
two
first
appearance
in
the
inscriptions
of
Sambhuvarman
1
.
Parnavarman
the
latter,
of
Bhadravarman ruled about 400 A. D., while Sambhuvarman ruled from about a It would be reasonable, therefore, 565 A. D. to 629 A. D. Purnavarman in the sixth century A. D. to place
rather than of the
Now
assume that by the sixth was ruling in Western Java century A. D., king Parnavarman with his capital at Taruma. He belonged to a Hindu, or at any rate a Hindu-ized royal family, which must have been reigning
To sum
up.
We may reasonably
Purnavarman ruled
are to
his
for
we
judge
from
the
of
his
inscriptions
alone,
kingdom
was of a
has been
1.
The palaeography
of
the inscriptions of
Champa
in
discussed by
2.
me
The
in B.
E. F. E. O., Vol.,
my
work,
Champa, Chs.
IV.
SUVARNADVIPA
moderate
Ci-tarum
l
111
size,
comprising the valleys of the Ci-liwong and rivers, together with the hilly country round
It is likely,
east,
At
Java.
civilisation was firmly established in Purnavarman was a follower of Brahmauical religion, and Sanskrit literature was studied in his court.
In addition to the kingdom of PGrnavarman, there must This seems have been other kingdoms in Java about this time.
to follow indirectly of Ho-lo-tan in
Chinese annals
state
(
But the Java, as already discussed before. even furnish a more direct evidence of this
of
things.
)
Two
historical
works of the
A. D. 589-618
called Tou-po,
which Pclliot
good reasons,
with Java.
are
country there
whose
chiefs
assume royal
the
island
Now,
is
this
is
a clear indication
of petty
that
was divided
statement
it
into a
number
kingdoms.
or
the
Whether
this
authors borrowed
possible, it
political
from an
as Pelliot
thinks
may be taken
is
condition of Java.
reference
Even
to
period
made
twenty-eight
feudatory kings,
3 This acknowledging the supremacy of the king of Java. the general picture, in so far as it relates to the corroborates
618-000 A. D.
).
direction is
the
use,
in
According to Pleyte,
city
this
river
has
preserved
the
name
of the capital
cf.
Taruma,
On
5
Krom
2.
3.
Geschiedenis, p. 77
B. E. F. E. O.,
Vogel, op.
p. 16.
GroeneveldtNotes,
112
which, for the time being, were in direct intercourse with the imperial court. The name Java, under various forms, occurs
for
the
country,
but
used, presumably to
denote different kingdoms situated in the island. We have already come across one such name, m., Ho-lo-tan. The
annals of the T'ang period ( A. D. 618-906) similarly mention Ho-ling as the name of the kingdom of Java, and apparently
take the two terms as synonymous, although the form Java 1 again comes into use towards the close of the same period .
was presumably the name of the again, Ho-ling most important kingdom in Java with which the Chinese had intercourse during the T'ang period, and hence they applied
Here,
the
name
to
was
Ho-ling
has
been generally
It
admitted
to
be a Chinese
would thus appear that the leading was named after the well-known province of kingdom in Java India, and it may easily lead to the inference that colonists from Kalinga dominated in that quarter. It is generally held that the name of Java was changed to Kalinga about this time,
transcription of Kalinga.
a fresh stream of immigration from 8 It is, however, equally Kalinga or the eastern part of India
and that
this
was due
to
in
Java from an
early period, but it only attained political importance, and came to be the leading state in Java, during the T'ang period.
If in
we
remains
Java,
we may presume
the
the
kingdom of Ho-lo-tan
represents
PQrnavarman.
1.
kingdom in Western Java ruled over by For that is the only kingdom in Java of which
Krom Geschiedenis, pp. 95-102. The transcription of Hiuen Tsang's Yen-mo-na as Yavadvipa shows the prevalence of the name in the 7th century A. D. ( B. E. F. E. O. iv. p. 278 J. R. A. S., 1920, pp. 117 ff. )
2.
;
SUVARNADVIPA
the
lift
existence in
the
fifth
century A. D.
is
established
by
epigraphic evidence. Arguing in a similar way, it may be held that Ho-ling represents a kingdom in Central Java, which has
yielded inscriptions and
monuments
that
may be
referred to
It should not, however, be century A. D. forgotten that such a line of argument, based as it is on a sort of negative evidence, cannot be very much
the
seventh
relied
upon.
It
is,
at best, a
the discovery of a single new Subject to this note of caution, we may regard the two embassies to China sent in 640 (or 648) and 666 A. D.,
inscription.
be demolished at any
moment by
as having proceeded
of the T'ang
Central Java The New History has preserved a tradition about a queen Dynasty
from
of
Java
a
:
follows
their
which deserves particular notice. It runs as "In 674-5 A. D. the people of this country took as
rider a
woman
of the
name Si-ma.
Her
rule
was most
excellent.
up.
The
things dropped on the road were not taken Prince of the Arabs (Tazi), hearing of this, sent a
:
Even
bag with gold to be laid down within her frontiers who passed that road avoided it in walking, and
the people
it
remained
there for three years. Once the heir-apparent stepped over that gold and Si-ma became so incensed that she wanted to
him. Her ministers interceded and then Si-ma said "Your fault lies in your feet, therefore it will be sufficient to cut them off". The ministers interceded again, and she had
kill
:
off,
in order to give
When
heard
How
may be
regarded as historical,
to a particular year,
it
is
impossible to say.
The reference
no doubt,
1.
B. E. F. E. O., Vol.
IV, p. 286.
Pelliot's version of the 14. p. story B. E. F. E. O., Vol. IV, p. 297 ) differs in some unimportant details. The date is given by Groeneveldt as 674, while Pelliot puts it as 674-5 A. D. Cf. Ferrand J. A. 11 ( 1922 ), p. 37.
(
2.
Groeneveldt
Notes,
XX
15
114
invests the story with an appearance of reality. esting to note that the story refers to the choice
inter-
or selection
of the ruler
by the people.
say.
Whether
this
may be
taken to
by the people,
is
difficult to
Java is not difficult to account for. The Tazi in the story no doubt denotes the Arabs. But whether the story-teller had in view the distant Arabia, or a colony of the Arabs nearer home, say, in Sumatra,
it is difficult to
1
say
we
possess
into consideration the epigraphic evidence regarding the kingdom in Central Java.
is
so far discovered in this region, inscription, that engraved on a large boulder near the famous spring, called Tuk Mas, at the foot of the Morbabu hill, which lies to
The
earliest
the north-east of Magclang. The inscription, consisting of one line, is a Sanskrit verse in Upajati metre. It praises the natural spring, which issues from the rock, and compares it to
the river Ganges. historical information is supplied by the inscription, but its importance lies in the alphabet used, and quite a large number of figures engraved above it. The
No
alphabet shows a developed stage of that used by Piirnavarman, and may thus be referred to the seventh century A. D. a The
figures,
about sixteen in number, are symmetrically arranged on two sides of the central one, which looks like a trident
fixed
To
I.
f.
Groeneveldt
while
is
in
n. 4.
),
Pelliot
p. 297.)
The inscription has been a. by H. Kern (V. G., Vol. VII, pp. 2O i
edited,
together
with a facsimile,
has given a revised reading ( J. assigned the record to the fifth century A. D., but middle of the seventh century A. D.
Krom
assigns
it
to the
SUVARNADVlPA
some warlike weapons.
115
To
these figures
the well;
known symbols of the two great gods, Visnu and Siva w'#., the trident of the latter, and the conch-shell, wheel, mace, and lotus 1 There is a round object immediately to the of the former of the central figure of the trident, and this may proper right be construed as the Kamandalu (water-pot) of Brahma. The
.
pitcher may be a symbol for Agastya, whom tradition regards as having been born in a pitcher. The battle-axe may refer to ParaSurama or Yama. The object above the wheel looks
like a noose,
the
weapon of Varuna.
in that region.
On
be
little
were
emblems of
gods worshipped
Thus
the
inscription of
Tuk Mas
proves that
Central
The alphabet of the inscription also appears to belong to the same class as that used in West Java, although There is, therefore, no need it shows some developed forms.
West
Java.
presume that there was a wide gulf separating Western and Eastern Java either from historical or cultural points of
to
view.
i.
Krom
of
infers
the
iva
from the symbols that the prevailing religion was But the four Vinuite ( Geschiedenis, p. 100 ).
clear,
Chapter VII
IN
the
bounded by Malay Archipelago. and Java seas the Indian ocean on the west and the China on the east. The three Straits of Malacca, Banka, and Sunda
largest island of the islands of
from Malay Peninsula in the north-east, and the Banka and Java in the east and south-east. A long chain of islands runs along its coasts, the most notable of them
separate
it
Mentawi, Sipura, North Paggy and South Paggy), on the west, and Rupat, Padang, Bengkalis, Rantau, and Engano the archipelagos of Riouw and Lengga ( including the Pulu Tiyu
islands),
east.
Sumatra is a long narrow country running in the direction It is very narrow at its two ends north-west to south-east.
and broad
dividing
it
at the
centre.
The equator
two
equal
passes
halves,
through
as
it
it,
almost
into
lies
between 5-39' North and 5-57' South Latitude. Its total length is 1060 miles, and the extreme breadth 248 miles, giving a total
area of 167,480 sq. miles.
A series of
proximity, to
mountains,
known
collectively as
island, parallel,
its western coast. This range of hills contains about 90 volcanoes, of which 12 are yet active. The strip of territory between the hills and the Indian ocean on the west
is
is
on the west are consequently short, torrential, and rarely navigable, while those on the east have a much
east.
The
rivers
SUVARNADVlPA
longer course, and are, in
length.
117
navigable to a great
many
cases,
are the Asahan, the Panei, the Eokan, the Siak, the
Kampar,
The Jambi
1300
ft.
river
is
the largest of
It springs
all,
having a width of
opposite Jambi.
tributaries,
Next
in
from mount Indrapura, the Batang Han and the Tambesi. the Musi river, on which stands
city,
now an
There are several lakes in the midst of the long range of and the hills, such as Toba, Maninjau, Sengkara, Korinchi,
Ranau, with a number of small ones Mt. Indrapura.
round
the
base
of
Sumatra
is
Gold,
silver,
and
copper are found in large quantities, while sulphur, naphtha, alum, and saltpetre arc found in great abundance near the
volcanoes.
Among
others
may
be
mentioned
tin,
lead,
Sumatra has an abundance of forests, full of teak, sandal, ebony, and many varieties of less useful timber. The forests
also yield all the
gum-producing
trees,
benzoin-trees etc. ; cocoanut, sago-palm, areca-palm and several other varieties of palm are found in large number. The land is very fertile, and a rich yield of food crops and
others
is
easily
obtainable.
The
arc
tobacco, cloves, nutmeg, pepper, rice, coffee, cotton, cocoanut, and sugarcane. In recent times there has been a great expansion of native-grown rubber.
In spite of its rich natural resources Sumatra is but a poor and thinly populated country. Although about four times
the size of Java,
it
this small population is not homogeneous in character. a large number of tribes, differing in language, physical Quite
Even
118
aspect,
The
following
may
The Lampongs inhabit the region, called after them, at 1. the southern extremity of Sumatra, on the Straits of Sunda.
In spite of their present poverty and insignificance, they possessed at one time a high degree of civilisation under the
influence of the Hindus.
2.
The Lebongs
live
in the
river.
3.
The
river.
Musi
4.
5.
They
still
surrounding Indrapura.
are
of sea-board and the Malays of Mcnangkabau. Malays of Malacca and closely resemble the
in the
The former
live
chiefly
ragard themselves as the primitive Malays, and, in old days, atttained to a high degree of civilisation. Until recently, there was a general belief that Mcnangkabau was the original home of the Malays,
country of Palembang.
latter
The
who emigrated
the
to
the Malay
Peninsula.
Menangkabau was
name
valleys,
Bataks are of the same stock as the Malays. the mountainous region of lake Toba, the They of Tapanuli, and a large part of the northern coast Residency of Sumatra. The Gayos live in the western coast of Sumatra. 7.
6.
The
inhabit
8.
to be
(
of
Hindu
origin
and inhabit
the
also
called Atjeh,
Acheh, Atcheh,
SUVARNADVIPA
The Dutch
Sumatra
1.
119
its
Government
of
has
divided
dominions
in
The Government
the
West Coast
of
Sumatra
capital, capital,
Padang.
(c)
2. 3.
Padang Sidcmpuan.
capital,
of Benkulan
Benkulan.
capital,
of Lainpong districts
Telok-
Betong.
4.
of the East
Coast of
Sumatra
capital,
Mcdan.
5.
The Residency
of
Palembang
of
capital,
Palembang.
6.
The Government
site
Achccn
capital,
Kota Raja
1
.
The geographical
preeminently the
Indonesia.
position of
Sumatra
of the
earliest
as
in
Being
situated
midway on
between
India and China, important harbours and trading stations must have developed on its eastern coast from an early period.
From what
the
it will
beginning
Hindu
been
to
colonisation
2
.
As
to
has
already
all
remarked above,
Java.
in
chapter VI,
to
Ferrand takes
Yavadvipa
apply
Thus Ptolemy's labadiou, Fa-hicn's Yc-pVt'i, the Yavadvipa of Ramiiyana, Yavakoti of 5ryabhatiya and Suryasiddhanta, and Yc-tiao, Tchou-po, Tou-po, and Cho-p'o of the Chinese annals, are all taken by him
Sumatra rather than
1.
Sumatra
is
its
necessarily incomplete.
The account
is
based
F'errand
puts
it
as
some
centuries
J. A.,
n-xx(i922),
p. 204.
120
to refer to
Said above regarding the early history of Java, should, according to Ferrand, be relegated to the history of Sumatra. But this
3
,
and we have
therefore provisionally accepted these as references to Java. But if labadiou of Ptolemy refers to Java, Barousai and the same author, may be taken to refer mentioned
Sabadebai,
3
.
by
respectively
to
the
western
and
south-eastern
coast
of
Sumatra
The
first definite
in
connection with an embassy reported in a Chinese account of 644 ( or beginning of 645 A. D. ). The name of the kingdom
given as Mo-lo-yeu, which has been easily identified, on the authority of I-tsing's writings, with modern Jambi in Sumatra.
is
The same
list
with Tulangbawang in
two kingdoms, Malayu or Tulangbawang, They were both superseded by flourished for a long time. another powerful kingdom which came into prominence about
But neither
of the
this time.
This kingdom
is
che by the Chinese, Sribuza by the Arabs, and Srl-Visaya in To M. Ccedfcs we owe the brilliant the Indian records.
hypothesis,
these
now
generally accepted
by
all
scholars,
that
all
name
Sri-Vijaya.
Some arguments, and specially his identification of with Palembang, may not be accepted as valid Sri-Vijaya
;
1.
Ferrand,
Cf. e. g.,
in J. A.,
ft,
2.
3.
4.
pp. 477
SUVARNADVIPA
nor can we accept his contention
that Sri-Vijaya
original seat of the Sailendras, and thus the nucleus of a empire in the Pacific. But his main thesis that there
121
was the
mighty
was a Sumatra has been supported by kingdom several inscriptions found in Sumatra itself. The identification of Sri-Vijaya must remain for the present an open question,
called Sri-Vijaya iu
comprising
the
some
of the neighbouring
Appendix
to
Bk.
II).
The
Chinese translation of a Buddhist Sutra, named Che eul yeou made in 392 A. D., contains a king. This translation,
description
of
Jambudvipa
which
is
We
Ceylon. As A. D. says
the first king is called Sseu-li Cho-yc." The first name refers no doubt to to Cho-ye, a commentator of the sixth century
is
that
it
means
.
"victory."
From
this
But even
till
if
Sri-Vijaya existed as an
it
independent kingdom
a much later period. seventh century A. D., that Sri-Vijaya comes into prominence. I-tsing, writing between 689 and 692 A. D., says that the a In other Malayu country is now the country of 8ri-Vijaya.
the
did not attain any great importance It is only towards the close of the
growing^ kingdom
of Sri-Vijaya, hinted at by the Chinese pilgrim, is corroborated by independent evidences. The most important of them are five
Sri-Vijaya.
The
political
greatness
thus
i.
(
Ferrand,
pp. 83-4
)
J.
A.
n -XX
(1922),
p.
210.
S. LeVi
(J.A. n-XI
view
1918),
but
Ferrand's
seems
preferable.
a.
Takakusu
16
Takakusu
transliterates Che-li-fo-che
asSri-Bhoja.
122
inscriptions
history of Sri-Vijaya.
which form the groundwork for the study of the Of these one is written in Sanskrit, and
The Sanskrit
inscription (No. 5)
was found at Ligor, in the Malay Peninsula, to the south of the Bay of Bandon. Of the four Malay inscriptions, three were found in Sumatra, two (Nos. 1-2) near Palembang, and one
(No. 3) in the province of Jambi (ancient Malayu), while the fourth (No. 4) was found at Kota Kapur, in the island of Banka.
No. 1
is
some good
to his country
by virtue of
magical powers
(?)
acquired by him.
No. 2
is
pious deeds and pious hopes of king Sri Jayanas*a. The name may 1 Stutterhcim reads it as Jayawaga be a mistake for Jayanaga
;
.
record.
Nos. 3 and 4 are nearly identical copies of the same It begins with an invocation to the gods who protect
the
kingdom
if
of Srl-Vijaya.
It
holds
of
countries,
subordinate to
Punishment was to be meted against the suzerain authority. out not only to actual rebels, but even to their family and clans.
On the
j.
loyal
to the
E.
O.,
XVIII.
No.
in B, E. F.
1-2.
Full
by him.
For
later
comments
and
elucidations,
a.
cf.
b.
c.
B. K. I., Vol. 88 (1931), pp. 508-13. G. Ferrand J. A., Vol. CCXXI (1932), pp. 271-326. Tijd. Aard. Gen., 2nd ser. deel Li J. W. J. Wellan
R. A. Kern
1934
),
pp. 348-402. B, C. d.
e.
Chhabra
J.
A.
S. B. L., Vol.
i,
pp. 28
ff.
G. Coedes-B. E. F. E. O., Vol. XXXIII, pp. 1002 ff. Following Coedes I have taken Bhumi Java in Ins. No. 4 as Java ; others take it as part of Sumatra. For different views on this point, see
Krom
(
Geschiedenis,
p. 114,
f.
n. i,
For
192?
)>
the
find-spot of inscription
P. 462.
and Coedes, op. cit. pp. 53-4. No. 5, cf. B. K. I., Vol. 83 2. O. B., p. 67.
SUVARNADVlPA
123
government of Sri-Vijaya, together with their clan and family, would be blessed with all sorts of blessings divine.
This
is
which, as
we
learn
from a postscript added to No. 4, was engraved in Saka 608 of Sri-Vijaya was ( 686 A. D. ), at the moment when the army on an expedition against Java which had not yet starting
submitted to Sri-Vijaya.
These four inscriptions prove incontestably that Sri-Vijaya was already a powerful kingdom before 683 A. D., and that it had established its political supremacy not only over Malayu
(Jambi), but also over the neighbouring island of Banka.
The
ruler Jayana^a was a Buddhist, and the two inscriptions found near the capital vix., Nos. 1 and 2, are definitely Buddhist in character.
These corroborate,
that the king of Sri-Vijaya, as well as the rulers of neighbouring states, favoured Buddhism, and that Sri-Vijaya was a centre of
1
.
of Sri-Vijaya possessed
ships,
and Sri-Vijaya. that the city of Sri-Vijaya was We also learn from his memoir the chief centre of trade with China, and that there was a regular navigation between it and Kwang-Tung*. That Sri-Vijaya was fast growing into an important naval
probably for commerce, sailing between India
and commercial power appears clearly from the Ligor (formerly called Vieng Sa) or Vat Sema Murong Inscription (No. 5). This inscription, dated in Saka 697 ( 775 A. D. ), refers to the
He is said to be the whose kings made obeisance to him. He made three Buddhist Caityas, and his chaplain and the latter^s disciple built other Stupas and Caityas. Now this inscription shows that the Buddhist king of Sri-Vijaya had
mighty prowess of the king of Sri-Vijaya.
overlord of
all
neighbouring states
extended his
political
Bay
The
by the kingdom of
3.
Sri-
Takakusu
I-tsing, p.
XL
I.
Ibid.,
pp,
XL-XLI,
124
Vijaya during the century 675-775 A. D. By 680 A. D. it had absorbed the neighbouring kingdom of Malayu, conquered the
neighbouring island of Banka, and sent a military expedition to the powerful island kingdom of Java. Before a century was
over,
we
find its
power
Malay Peninsula,
Bay
of Bandon.
The Chinese Annals state that several embassies came from Sri-Vijaya to China during the period between 670 and 741 A. D. The date of the earliest embassy cannot be but there is no doubt that it was before 695 A. D. ascertained, By an imperial edict dated in that year, orders were issued for
supplying provisions to the ambassadors of different countries then living in the Chinese court. Thus provisions for six
months were to be given to ambassadors from North India, South India, Persia, and Arabia provisions for five months were to be given to ambassadors from Sri-Vijaya, Chen-la (Cambodia), to envoys from Champa Ho-ling (Java) and other kingdoms
;
1 It provisions were to be given only for three months". therefore, that Sri- Vijaya was already recognised as a appears, leading state, the only one in Sumatra to be individually referred to, before the close of the seventh century A. D.
and 716 A. D.
other embassies from Srl-Vijaya visited China in 702 In 724 A. D. the king of Sri-Vijaya named Che-li-t'o-lo-pa-ino (Srindravarman) sent an ambassador with
Two
presents consisting of two dwarfs, a Negro girl, a party of musicians, and a parrot of five colours. The ambassador is called
might be a personal name, or denote the crownon him the title of tcho-tch'ong prince. The emperor conferred and presented him 100 pieces of silk. He also conferred (general)
Kumara.
It
an honorary
title
upon the
king.
In 728 the king of Srl-Vijaya again presented the emperor with parrots of motley colours. In 742 the king sent his son
to the Chinese court with customary offerings,
title.
p. 334.
2,
Chapter VIII
IN
BORNEO
archipelago,
is
Malay
Its
it is little
known and
thinly populated.
area
seven
or eight times that of Java, but its population is only about three millions. The island is covered with dense forests and
crossed by a series of mountain groups from the north-east
to south-west
The
is
about 13,698
ft.
and navigable, but often impeded by mudThe principal rivers arc the Brunei, the Rejang, and banks. the Kapuas on the west, and the Sampit, the Katingan, the Barito, and the Mahakam or the Kutei on the south and
The
east.
The
and
The famous Sago-palm is the characteristic tree The soil is very fertile and all kinds of crops can be grown easily. The sub-soil is rich in mineral resources
resins.
of the island.
such as diamond,
gold,
silver,
lead,
copper, antimony,
zinc,
bismuth, platinum, mercury, arsenic, coal, and petroleum. But neither agriculture nor industry flourishes among the Dyaks,
a semi-savage
population.
tribe,
The
river-side
the native
intelligent,
and energetic, but those in the interior are almost savages. Borneo is now divided between the British and the Dutch. All the north and part of the western part of the island,
comprising about a third of the total area, is under the British It includes the territories of the British North suzerainty.
Borneo Company, the Sultanate of Brunei, a protectorate, and the principality of Sarawak, founded in 1841 by James Brooke and still ruled by his family. Sarawak is a British Protectorate,
though
the
ruler
is
independent
in
matters
of
internal
administration,
126
two Residencies Pontianak, at the mouth of the Kapuas and the Residency of the south and east, with its capital Banjermassin, at the mouth of the Barito river. The earliest evidence of the Hindu colonisation in Borneo 1 is furnished by four inscriptions These were discovered in 1879 in the district of Koti (Kutei), at Muara Kaman, on
are divided into
:
The Dutch
its capital
the
The river, three days' journey above Pelarang. remains of a Chinese jonk, found in the locality, mark it to be an important sea-port in old days, and that perhaps
explains the early
objects,
Mahakam
Hindu
a
settlements
there.
including
Visnu
image,
were
also
Muara Kaman.
The
the tops of the pillars were rounded, they were originally mistaken for 'Liiiga', but the
height.
of about a man's
As
inscriptions clearly
The
following
is
pillars (yupa).
King Mulavarman has done many virtuous acts, gifts of animals, land, Kalpa-tree (?) and other things. the Brahmanas have set up this pillar*.
1. 2.
to
wit,
Hence
like
the
King Kundunga had a famous son Asvavarman, who, Sun (AmSuman), was the originator of a family. Of
sons
of
the
three
Asvavarman,
the
eldest
was
king
Srl-Mulavarman,
sacrifice
who performed a
called Bahu-Suvarnakam (much-gold). This pillar of that sacrifice has been set up by the Brahmanas. (yupa) The chief of kings, Mulavarman, made a gift of 3.
Kern (V.
G.,
Vol.
all
VII,
pp.
55-76.)
edited
in
the
first
I.,
three
Vol. 74
inscriptions.
They have
;
B. K.
Vol. 76, p. 431 ; and commented upon by (1918), pp. 167-232 Mr. B. C. Chhabfa in J. A. S. B. L,, Vol. I, pp. 33 ff. I have followed the usual rendering of the 2But inscriptions. the terms 'Kalpa-Vrksa, Bhumi-dana, and Go-sahasrika' may be taken
list
of sixteen
Mah^danas.
SUVARNADVIPA
For that pious act this pillar Brahmanas who came here.
(yiipa)
127
Bhaglratha
**.
These
to
inscriptions
have been
referred
on
palreographic
Thus there is no doubt that grounds A. D. the Hindus had established the fourth century by kingdoms in the eastern part of Borneo. The inscriptions
leave
1 about 400 A. D.
thorough-going
that
locality.
nature
of
the
Brahmanical
in
The
favour
the
Mulavarman was undoubtedly a historical personage, but same cannot be asserted with certainty of his two and Afivavarman. Kroin 2 thinks predecessors, Kundunga that as these were not illustrious Sanskrit names of the usual But the type, they may be regarded as historical personages.
two names have undoubtedly a striking resemblance with Kaundinya, and ASvatthama, names associated with the
foundation
of
Kamboja
of
(Cambodia).
An
inscription
of
Champa
"It
8
,
of
the
Hindu kingdom
Kamboja
that
was there
Kaundinya,
the
foremost
among
But
and as
This
is
cit.)
and Vogel,
(op. cit
).
2, 3.
Geschiedenis,
III. p. 23.
128
The second king has a correct Sanskrit name, whereas the name of the first may be either of Indian or native origin. The second king is also referred to as the founder of the On these grounds Krom 1 concludes that Kundunga family. was a native chief, whose son adopted Hindu religion and
culture,
family.
and thus became the founder of a Hindu-ized royal however, cannot be readily accepted, as This,
mean
the
first
king of a
of
it.
long This
line,
but
may
refer to the
most
illustrious
member
is proved by such terms as Raghuvama and Sagaravama, frequently used in Indian literature, although neither Raghu nor
first
member
In addition to the antiquities at Muara Kaman described above, remains of ancient Hindu culture have also been found in other localities in east Borneo. The most notable among
these
is
the cave of
number
of interesting articles.
Kombeng* which has yielded a large Kombeng is situated consideraMuara Kaman and to the east of the upper
The cave consists of two chambers. In the back-chamber were found twelve sandstone images, pieces of carved stone, and a few half-decayed iron-wood beams. All these may be taken as the remains of a temple which were hurriedly secreted in the dark chamber of a cave, apparently for safety. That the
images were brought from elsewhere is clearly indicated by the fact that most of them have a pin under the pedestal, evidently
for fixing
them
in a niche.
those of Siva, GaneSa, NandlSvara, Brahma, Skanda, and Mahakfila. Nandi, Agastya, The preponderance of the images of Siva and Sivaite gods,
and Brahmanical.
The
latter included
1.
Geschiedenis, p. 69,
2.
The
antiquities of
Kombeng have
in
SUVARNADVlPA
there being two images of GaneSa
prevailing religion in that quarter
129
of the most interesting facts about these images is that do not appear to be the products of Indo- Javanese art they which was predominant in Borneo in the later periods, and as such we have to postulate a direct stream of Hindu influence The images of Kombeng cave are from India to Borneo 1
.
One
specimens of Hindu art in the eastern colonies. As already remarked above, they evidently belonged to a temple of which the ruins are preserved in the cave. That temple was one of
the earliest specimens of
tely nothing
Hindu
of
architecture,
though unfortuna-
now remains
it
in situ.
however,
We
the
may
proves that the main structure was built of wood. well believe that this was the case with most, if not all,
early Hindu temples in the colonies, and this explains almost total absence of early specimens of Hindu temples It is tempting to connect the Kombeng ruins in that region. of the
Muara Kaman, and attribute all of them to one Hindu colonisation in the fourth century A. D. If stream of it were so, we may presume that the transition from wood to stone architecture took place somewhat later than that period, at least in some regions of the eastern colonies.
with those of
The
been
antiquities secreted in
the
Kombeng
plains
more
The
the valley of the Mahakam river. temple was probably This river undoubtedly played the chief part in the colonisation of east Borneo by the Hindus. A great river is a necessity in the early stages of colonisation by foreigners. In the first place, its junction with the sea serves as a good sea-port and trading
centre,
which receives goods from without and distributes them by the reverse process, collects articles from
This point has been discussed later
in
the
chapter on Art,
Book V.
17
130
inland and ships them for foreign lands. Secondly, the foreign colonists, having secured a firm footing in the port, find in the
river an excellent,
and
in
many
means
of
interior, as
course.
to
river was not the only one in Borneo play such an important rftle in the early colonisation of the country by the Hindus. Another river, the Kapuas, offered
for colonisation
of western Borneo.
At
various places on or near the bank of this river, we come across archaeological remains of the Hindu period 1 which, taken together, imply a flourishing period of Hindu colonisation
,
Among
(1)
we may
specially note
the following
The Mukhalinga
at Sepauk*.
river-bed near Sanggau, containing two (2) lines of writing in cursive script, which have not yet been
A stone in the
deciphered.
(3)
springs depicts a staff with a succession of umbrellas at the top, and is thus possibly a miniature representation of a Stupa.
Four of these
karma," and three repeat the well-known "Yc dharma hetuprabhava," both of which we meet with in Malay Peninsula There is an eighth inscription, but it is (Nos. 10 and 12).
mostly illegible*.
large number of golden plates, inscribed in old found in a pot at the mouth of the Sampit river*. characters,
(4) (5)
An inscription
at
Sang belirang
5
.
i.
3. 4.
5.
O. V., 1914, pp. 140-147- 2. O. V., 1920, pp. 102-105. These inscriptions have been edited by Mr, B.C. Chhabra, op. Encycl. Ned, Ind., Vol. Ill, p. 198.
Not. Bat. Gen., 1880,
p. 98.
cit.
SUVARNADVlPA
131
Here, again, the Hindu civilization is to be traced direct from India, and not through Java, as the Mukhalinga and the Pahat are both un-Javanese. The same figures at Batu
conclusion follows from a study of some archaeological remains, notably in the south and east, other than those on the river
Mahakam
Hindu
and
colonists,
1 Thus we have to conclude that Kapuas. direct from India, settled in different parts of
Borneo during the early centuries of the Christian era. The general belief that Borneo was colonised by Indo-Javanese
emigrants, cannot be accepted, at least for the early period.
j.
See
later, the
chapter on Art,
Book V.
Chapter IX.
IN BALI
by a narrow
strait,
Its
dimensions are quite small. Its extreme length is 93, and extreme breadth, about 50 miles. Its area is estimated to be
2,095 square miles, and
its
A chain
of
from west to east, and plains on both sides. The highest valleys leaving peaks of the mountain are the Peak of Bali or Gunung Anung ( 10,499 ft ), Tabanan ( 7,500 ft. ), and Batur (7,350 ft.).
of that of Java, runs throughout the island
fertile
The coast-line is difficult of approach and has but one or two harbours. There are numerous rivers, but they are small, and navigable, only for small vessels, upto the reach of the tide. The island abounds in beautiful lakes at high elevation, which supply abundant means of irrigation. The land is fertile, and
the whole
The
chief products of agriculture arc rice, maize, pulses, coffee, tobacco, sugar-cane, and the fruits of Java.
The
the only colony of the ancient Hindus which still retains its old culture and civilisation, at least to a considerable extent.
it still
affords
a unique opportunity to study Hinduism as it was modified by coming into contact with the aborigines of the archipelago. Its
present condition, are, therefore, of the ancient Indian surpassing interest in any study colonisation in the Far East.
its
Unfortunately,
Unlike
past history is involved in obscurity. the other colonies, it has not yet yielded any archseoits
SUVARNADVIPA
logical remains of a very early date,
133
extant ruins belong
and
its
We are,
for the
evidence
beginning of Balinesc
is
an
initial
difficulty.
The Chinese
an island called PVli, which etymologically corresponds to Bali, and there are other indications in support of But some particulars about PVli are this identification.
inapplicable to Bali.
a great deal of uncertainty scholars, notably Schlegel and Groencveldt, have sought to identify PVli with the northern coast of Sumatra, and this view was generally accepted till Pclliot established the identity of PVli and Bali, if not beyond all doubts, at least on
is
Thus there
about it
Some
fairly satisfactory
We
i.
(cf.
e.g.
P'o-li was formerly identified with northern coast Groeneveldt Notes, p. 84. Schlegel in Toung
of
Sumatra
1898,
Pao,
p.
276).
But
Pelliot
has
shown
good
grounds
ff).
for
rejecting this
The arguments
of
summed up by
himself.
''The country called PVli is said by all Chinese geographers to be the northern coast of Sumatra, and its neighbourhood to the Nicobar islands
is
Pelliot
by
geography Nicobar islands, the Chinese term is reliable evidence to identify it with Nicobar islands which are designated by the Chinese by different names. Further Lo-tch'a is placed to the
east of P'o-li, while the Nicobar islands are to the north-west of Sumatra.
passage in the History of the T'ang Dynasty, repeated in the History of the T'ang Dynasty, places P'o-li to the east of Ho-ling or Kaling which has been identified with Java. Grocneveldt and Schlegel as to place P'o-li to the west of wrongly translated this passage so
New
Kaling. Thus, instead of supporting the location of P'o-li in Sumatra, the passage in the T'ang Dynasty is a strong evidence in favour of
identifying P'o-li with Bali, which
is
134
The History
the
earliest
account of
It gives
following
"The Bang's family name* is Kaundinya and he never before When asked about his had any intercourse with China.
ancestors or about their age, he could not state this, but said
that the wife of
of his country.
his
"The king uses a texture of flowered silk wrapped round body on his head he wears a golden bonnet of more than a span high, resembling in shape a Chinese helmet, and adorned
;
with various precious stones ( sapta rat no, or seven jewels). He carries a sword inlaid with gold, and sits on a golden throne, with his feet on a silver footstool. His female attendants are
them holding
adorned with golden flowers and all kinds of jewels, some of choivries of white feathers or fans of peacockThere are some particulars
of P'o-li
e.g.,
it is
of
Canton.
Bali
is
cable
fifty
is
m easurement
of P'o-li
the country
This
but,
as Pelliot has
remarked,
P'oli
such general statements that the Chinese commit mistakes. If the measurement be held to be true, annalists often
is
precisely
in
chneider.
is
can only be identified with Borneo, as was suggested by BretsBut Borneo is to the north or north-east of Java, while P'o-li
Again, the
called Ma-li.
also
of the
names
given
in
grounds
another text of the seventeenth century A. D. On these while admitting the possibility of Bretschneider's Pelliot,
li is
Borneo,
is
that
follow
Groeneveldt (Notes, pp. 80-84), Schlegel (T'oung Pao, 1901, pp. 329-337), The and partly by Pelliot (B. E. F, E. O., Vol. IV, pp. 283-85). Differences on important points only translations do not entirely agree.
will
be noted.
3.
of Groeneveldt.
According to Schlegel,
king.
SUVARNADVIPA
feathers.
135
When
On
the top of
it
is
a flat
sides.
The above account leaves no doubt that PVH was a rich and civilised kingdom ruled by Hindu colonists who professed Buddhism. The kingdom existed as early as the sixth century 1 A. D. For we arc told that in 518 A. D. the king sent an
,
letter
servile
Emperor.
should not, of course, be taken at its face value*. In the year 523 the king, Pin-ka 8 by name, again sent an envoy with tribute.
letter
The
The History of the Sui Dynasty (581-617 A. D) gives us some additional information "The king's family name is This Ch'a-ri-ya-ka and his personal name, Hu-lan-na-po."
:
information
is
repeated in the
New
History of the
T'ang
Dynasty (618-906 A.
name
is
written as
D.), though the second syllable of the king's instead of If the same king is
W.
the historical
accounts
are
correct
in
representing him as ruling during the periods of which they respectively treat, his reign must fall in the first quarter
century A. D. The same conclusion follows from the fact that the only embassy from P'o-li during the Sui period is the one dated 616 A. D. Evidently the name of the king was known from this embassy. As regards the
of the
seventh
family
notes that
of
the
the
first
two
characters
common
transcription
word
1. The dates of the embassies are given as 517 and 522 by Pelliot, and 518 and 523 by Groeneveldt and Schlegel. "The letter was probably fabricated by 2. Schelegel remarks the Chinese official who had to introduce the ambassadors of P'o-li at the
:
136
of
The
Sui
other
country
throwing a discus-knife of the size of a (Chinese metal) mirror, having in the centre a hole, whilst the edge is indented like a saw. When they throw it from afar at a
are skilled in
fail to hit
him".
In
this
is
we have a
reference
weapon
called 'Cakra',
which
frequently mentioned in
are It was the special weapon of the great god Krsna. 1" further told that "they have a bird called Sari which can talk"
We
The Chinese word is an exact transcription of the Indian Sari. "In the year 616 The History of the Sui Dynasty says
:
they sent an envoy to appear at court and bring tribute, but they ceased to do this afterwards". But we have reference
to an
embassy from
P'o-li
in
accounts in the
New
We may quote
"PVli
is
they are new, are based upon the information gathered from a few interesting details given in, this History.
also
called
Ma-lL
There
are
found
many
;
they are round and white, and shine to a distance of several when one holds such a pearl at midday over some feet
;
immediately springs from it. "The common people have swarthy bodies and red 3 hair they have nails like hawks and beast-like teeth
tinder, the fire
; .
frizzled
is
also
This embassy js referred to only by Pelliot (op. cit, p. 285). Schlegel concludes from this passage that the people in general 3. were barbarous, although there were some immigrants from India. But
2.
Pelliot
not to P'o-li
it
most likely this passage refers to Lo-tch'a and whereas, other works omit this in their account of P'o-li, occurs word for word in the account of Lo-tch'a preserved in many of
has shown that
;
for,
them.
SUVARNADVIPA
137
"They perforate their ears and put rings into them. They wind a piece of cotton (Kupei) around their loins. Ku-pei is a plant, whose flowers are spun to cloth. The coarser sorts are called Pei and the finer sorts T'ieh". There is no doubt that in Kupei we have a reference to the cotton-plant, Karpasa, and evidently there was abundant
cultivation of cotton in the country.
After the embassy of 630 A. D. from Bali to China, we have no knowledge of any further relation between the two countries for a long time. There is, however, reference to a country
called Dva-pa-tan
1
,
in the
Old History
of the
This country
therefore,
been
by some
scholars.
no
insuperable
is
the island objection to this identification, that also known by a different name PVli, for the Chinese are in
it,
by different names. But except its geographical position, which might indicate cither easteni Java or Bali, there is no
other ground for the identification.
gives some details of
The king
I-tsing,
is
in
'the
the records
islands
of
as
one
of
of the
Southern Sea where the Mulasarviistivada-nikaya has been almost universally adopted". \Ve have already seen that the prevalence of Buddhism in Bali is hinted at in the earliest
Chinese records dating from the sixth century A. D. It may thus be fairly inferred that Buddhism had a firm footing in the island in the early centuries of Hindu colonisation.
With
I-tsing's
early
Although fragmentary, they furnish us interesting details of its history and civilisation during the sixth and seventh centuries A. D., of course, on the
assumption, that the Chinese
i.
history of Bali
come
an end.
PVli
58.
Groeneveldt
Notes,
p.
I-tsing
Records
p. 10.
18
Chapter
It
seems almost
civilisation
appeared in Malayasia, and canie into close association her peoples, this process immediately set in, and produced with
first
stages of the
The early history of this contact, and evolution of the new culture springing
is
therefrom arc, no doubt, hidden from us, but there of evidence to show what the ultimate effect was.
arc lacking,
this
no dearth
As
details
are obliged to take a broad general view of development. The first colonisation of the Hindus
we
has
been
referred
to
the
first
or
second
century
to the
of
the
we propose
civilisation
in review
the state of
Hindu
years.
up
end of
five
or
hundred
of
Hindu
civilisation,
it
This period may be regarded as the dawn for, with the foundation of the empire of
its
the Sailendras,
reached
mark
of glory
and splendour.
The inscriptions discovered at Borneo, Java, and Malaya Peninsula furnish us with the most valuable evidence in respect
of our enquiry.
to the
conclusion that the language, literature, religion, and a thorough political and social institutions of India made
SUVABNADVlPA
139
conquest of these far-off lands, and, to a great extent, eliminated or absorbed the native elements in these respects.
The Kutei
inscriptions
of
a court and a society thoroughly saturated with culture. They refer to the due performance of
sacrificial
sacrificial
and making
the Brahmanas.
is
The
is
clearly indicated.
and reference
A reference to AmumSn
with the legends and
and Sagara
shows a
familiarity
All these inferences are corroborated by the inscriptions 2 discovered in western Java. These, too, present before us a
strongly Brahman-ized society to
and
court.
We
have reference
Hindu gods like Visnu and Indra, and Airilvata, the elephant of Indra. The sacred nature and worship of footprints, such a
practice of India, though by no of that country, seems to be a special feature
characteristic religious
means a
of the
monopoly
religion.
and Indian system of measurement of distance are quite familiar to the soil. Besides, in the river-names Candrabhaga and Gomati we have the beginnings of that familiar practice of transplanting Indian geographical names to the new colonies.
The images of various gods and goddesses discovered in Borneo and Malay Peninsula corroborate the evidence of the
inscriptions.
As
of Visnu,
Brahma, Siva, GaneSa, Nandi, Skanda, and Mahakala have been 3 and those of Durga, GaneSa, Nandi, and found in Borneo
,
Yoni
in the
is
Malay Peninsula*.
images
not
known
may
be
referred
i.
ff.
a. 9.
For references
VI.
4-
See Chap. V,
140
approximately
review,
The remains
lead to the
of
at
Tuk Mas 1
in
same conclusion.
Qada
Lotus
of the former,
TriSala
trident
of the latter.
inscriptions discovered in
Sumatra, Borneo,
9
addition to
Malay Peninsula prove that Brahmanieal religion Buddhism had also made
of the
in
its
remains in Bali may not be as early as the seventh century A. D., there is little doubt that Buddhism was introduced there
by
this time
3
.
Taken
were highly cultivated. Most of the records are written in good and almost flawless Sanskrit. Such names as Indian scripts were adopted everywhere.
language and
literature
PQrnavarman and Mdlavarman, if borne by the aborigines, would show that Sanskrit language made its influence felt even The images show the thorough-going in personal nomenclature.
influence of Indian art.
The
archaeological evidence
is
of the Chinese.
we have
the
express statement of Fa-hien* that Brfthmanism was flourishing in Yava-dvlpa, and that there was very little trace of Buddhism. The graphic account which Fa-hien gives of his
journey from Ceylon to China ria Java is interesting in more ways than one. It depicts to us the perilous nature of the sea
Kern, V. a, Vol.
Cf.
2.
VII. pp. 201. ff. the different Chapters dealing with the history and
art
of
these regions.
.
4-
ff.
SUVARNADVlPA
India and her colonies in Indonesia.
It further tells us
141
that the
200 merchants who boarded the vessel along with Fa-hien were all followers of Brahmanical religion. This statement may
stimulus to
be taken to imply that trade and commerce were still the chief Indian colonisation. As the merchants belonged
mostly to Brahmanical religion, we get an explanation of preponderance over Buddhism in the Archipelago.
its
The story of Gunavarman shows how Buddhism was introduced and then gradually took root in Java in the fifth century A. D. As Gunavarman is known to have translated a
text of the Dharmagupta-sect
1
Molasarvastiviida school.
sect established its
islands, as
It is
he must have belonged to the perhaps for this reason that the
we know from
left
The accounts
the close of the
by
I-tsing
over other regions. The following two paragraphs from his "Record of Buddhist Practices" convey a fair idea of the state
of things.
consisting of
more than
Mulasarvilstivadanikaya has been almost adopted ( lit. 'there is almost only one' ), though universally occasionally some have devoted themselves to the Sainmitinikaya
;
and recently a few followers of the other two schools have also been found. Counting from the West there is first of all P'o-lushi (Pulushih) island, and then the Mo-lo-yu (Malayu) country
which
is
now
Mo-ho-sin
(Mahasin) island,
island (Natuna island), Pern-pen island, PVli (Bali) Ku-lun island (Pulo Condore), Fo-shih-pu-lo (Bhojapura) O-shan island, and Mo-chia-man island.
"There are some more small islands which cannot be all mentioned here. Buddhism is embraced in all these countries,
J.A.,
u-VUl
(1916),
p.
46.
142
is
where there adopted except in Malayu (Sribhoja), 1 who belong to the Mahayana (the Larger Vehicle")
have already discussed the identification of some of these islands and may refer to Takakusu's learned discussion for the location of the rest. But whatever we may think of these that identifications, there is absolutely no doubt whatsoever
We
all
to be located in Malayasia,
as generally true for this region. It may thus be regarded as certain that the Hmayana form of Buddhism
may be taken
was fairly prevalent all over Malayasia, though Mahayanism was not altogether unknown.
In addition to the general statement quoted above, I-tsing has left some details of his own journey which throw interesting
light
civilisation in Malayasia.
On
his
way
six months, and to India, the pilgrim halted in Sri-Vijaya for Grammar). During his return learnt the Sabdavidya (Sanskrit at Sri-Vijaya, and, after a short stay journey also he stopped Here he was in China, he again returned to the same place.
the voluminous Buddhist engaged in copying and translating he had brought with him from India. Why he texts which
Ms work
is
own
words
"Many kings and chieftains in the islands Ocean admire and believe (Buddhism), and their
on accumulating good
of the Southern
hearts are
set
In the fortified city of Bhoja actions. Buddhist priests number more than 1,000, ( i.e., Sri-Vijaya) whose minds are bent on learning and good practices. They
investigate
and study
Middle Kingdom
are not
the subjects that exist just as in the (Madhya-deSa, India) the rules and ceremonies
all
;
go to the and read (the original), he had West in order to hear (lectures) and practise the proper rules better stay here one or two years
at all different.
If a Chinese priest wishes to
to Central India"
8
.
I.
I-tsing
2.
Ibid, p.
XXXIV,
SUVARNADVlPA
The
position
is
143
of
Sri-Vijaya
as
an
important
centre of
Buddhism
also
indicated
by
1 Quite a large pilgrims to India which I-tsing has compiled number of Chinese pilgrims such as Yun-ki, Ta-tsin, Tcheng-
in kou, Tao-hong, Fa-lang, and others made a prolonged stay the local dialect (Kouen-luen, probably a form Sri-Vijaya, learned as well as Sanskrit, and engaged themselves in of
Malay)
collecting, studying,
texts.
We
are
that the Chinese pilgrim Hui-ning, on his way to India, stopped for three years in Java (Ho-ling), and, in collaboration with a local monk called Jnanabhadra, translated
also told
Buddhism and
were in
this
The importance
of Sri-Vijaya
in
this
respect
deserves,
however, more than a passing notice. Apart from its position as a great centre of Buddhism, it merits distinction as the
earliest
seat of that
Mahayana
sect
ulti-
whole of Malayasia. mately to play such a leading to the express statement of I-tsing, quoted above, According
part in the
Hinayanism was
time,
in
his
except
in Sri-Vijaya,
Mahayana.
YogaSastra
The same
(of
Asanga) in Sri-Vijaya.
rated by the inscriptions of the kings of Sri-Vijaya referred to The inscription of JayanaSa, dated 684 A. D., in Chap. VII.
contains definite references to Mahayanist doctrine.
It mentions
pranidhana and the well-known successive stages of development such as (1) the awakening of the thought of Bodhi (2) the
;
(3)
the acquisition of
supernatural
power
and
(4)
mastery over
and sorrows
(kleSa), leading
i.
knowledge (anuttarabhisamyak-
1-tsing
Memoire, pp.
144
sambodhi).
Malayasia referring to
the
that MahaySnism with the evidence of I-tsing, was a recent importation into Sri-Vijaya and had not spread
Taking
it
along
much beyond
this centre
1
.
The occurrence
was
of the Tantric
Its
of the
word
Mahayana
in
Srl-Vijaya
Tantrayfina.
form known as Vajrayana, Mantrayana, or further development in Java and Sumatra will
be dealt with in a subsequent chapter. According to the general view of scholars, this cult was developed, mainly in Bengal,
interesting to observe,
towards the middle of the seventh century A.D. It is, therefore, first, the rapidity with which new ideas
Far East, and secondly, the influence exerted by the Buddhists of Bengal over the development of
in Sumatra,
Buddhism
concrete
definite
and
evidence
is
the
eighth
and ninth
centuries A.D.
Malayasia
and
Dharmapala,
Nalandii,
of Kafici,
.
and
Professor
at
9 Suvarnadvlpa Early in the eighth A. D. Vajrabodhi, a South Indian monk, went from century Ceylon to China, stopping for five months at Srl-Vijaya. He and his disciple Amoghavajra, who accompanied him, were
who
its
introduction
China
3
.
stories
like
those of Gurjavar-
man*, Dharmapala, and Vajrabodhi clearly indicate that there was a regular intercourse between India and Malayasia. A
1. 2.
of Indian
Buddhism,
p.
p. 130.
(
3.
1924), P. 242.
4.
SUVARNADVlPA
Lang-ga-su was even social intercourse between the two.
story told in connection with
1
145
A brother
of the
king, being expelled from the kingdom, betook himself to India and married the eldest daughter of the ruler of that country. Indeed, everything indicates a regular, active, and familiar
It is
said with
reference to
Tun-Sun a
be exactly located, that "different countries beyond the Ganges To its market people come from east all come to trade here.
it is
visited daily
All
we
An
commerce kept up a
religion
close
and intimate
relation
between
which
and
social ideas, as
way
to those
Gradually an
increasing
number
of
Indians settled
down
in these colonies,
institutions
and formed a nucleus, round which- the Hindu up and took a deep root in the soil.
grew
For, in addition to religion, which might have been due to outside missionary propaganda, the influence of Hindu civilisation is also clearly
marked
in the political
and
social
this
ideas
and
We
may
refer in
connection
a state called Tan-Tan, the exact location of which it is determine. This kingdom sent ambassadors to China
in 530, 535,
We get the
name
Chinese annals
[
Ksatriya
and
his personal
Silingkia (Sringa).
He
daily
attends to business and has eight great ministers, called the "Eight Seats", all chosen from among the Brahmanas. The
king rubs his body with perfumes, wears a very high hat and a
I.
See Chap. V.
2.
Groeneveldt
pp. 460-61
;
Notes, p. 119.
B. E, F. E. O.,
3.
T'oung
Pao,
Ser.
I,
Vol.
X,
19
146
clothed in Muslin
rides
slippers.
he mounts an elephant.
We
also
possess an
1
equally interesting
.
account
of
the
court-life of
Lang-ya-su
the upper part of the body naked, loosely down, and around their lower limbs they only use a sarong of cotton. The king and the nobles moreover have a thin, flowered cloth for covering the upper
they wear a girdle of gold and golden rings Young girls cover themselves with a cloth of
;
"The city-walls arc made of bricks. They have double he rides on an gates and watch-towers. When the king goes out,
elephant.
He
is is
surrounded with
flags
of feathers, banners,
description of the court-life of PVli, which we have quoted in the last chapter, corroborates and supplements the picture. It is evident that the manners and customs of Indian court were reproduced to a large extent in these
The gorgeous
In one respect alone, there is some divergence. It is said that women of Lang-ya-su have the upper part This custom, which still prevails in of the body naked.
Indian colonies.
It is to bo present Indian notion. that in our ancient sculptures, the upper remembered, however, and there are still part of female body is represented as naked, some tribes in India who observe the custom. It is, therefore,
Bali,
is
abhorrent
to
difficult to
say whether the custom was borrowed from India, or was only a remnant of the indigenous practices. Speaking of the material dress, it is interesting to note that cotton was
commonly
used.
The use
of its Indian
in express mention of Indian cotton leave no doubt about the origin of the practice. of Ho-lo-tan,
I.
Groeneveldt
Notes,
p. 10.
SUVARNADVIPA
The use
weapon
is
147
of
Cakra
(discus) as
and the Mahabharata refers to it, Krsna or Visnu. That the Indian
system of warfare was prevalent in the colonies is evident from the Chinese account in respect of Ka-la. 1 The description given there might apply in toto to any Indian army.
following customs of Ka-la, referred to by the Chinese, 2 are also Indian in origin "When they marry they give no other presents than areca-nuts, sometimes as many as two
.
The
hundred trays. The wife enters the family of her husband. Their musical instruments are a kind of guitar, a transversal Their dead are burned, flute, copper cymbals, and iron drums.
the ashes put into a golden jar and sunk into the sea."
1.
See Chap.
V., p. 77.
2.
Groeneveldt
Book
II
BOOK
Chapter
II
I.
Sailendra dynasty, and we may, therefore, call it the Sailendra empire. The current notions about the character and origin of
this
empire
of keen
very widely, and form at present a subject As it touches the controversy among scholars.
differ
we we
shall
altogether
accept the one view or the other, I have discussed in detail these preliminary points in an
ways according
this section
is
1
.
as
appendix to
The
as given below,
Our knowledge
based
solely
Sailendras
is
on four
summary
be
The Ligor
Bay
A. D. a
A
two
stelae,
found at
south of the
faces.
of Bandon,
The
raja,
inscription
and then
1.
French translation
was published
in the B. E. F. E. O.,
Vol.,
2. B.E.F.E.O., Vol. XVIII, No. 6, App. I, pp. agff. The inscription has been recently re-edited by Mr. B. C. Chhabra ( J. A. S. B. L. Vol. I, No. i, pp. 2off.) I do not agree with him that the two portions belong to
the
same
record.
150
priest
Buddhist gods by Sri-Vijayevarabhiipati. Jayanta, the royal (rajasthamra) being ordered by the king, built three
After
built
stupas.
Jayanta's
Adhimukti
death, his disciple and successor two brick caityas by the side of the three
king).
caityas (built
by the
In
conclusion,
it
is
said,
that
The
inscription B, engraved
stelae, consists
of only one verse and a few letters of the second. It contains the eulogy of an emperor (rajadhiraja) having the name
Visnu (visnvakhyo).
The
It seems
named Sri-Maharaja,
this
and though probable, it is not absolutely certain, if is the same as rajadhiraja having the name Visnu*.
2.
person
The Kalasan
3
.
1.
M, Coedes
the
last line
as
'Sailendra-
Vamfaprabhunigadatah which gives no sense. I proposed to read the But M. Coedes has kindly last word in the compound as nigaditah. informed me in a letter that there is no trace of i on d. P. Mus (B.E.F.E.O., XXIX, 448) has suggested prabha(ba)niga<1atiih.
2.
Mr.
B. C.
Chhabra
has
made
the
same
But
I
naturally claims the credit of the discovery. J. G. I. S., Vol. I, No. i, p. 12) before I saw his
article.
with his identification of this Visnu with Visnuvarman of the Perak seal.
grounds to justify it. This inscription was originally published by Brandes in 1886, 3. It was re-edited by Sir R. G. Bhandarkar Vol. 31, pp. 240-60. T.B.G.,
sufficient
The last revised edition i-io. J.Bo.Br.R.A.S., Vol. XVII, part II, pp. Vol. 68 (1928), pp. 5?ff According to Vogel, there by Bosch, T.B.G., are two Sailendra kings referred to in this inscription the Sumatran
in
is
:
whose gurus played an important part in the foundation of the Tara temple, and kariyana Panamkurana, the scion of the Sailendra
ailendraraja,
(B.K.I., 1930,
is
This is, however, denied in Java (B.K.I., Vol. 75, p. 634). Stutterheim who takes the two to be one and the same king of the by Sailendra dynasty, with whose sanction the temple was built by his gurus Vol. 86, pp. 567-571)* Vogel has pointed out that kariyana
dynasty ruling
old Javanese rakarayan or rakryan used as the equivalent to the next only to the king. pf a dignified officer,
title
SUVARNADVlPA
The
up
inscription
151
village
was discovered
at the
of Kalasan
Its
contents
may
be summed
as follows
"The preceptors (Guru) of the Sailendra king had a temple of Tara built with the help (or sanction) of Maharaja
At the command of the Gurus PaScapana Panamkarana. some officers of the king built a temple, an image of Goddess Tara, and a residence for monks proficient in Vinaya-Mahayana. "In the prosperous kingdom of the ornament of the Sailendra
/
dynasty
built
(Sattendra-ramSa-tilaka),
the
700,
worship of
village of
Kalasa to the Samgha. This gift should be protected Srimaii Kariyana by the kings of the Sailendra dynasty. Panamkarana makes this request to the future kings".
3.
The Kelurak
was
The
district.
inscription
Jogyakerta
illegible
in
many
parts,
summary
of view
:
(ratnatraya).
Praises of
Buddhist
deities.
is
"This earth
is
who
I. Edited by Bosch in T.B.G., Vol. 68 (1928), pp, iff. The Kalasan and Kelurak Inscriptions are both written in Indian alphabets of the Nagaii type. Several other inscriptions, written in the same alphabet, have been found in the same locality, e.g., at Batu-raka,
Plaosan, and Sajivan, but they are hardly legible and offer no connected
meaning.
152
who
the
most
powerful
hero
of
the
enemy
purified
Vairi-vara-vlra-
vimardana).
coming from Gauda (Gaudl-dvlpa-guru)... "This image of MaGju&ri has been set up for the welfare of the world by the royal preceptor (raja-guru).
"In the Saka year 704, Kum&raghosha [/.<?., the preceptor from Gauda mentioned above] set up this Manjughosha.
an excellent landmark of
shape
of
creatures.
exist
religion
having
the
all
an image of ManjuSri,
Buddha,
hospitality
"
The Nalanda
This
inscription
at
five
villages
by
Devapala
the
of the illustrious
king of Suvarnadvlpa.
Balaputradeva, account of
:
Balaputradeva which
may be summed up
as follows
"There was a great king of Yavabhumi ( Yavabhumi-pala), whose name signified 'tormentor of brave foes' (Vlra-vairimathan-aniigat-abhidhftna) and who was an ornament of the
Sailendra dynasty (Sailendra-ramsa-tilaka).
I.
He had
inscription
a valiant
was
also
Ep.
Ind.,
Vol.
XVII,
p.
310.
The
published separately by
SUVARNADVIPA
son (called
in battle).
153
) Samaragravira ( or who was the foremost warrior His wife Tara, daughter of king iSrl-Varmasetu l of the lunar race, resembled the goddess Tara. By this wife he had
a son JSii-Biilaputra,
who
built a monastery
at Nalanda".
The Ligor
Inscription
B definitely
to
of the Sailendra
in the
Sii-Vijaya
least the Ligor region from the kingdom of sometime after 775 A. D. a The Kalasan and
Kelurak
inscriptions
prove
Thus during the last quarter of the eighth century A.D. the Hindu kingdoms of Sumatra, Java, and Malay Peninsula had all to succumb to, or, at least, feel the weight of, this new power. The Sailendras ushered in a new epoch in more senses than one. For the first time in its history, Malayasia, or the
greater part of it, achieved a political unity as integral parts of an empire, and we shall sec later, how this empire rose to a height of glory and splendour unknown before. But the
of the
monuments
and the highly developed art which produced such splendid as Candi Kalasan and Barabudur in Java, may be
mainly attributed to their patronage. The introduction of a new kind of alphabet, which has been called the Pre-Nagari
script,
at
and the adoption of a new name Kalinga for Malayasia, least by the foreigners, may also be traced to the same
source.
1. Pandit H. Sastrl reads this name Mr. N. G. Majumdar's reading Varmasetu seems
as
to
Dharmasetu,
doubt.
but
me beyond
2. This is the view generally taken, but Dr. H. G. Quaritch Wales denies the suzerainty of He takes ri-Vijaya in Malay Peninsula. Srl-Vijaya as the name of a kingdom in Malay Peninsula (I.A.L., Vol. IX, No. i, p. 4) and refers to the name of 'an ancient site called Caiya (i.e. Jaya, a shortened form of Vijaya ; and not far to the south
is
20
154
definite Yet, strangely enough, we have as yet no knowledge of the chief seat of authority of the Sailendras in It is generally held that they were Malayasia. originally
rulers
of Sri-Vijaya
(Palembang
in
Sumatra), and
extended
their authority
gradually over Java and Malay Peninsula. I have discussed this question in the Appendix and tried to show how this hypothesis rests on a very weak basis.
I hold the view that there are far better grounds for the belief that the original seat of authority of the Sailendras was either
Malay Peninsula. For the present the question must be left open. But supposing that cither Sri-Vijaya or Malay Peninsula was the nucleus of the Sailendra empire, the question arises whether Java was an integral part of the empire ruled over by the same king, or whether it formed a separate, though subordinate, kingdom under a member of the same
in Java or in
royal dynasty.
The
first
view would
in
ordinary circumstances
as
latter view.
place,
we
shall see later, the Sailendra period in the history of Java was the most glorious in respect of the development of art
and
architecture,
which reached
Barabudur.
its
climax
in
the
famous
monument
nor Now, neither Sumatra Peninsula has left any monument worth comparison, and Malay although the destructive agencies of man and nature may
of
account
for
monuments
like
much, it is impossible to believe that mighty Barabudur could have entirely vanished
altogether outlying dependency of such a kingdom
is difficult
in
is
is
should produce so magnificent structures. In the second place, the Nalanda copper-plate of Devap&la, Balaputradeva
mentioned as the king of Suvarnadvlpa, but his grandfather expressly referred to as a king of Yavabhumi, an ornament
If Yavabhumi means Java, as is commonly accepted, the reference should be taken to mean
SUVARNADVIPA
that Java formed a separate state under a
155
of the
lias laid
member
same
down dynasty. Mainly on these two grounds, Krom the hypothesis, that while Java, no doubt, came under the it came sphere of influence of Srl-Vijaya, sooner or later state under a member of the same dynasty to form a separate
which ruled over Srl-Vijaya
I
1
.
regards the first argument, it is not so forcible against Malay Peninsula. In addition to the archaeological monuments referred to above
am
view.
As
(pp. 80ff.),
Mr. R.
J.
in the
forests
of the
and temples, the relics of a civilisation that built in imperishable He has also referred to other facts which "point to the stone.
past existence of powerful states and a high standard of wealth 8 and luxury in the north of the Malay Peninsula ". Besides,
it
may be
easily
supposed that the seat of central authority to Java for a period. As to the second
in the
may
expression lead to u
But whatever might have been the original seat of the Sailendras, there is no doubt that from the eighth century
A. D. they were the dominant
political
is
referred to
Ziibag,
describe
quite
its
wealth
these accounts that the authority of the king of Zabag extended over nearly the whole of Malayasia, and possibly also over the two mighty kingdoms in Lido-China,
clear from
vix. 9
Krom-Geschiedenis 2 pp. H2-45- M. Coedes, in a private letter, on the following, among other grounds objects to the Malay Peninsula
:
"The Peninsula
2.
is
as poor in antiquities as
Palembang
of
itself."
R.
G. Wilkinson, 'A
History
the
Peninsular
Malays'
156
we have a tradition preserved by whose account of a voyage in India and China was originally written in 851 and published by Abfl Zayd Hasan, with additional remarks, about 916 A.D.
the merchant Sulayman,
1
:
the annals of the country of Zabag, that in years gone by the country of Khmer came into the hands One day he was of a young prince of a very hasty temper.
in
empire of the
subjects,
when the conversation turned upon Maharaja, of its splendour, the number of
:
the
its
and of the islands subordinate to it. All at once the king said to the Vizier "I have taken a fancy into my I should like to head which I should much like to gratify " see before me the head of the kingofZfibag in a dish These words passed from mouth to mouth and so spread that
they at length reached the ears of the Maharaja. That king ordered his Vizier to have a thousand vessels of medium size
prepared with their engines of war, and to put on board of each vessel as many arms and soldiers as it could carry. AVhen the preparations were ended, and everything was ready,
the king went on board his fleet and proceeded with his troops The king of Khmer knew nothing of the to Khmer impending danger until the fleet had entered the river which
and the troops of the Maharaja had landed. The Maharaja thus took the king of Khmer unawares and He had the king brought forth and seized upon his palace. The Maharaja returned immediately had his head cut off.
led to his capital,
to
country and neither he nor any of his Khmer anything belonging to the king of
his
men touched
Afterwards
the Mahftrflja had the head washed and embalmed, then putting it in a vase, he sent it to the prince who then occupied the
throne of Khmer."
i.
Elliot
its
own
Historians, Vol.
i,
p.8.
Ferrand
in J.A., II-
XX
219$.
The
story
is
also
p. 93).
SUVAKNADVIPA
The
157
story undoubtedly belongs to the domain of folklore, but seems to have been based on a real struggle between Zabag
and the Khmer kingdom of Cambodia. This is confirmed in Cambodia itself. The discovered by an inscription Thorn Inscription, written in Sanskrit and Khmer, Sdok Kak and dated in 974 Saka (=1052 A.D.), tells us that king Jayavarman II, who came from Java to reign in the city of
1
order
that
1
.
Java
As
from 802 to 869 A. D., it follows that Jayavarman the Khmer kingdom of Cambodia had come under the influence of Java towards the close of the eighth century A. D. Taking
Java of the inscription to be identical with Zabag of the Arabian account, it is reasonable to refer the 'old' story of Sulayman to the same period. This fits in well with other
known
by 775
to
facts.
We
have
seen
that
the
Sailendras
established
their authority
and
the
hold
It is, therefore, quite 778 A. D. reasonable had at least a temporary success that they
against
Khmcrs
towards
the
close
of
the
eighth
century A. D.
fleet of
an invasion of
people of
identifies
The Chinese annals refer Tran-nam in 767 A.D. by the Co-Ion (Kuen-Luen) and of Daba', which Maspero
north.
the "March of
8
kingdom
and
Champa
in one case the raiders are named 'forces coming by way of from Java/ The first reference occurs in Po-Nagar stelae sea
1.
B.E.F.E.O., Vol.
XV,
Part
II,
p. 87.
pp. 97-98
and
p,
98
f.
n. 4.
158
inscription of
A.D.).
It runs as follows
"In the Saka year, denoted by Kosa-nava-rtu (696=774 A.D.), ferocious, pitiless, dark-coloured people of other cities,
whose food was more horrible than that of the vampires, and who were vicious and furious like Yama, came in ships, took
away the Mukhalinga of the God (Sambhu, established at Kauth&ra by Vicitrasagara), and set fire to the abode of the God, as the armed crowds of Daityas did in heaven."
is
referred to
in another inscription
as
other
by means of ships carried away the images." The next reference occurs in Yang Tikuh stelae inscription Speaking of of Indravarman 1, dated 721 Saka (=799 A.D.). 8 the temple of BhadradhipatlSvara, it says that it was burnt by the army of Java coming by means of ships, and became empty
countries
in the
Here, again,
of
we
Champa
Although
definite
Java raiding the distant coast quarter of the eighth century A.D.
is
believe that
dynasty of Champa.
But even
if it
were
so,
shortlived one. For a new dynasty soon established itself in Champa*. On the whole, therefore, while there is nothing to
Java gained any permanent material the circumstances narrated above indicate success in Champa,
fleet of
question arises about the identity of Java mentioned in the Cham record. It has usually been taken to stand for or the island of Java, but it may also be taken as
Now the
Yavadvlpa,
the Sailendra equivalent to Arabic Zabag, and thus identical with it makes but little empire. In the present instance, however,
I.
R. C.
Majumdar
3.
Champa, Book
Ibid., p. $o.
III, p,
43.
3.
Ibid,, p. 70.
4.
Ibid,
Book
J
f
Ch. V,
StJVARNADVIPA
difference whether
150
;
we
identify
it
for,
as
we have
seen,
included within
the empire of the Sailendras, or ruled by a member of the same dynasty, and as such there must have been a close association
least as the
foreign policy
was
concerned. On the whole, therefore, we ding the naval raids as ultimately emanating from the empire
are justified in regarof the Sailendras.
1
The emergence
in Indonesia
power
his
importance.
story,
king (of Zabag) in the estimation of the rulers of India and China."
The
evidences, collected
above,
leave
no
doubt
that
high-water mark The of its greatness and glory in the eighth century A. D. inevitable the beginning of the following century saw
the empire of the Sailendras reached the
decline.
By
the
middle
of the
ninth
century A.D.,
their
supremacy was successfully challenged by the of Cambodia and Java. states neighbouring
of
two
great
We
have
Jayavarman II of already seen the determined attempt Cambodia (802-869 A. D.) to throw off the yoke of the
Sailendras,
and there
is
in that respect.
There
kingdom
after
time, the
Sailendras lost
their hold
on
Unfortunately
It
we know
possible
circummere
i.
is,
of
course,
raiders as
But the pointed references to the raiders as "nnvagatairJava-'vala-samghais" seems to exclude this
pirates belonging to
in particular.
no country
possibility.
The
from Java
to
by way
of sea,'
160
Java.
It
is
also
difficult to assign even any approximate date for this event. If king Samarottunga, who issued the Kedu inscription in A. D. 847, may be identified with king Samaragravira of the
we may presume that the authority of had continued in Java till at least the middle the Sailendra kings of the ninth century A. D. But this identification cannot be held as certain, the more so because a later king of East Java
Nalandii copper-plate,
also bore the title Samarottunga.
must have
lost
their authority
in
Java belonging to a
Java was then being ruled over by a king of The middle of the ninth different dynasty.
century A. D. may thus be regarded as the approximate limit 1 of the Sailendra supremacy in Java
.
But, in spite of the loss of Cambodia and Java, the Sailendra empire retained its position as a great power, and, to the outside world, it was still the greatest political power
in the Pacific region.
In addition to the Nalanda copper-plate, which describes the Sailendras as rulers of Suvarnadvipa or Malayasia, our
this
period
is
by Arab writers, who, as already remarked, refer to their country as Zabag or Zabaj. Jbn Khordadzbeh (844-848 A. D.) says that the king of Zabag is named Maharaja. His Jiians of gold. He daily revenue amounts to two hundred
and throws it into water, prepares a solid brick of this gold 'there is my treasure/ part of this revenue, about saying is derived from cock-fight. leg 50 mans of gold per (Jay,
of the cock
right to
its
him, and
.
the
owner
by paying
8 value in gold
He
will
says
"Kalah-bar
1.
The
Ch.
be further discussed
in
Bk.
Ill,
2.
J,A., Ser.
n. Vol.
XX
SUVARNADVIPA
(i.e.,
161
Peninsula)
in the Malay which is situated Zabag Kalah-bar and Zabag are governed by
the Isthmus
of
Kra
."
is
repeated by
who adds
that
its
that there
is
is
king
very
rich*.
:
Ibn Rosteh, writing about 903 A. D., remarks "The great He is (of Zabag) is called Maharaja i.e., king of kings. king
not regarded as the greatest among the kings of India, because he dwells in the islands. No other king is richer or more 3 powerful than he, and none has more revenue ."
These Arab
as
Isfcak
(c.
950
tell
Zabag and
is
furnished by
published, about A. D. 916, the account written by Sulayman in 851 A. D., with additional originally remarks of his own. He applies the name Zabag both to
the
kingdom
and
its
:
capital
city.
His
remarks may be
summed up
as follows
journey by sea-route.
favourable.
"The distance between Zabag and China is one month's It may be even less if the winds are
area
"The king of this town has got the title Maharaja. of the kingdom is about 900 (square) Parsangs.
1.
The The
Kelah)
Ibid., p. 53.
it
The
reference to tin
mines
in
Kalah
(or
localises
the tin-bearing tract of the country extending from southern Tennasserim through the greater part of Malay Peninsula. Its identification with Kedah is at least in highly probable.
definitely in
(Blagden
J. Str. Br.
2.
p. 24).
3
I.
ibid.,
55.
4.
Ferrand
Textes, Vol.
5.
ibid., p. 112.
21
162
king is also overlord of a large number of islands extending over a length of 1000 Parsangs or more. Among the kingdoms over which he rules are the island called Sribuza
(=Srl-Vijaya) with an area of about 400 (square) Parsangs, and the island called Ram! with an area of about 800 (square)
Parsangs.
of
also
included
is
among
the territories of
The
of
area of Kalah
is
The town
Kalah
ebony, spices,
articles.
There was a
regular
maritime
Oman.
The
"The Maharaja exercises sovereignty over all these islands. island in which he lives is very thickly populated from
is
Into this the king throws every morning a brick made of solid gold. These bricks are covered by water during tide, but
are visible during ebb.
When
is
all
these bricks
records.
The gold
then
distributed
among
the poor
1
the
members
to their rank,
is
distributed
among
".
Mas'udl has given some details about Zabag in his work, Some of his relevant remarks D.).
and mountains.
is
a vast country extending over sea and land It borders on the country of Zabag, which the kingdom of the Maharaja, the king of the islands.
1.
India
is
The account concludes with the story Zabag and the king of Khmer which
I.
volume.
SUVARNADVlPA
Zabag, which separates India from China, the former country, (p. 92.)
2.
163
is
comprised within
The kingdom
of
Khmer is on
the
way
to
the kingdoms
of the Maharaja, the king of the islands of Zabag, Kalah and Sirandib. (Here follows the story, quoted above, of the
expedition of the Maharaja against the death of the latter.) (p. 03.)
3.
Khmer
Formerly there was a direct voyage between China and ports like Slraf and Oman. Now the port of Kalah serves as the meeting place for the mercantile navies of the
two
countries,
(p. 96.)
is
5.
who
rules over
the most rapid vessels could not has innumerable troops. complete in two years a tour round the isles which are under The territories of this king produce all sorts his possession.
of spices
Even
has as
6.
much
and aromatics, and no other sovereign of the world wealth from the soil. (p. 99.)
In the empire of the Maharaja is the island of Sribuza (Srl-Vijaya) which is situated at about 400 Parsangs from
the continent and entirely cultivated.
the
islands
of Zabag,
of
Ramnl,
and the
domain,
7.
whole
(p. 100.)
the sea of
Champa
included
in
his
country, of which Mandurapatan is the capital, Ceylon, as the Khmer country is in relation to the isles of the Maharaja, such as Zabag and others,
is
The
situated opposite
(p. 107.)
The next
by Ibrahim
1000 A. D.) "Zabag is a large archipelago, thickly populated, and with abundant means of livelihood. I( is said that the Chinese, ruined by foreign invasions and
164
civil wars,
Archipelago
and
all
their towns.
;
this ocean,
"The eastern islands in 1030 A. D.) says (c. which are nearer to China than to India, are the islands of the Zabaj, called by the Hindus Suvarna-dvlpa
:
i. e.,
the gold islands. The islands of the Zabaj are called the Gold Country (Suvarna-dvlpa), because you obtain much
.
gold as deposit
8
if
little
of the
earth of that
country/
The accounts of the Arab writers quoted above leave no doubt that a mighty empire, comprising a large part of the Malay Archipelago and Malay Peninsula, flourished from the
middle of the ninth to at least the end of the tenth century A.D. Thus we must hold that even after the loss of Java and
Cambodia, the Sailciidra empire continued to flourish for more than a century, and Sribuza or Srl-Vijaya formed an important and integral part of it.
The Chinese
San-fo-tsi
We
annals contain references to a kingdom called which undoubtedly stands for the Sailendra empire. learn from them that several embassies of the Sailendras
visited
In the year 904 or 905 A.D. the governor of the capital The Chinese city was sent as an ambassador with tribute.
title
3
who
In the 9th month of the year 960 A.D., king Si-li hou-ta named Li-tche-ti with tributes, was repeated in the summer of 961. A.D. During the and this
the tribute
called
1.
J.A.,
ii-XX
2.
p. 210,
Vol.
II, p. 106.
3.
n-XX
SUVAKNADVlPA
Che-li Wou-ye.
of San-fo-tsi
165
was
In the spring of 962 A.D. the king Che-li Wou-ye sent to China an embassy, composed of three ambassadors, with tribute. They brought back several articles from China.*
Four embassies were sent in 971, 972, 974, and 975 A.D. In 980 and 983 A.D., the king Hiu-tchc sent ambassadors
with tribute.
Hia-tche probably stands for the
old
Malay
tenth
word
'Haji'
The
century.
was
In
at Canton,
Ming-chu.
We
Malay Peninsula,
Champa
at
and
In the year 980 A.D., a merchant from San-fo-tsi arrived carried to Canton. 5
presented products of his country. The Arabic and Chinese accounts thus both testify to the political and commercial greatness of the Sailcndra empire
we possess of the kingdom. The very few details of the political history
Unfortunately
1.
and
3.
It
is
difficult to
of the proper
names given
(a) Si-li
Chinese.
(b)
first
Che-li
Wou-ye =
ri
Wuja.
the
ri-Gupta-harita (Records, p. XLII). Ferrand further amends Sien-lieou as Mo-lieou and regards it as equivalent to Malayu. Needless to say, these suggestions are purely
name
as
ri-Kuta-harit or
J.A.,
n-XX
;(iQ22),
p. 17. f.n.
4.
According to Ma-Twan-lin
(i.e.,
this
Li-si-lin-nan-mi-je-lai
Mi-je-lai,
son of
Ibid., p. 18.
J.A.,
ii-XX
166
only facts of outstanding importance that arc known to us, in outline only, are its relations with Java and with the Cola
first
information that
we
possess
regarding the
the latter
relation
kingdom
from the control of the former. We learn from 988 A.D. an ambassador from San-fo-tsi
to China.
came with
in
tribute
but,
He
left
the
imperial
learnt
capital
990
A.D.,
country
had
been
on reaching invaded by
Canton,
that
his
rested there for about a year. ambassador went with his navy to Champa, but as he did not receive any good news there, he came back to China and requested the emperor to issue a decree making San-fo-tsi a
protectorate of China
1
.
We hardly know
of this hostility,
anything about the origin and incidents which took a serious turn in the last decade
But
it
is
not
difficult
to imagine
been
or it may hostile, and perhaps there were intermittent fights the king of Java, felt powerful enough be that DharmavamSa, to follow an imperial policy like his neighbour, and this
no doubt about the result of To begin with, the king of Java had splendid the struggle. success and invaded the enemy's country. But his success was neither decisive nor of a permanent character. In 1003
is
collision
between
the two.
But
A.D. San-fo-tsi recovered her strength sufficiently to send an a In 1006 embassy to China without any hindrance from Java of Java was destroyed by a catastrophe, the AJD. the kingdom
.
8 exact nature of which will be discussed in a subsequent chapter So the Sailendra empire was freed from any further fear from
that quarter.
Ibid
pp. 18-19.
2.
I.
Ibid., p. 19.
3.
Bk.
Ill,
Chap,
II,
Chapter
II.
one
known
to us,
is
was one of the three kingdoms in South India which flourished from a hoary antiquity. It extended along the Coromandcl coast, and its traditional boundaries were the Pennar river in the north, the Southern Vellaru river on the south, and up to the borders of Coorg on the west.
state
The Cola
The
rise
of the Pallavas
within this area kept the Colas in But the Colas re-asserted their
of
the
I
With
the
accession of Parantaka
in
entered
made himself
still
succession of great victories Rajaraja the Great (985-1014 A.D.) the lord paramount of Southern India. His
more famous son Rajendra Cola (1014-1044 A.D.) 1 raised the Cola power to its climax, and his conquests extended
as far as Bengal in the north.
power and
this
naturally
Cola
This
is
proved by an inscriphis
father,
in
the
administration
the
empire,
in
1012 A.D.,
and
his
counted from
they
differ
this date. The dates of Ccla kings in from those given by V. A. Smith, are authority of Prof. K. A. N. Sastri ( Sastri Colas ).
this chapter,
where
accepted
on the
168
and is now tion, which is engraved on twenty-one plates, preserved in the Leiden Museum along with another of three The two records are known respectively as the plates.
Larger Leiden Grant and the Smaller Leiden Grant, as their
find-place is not
known 1
The Larger Leiden Grant is written partly in Sanskrit, and partly in Tamil. The Tamil portion tells us that the Cola king
Rajaraja, the Great, granted, in the twenty-first year of his reign, the revenues of a village for the upkeep of the shrine of Buddha
Culamanivarma-vihara which was being constructed 8 by Culamanivarman, king of Kadaram at Nagapattana. After the completion of the necessary preliminaries the deed of gift
in the
,
The Sanskrit portion tells us that Rajaraja RajakeSarivarman (i.e. Rajaraja, the Great) gave, in the twenty-first year of his reign, a village to the Buddha residing in the Culamanivarma-vihara which was built at Naglpattana by iSrl-Maravijayottungavarman in the name of his father Culamanivarman. It further informs us that Mara-vijayottuiigavarman was born in the Sailendra family, was the lord of SrI-visaya, had
extended
the
suzerainty
of
Kataha
(Srl-visay-adhipatiiia
from the Sanskrit portion that after the death of Rajaraja, his son and successor Madhurantaka, i.e., Rajendra Cola, issued this edict for the grant made by his
also learn
father.
We
from these statements that king Culamanivarman of Kataha commenced the construction of a Buddhist
It is obvious
1.
Cf. B.K.I.,
edited in Arch.
is
Vol. 75, pp. 628 ff. The inscription Surv. South India, Vol. IV, pp. 206 ff.
in
was
originally
revised edition
being published
2.
The name
in
also written
as
is
Ki^aram.
equivalent to
The name
written as
Cfl|amanivarman
Tamil character
CGtfamanivarman.
SUVARNADVIPA
Vihara at Nagapattana,
169
in
modern
Negapatam,
or
shortly
before the 21st year of Raja raja when a village was granted by the Cola king for its upkeep. King Culamanivarman, however,
died shortly after, and the Vihara was completed by his son and successor Mara-vijayottungavarman. Presumably, king
Rajaraja also died by that time, and the actual edict for the grant was issued by Rajendra Cola.
in the
23rd year of Rajaraja, does not mention Maraup vijayottungavnrman, but refers only to Cfllamanivarman. This
the
fact
might be taken
to indicate that
the
latter
date.
But
this
is
need
naturally
the
Nalanda
copper-plate of the time of Devapuia. In both cases an Indian king grants villages to a Buddhist sanctuary, erected in India
by a Sailendra king. Both furnish us with names of Sailcndra kings not known from indigenous sources.
Fortunately the present inscription can be precisely dated, for the 21st year of Rajaraja falls in 1005 A.D. thus come
We
to
know
that king
succeeded shortly after by his son Srl-MaraTo G. Coedfcs belongs the credit of vijayottungavarman.
tracing these two
of the
names
in the Chinese
Annals 1
Sung dynasty
to
bring tribute
they told that in their country a Buddhist temple had been erected in order to pray for the long life of the emperor.
"In the year 1008 the king So-ri-ma-la-p'i (Sri-Mara-vijayottungavarman) sent three envoys to present tribute".
Comparing the Chinese and Indian data we can the death of Cudamanivarman and the accession
1.
easily
put
of his son
6. p. 7.
2.
ii-XX
(1922), p. 19.
22
170
Sri-Msra-vijayottungavarman some time between 1005 and 1008 A JD. So the relations between the Cola and Sailendra kings were quite friendly at the commencement of the eleventh
century A.D.
As noted
refers
to
above, the Sanskrit portion of the Leiden Grant Srl-Mara-vijayottungavarman as extending the
suzerainty of Kataha, and lord of Sri-Visaya, while the Tamil portion refers to his father only as the king of KadSra or Kidara. In spite of Ferrand's criticism 1 there is much to be
said in support of the view of G. Coed&s, that Kataha, Kad&ra or Kidara are all equivalents of Keddah in the western part of 8 the Malay Peninsula It would then follow, that while the
.
king Mara-vijayottungavarmadeva ruled over both Srl-Vijaya and Malay Peninsula, as is also testified to by the Arab writers,
the Colas
regarded the Sailendras rather as rulers of Malay Peninsula, with suzerainty over Srl-Vijaya.
between the
two
An
from
old Tamil
poem
coming
which a
certainly to
Kalagam, commentator equates with Kadaram, is almost be identified with Keddah which the Arabs
.
the great
designate as Kala.
The friendly relation between the Cola kings and the Sailendra rulers did not last long. In a few years hostilities
broke
and Rajendra Cola sent a naval expedition against his mighty adversary beyond the sea. The details preserved in the Cola records leave no doubt that the expedition was crowned with brilliant success, and various parts of the
out,
empire of the Sailendras were reduced by Cola emperor. The reason for the outbreak of
the
hostility,
mighty and
J.A., ii
XX (1922),
pp. 50-51.
in
I.
3.
Also
cf.
H., Vol.
p. 347.
SUVARNADVIPA
of
171
the
the
most
arduous
undertaking
of
Cola
fair
emperor,
the
the
idea of unknown to us. Fortunately, we have a time when the expedition took place, and we also know name of the Sailendra king who was humbled by
are
the
Indian emperor.
the
is
records
of
the Colas,
These and other details arc furnished by and a short reference to these
necessary for a proper understanding of the subject. 1. Several inscriptions at Malurpatna, dated in the 23rd
year of king Rajaraja, record that he was pleased to destroy and twelve thousand the ships (at) Kandalur Salai
ancient islands of the sea
1
.
The
It
is,
23rd
therefore, reasonable to
a powerful maritime conquests early in the eleventh century A. D. 2. The Tiruvalangadu plates, dated in the 6th year of 2 Rajendra Cola (1017-8 A. D.), contain the following verse
:
year of Rajaraja corresponds to A. D. 1007. presume that the Colas possessed and started on a deliberate policy of making navy,
1.
Nos
S.
128,
130,
131,
132 of
The
inscription consists
of 271 lines in
Sanskrit and
expressly dated in
Both the parts are 524 the 6th year of Rajendra Cola. But the Sanskrit
Tamil.
at a later date. When portion is usually regarded as being engraved the Ann. Rep. Arch. Surv. (1903-4. the inscription was first noticed in pp. 234-5), the following remarks were made: "The Tamil portion of
Tiruvalangadu plates
is dated in the 6th year of Rajendra Cola's reign (A.D. ioi6-i7)/ and the Sanskrit portion also refers to the grant having been made in the same year. But the conquest of Kajaha, which, as we
know from other inscriptions of the king, took place in the 15111 or i6th year of his reign, is mentioned in the Sanskrit portion. It has, therefore, to be concluded that, as in the Leyden Grant, the Sanskrit Prafastt of the Tiruvalangadu plates was added subsequently to the Tamil portion
which actually contains the king's order (issued in the 6th year of his This argument has, however, very little force, for, as we now reign)."
is no reason to place the expedition to Kajaha in the J5th or year, and, as we shall see later, the conquest of Ka^aram is referred to in a record of the nth year, and an inscription of the i3th year of
know, there
1 6th
172
"Having conquered Kataha with (the help of) forces that had crossed the ocean, (and) having made
kings
bow down
3.
(before
him),
this (king)
(v. 123).
The preambles
of inscriptions dated in
30,
the
regnal
years
a modified manner.
Hultzsch, while editing the inscription, expresses the same view in Referring to the conquests recorded in the Sanskrit
:
recorded
"These conquests of Rajendra Cola are mostly portion he observes in the historical introductions to his Tamil inscriptions dated from and after the I3th year of his reign. It may here be noted that
the Tamil introduction given in lines 131 to 142 below is naturally the shorter one, since it belongs to the sixth year of the king's reign ; and since it does not include a list of all the conquests mentioned above, it has
been suggested that the Sanskrit portion of the grant which includes the addition." (S. /. /. conquests of the later years must be a subsequent Vol. Ill, Fart III, p. 389).
It must be observed, however, that none of the records of Rajendra Cola gives any specific date for any of his conquests, and we can only conclude that the conquests must have been made before the date of the them. It is, therefore, too risky to assert inscription which first records
that
is
of
a later date.
On the other hand, a comparison of the records shows that they the same contain stereotyped official list of conquests, repeated in exactly with additions from time to time in records of later years. This, words, no doubt, is a strong argument in favour of the belief that the 'additional the date of the last inscription which does conquests' took place after
1
of
list
conquests
in inscriptions
dated
in
the 9th
be shown
reign.
of
in
As
13th
will
other
the
states
beyond the
If,
mentioned
inscriptions
dated
and
composed
author,
would
SUVARNADVlPA
refer to him as ruling over Gange and Kadaram. 1
4.
173
East country,
district,
Bangalore dated in the 13th year of R&jendra Cola (A.D. 1024-5), gives a detailed account of his oversea conquests."
5.
An
Malur
in
the
These
details
are
also
repeated
in
many
other
and 29th
to 31st years
of Rajendra Coladeva.
6.
These
details,
as
given in
the
Tan j ore
inscription
quoted below
3
:
'And (who) ( Rajendra Cola ) having despatched many ships in the midst of the rolling sea and having caught
Sangrama-vijayottimgavarman, the king of Kadaram, along with the rutting elephants of his army, (took) the large heap of treasures, which (that king) had rightfully accumulated
;
captured
the
arch
called
Vidyadhara-torana
at
the
"war-gate" of the extensive city of the enemy; Srl-Vijaya with the "Jewel-gate," adorned with great splendour and the the "gate of large jewels ;" Pannai, watered by the river
;
IlangaSogam undaunted
Mappappajam, having
we
the whole, therefore, until more specific evidence is available, accept the clear deduction from the inscription that a naval expedi-
On
tion
was sent
is
it
to
sixth
year,
and
same
referred to
record of the
nth
to
year.
below,
expeditions
Inscriptions.
1.
the
I3th
year,
referred
in
Malur
and
Tanjore
to
below,
the
list
of inscriptions,
arranged
No. 84
S.
I.
of
3.
I.,
Vol.
Channapatna Taluq (Ep. Cam., IX, pp. 148-50), II, pp. 105 ff. (Some corrections were made
;
later,
cf.
174
Mevilimbangam, having
fine
land
(?)
and jungle
men
Madamalifigam,
firm
in
great and
IlamurideSam, whose
fierce strength
was subdued
by a vehement (attack^
M&nakkavaram whose flower-gardens ; (resembled) the girdle (of the nymph) of the southern region ;
fierce
KadSram, of
strength,
which was
protected
by
the
neighbouring sea/
In an inscription at Mandikere, dated 1050 A.D., Rajendra Cola is said to have conquered Gangai in the north,
7.
Ilafigai
in the south,
1
.
Mahodai on the
west,
and Kadaram on
the east
8.
The Kanyakumarl
inscription
(verse 72)
of the
7th
Rajendra Cola.
"With
fire
(the
help) of
his
seas,
by
others*".
In the light of the above records, the long passage in the Tanjore inscription (No. 6) seems to indicate that Rajendra Cola defeated the king of Kadara, took possession of various
Kadara
his compaign by taking parts of his kingdom, and concluded In other words, the various countries, mentioned itself.
in the passage, were not independent kingdoms, but merely the different subject-states of SaAgr&ma-vijayottungavarman,
ruler of
5
.
must, therefore, try to identify these geographical names, with a view to understand correctly the exact nature
1.
We
2.
p. 33).
Ill,
Part
I,
p.
157.
Ep.
Ind., Vol.
3.
by
Hultzsch
( cf.
p.
173,
n. 3), is
(B.E.F.E.O,
Surv. Burma. 1909-10, p, 14) and accepted by Venkayya (Arch. Vol, XVIII, No. 6, pp. 5-6).
SUVABNADVlPA
of Sangr&ma-vijayottuftga.
It is
175
needless
now
to refer to
the various
suggestions and
to
time,
the ingenious researches of Coedfcs put the whole matter in a clear light Although some of the conclusions of Ccedfcs
.
beyond all doubt, his views are a great on his predecessors, and we cannot do better improvement than accept his results, at least as a working hypothesis. We therefore sum up below the views put forward by Coedfes
with some modifications necessitated by later researches*.
PANNAI. This country is probably identical with Pane which Nagarakrtagama includes among the states of Sumatra, subordinate to Majapahit. Gerini places it at modern Pani
or Panci on the eastern side of the island of Sumatra
8
.
MALAIYUR.
known
as
This
is,
Malayu, which
is
the end (as in this instance and in some Arab texts), and sometimes without it. The identification of this place has formed a subject of keen and protracted discussion*. It has
part of Malay
fifteen
Peninsula.
We
learn
was
days'
1.
6.
cf. S.I.I.,
;
Vols.
II,
1907-8, p. 233
p. 19
;
Ann. Rep, Arch. Surv. 1898-99, p. 17 Madras Review, 1902, p. 251 Arch. Surv. Burma, 1906-7,
III, pp.
194-5
1909-10, p. 14
1916-17, p. 25.
to later authorities in footnotes.
in
2.
Gerini
Pelliot,
Researches, p. 513.
ff.
Gerini
Researches,
(1918).,
pp. pp.
528
ff,
ff.,
and
II-XII,
176
1 Journey by sea from SrI-Vijaya and was conquered by state some time between 672 and 705 A.D.
The Dutch
Jambi*.
identifying
it
with
MlYIRUDINGAM.
equivalent
to Sanskrit
with
Taking the first syllable ma as maha, Yirudihgam has been identified Chau Ju-kua. Schlcgel identified this
the
island
of
proposed various identifications, viz., south-west of Jambi, (2) Jelutong in Johorc, and
Selangort.
Coedfcs concludes
it
(3)
Jelutong in
book that
Malay
northernmost group of states wore subordinate to the (in the Malay Peninsula) which Sailendra empire. Rouffaer, on the other hand, locates it in
the
the extreme south-east of the Peninsula near
Cape Rumenia
5
.
ILANGASOGAM.
ante pp. 71
ff.
For the
see
MA-PPAPPALAM.
that
it
Vonkayya was
mentioned
port in the
in
the
first
to point out
this
country
is
Mahavamsa".
There
country of Ramaiinadesa. of the king of Pagan extended far to But as the authority the south, the location of this place in the western part of
is
referred to as a
the Isthmus of
Kra
is
not barred
out.
Rouffaer identifies
it
1.
in
diate
of Che-li-fo-che.
This
is
ff.
See ante,
p. 120.
T'oung Pao
(1901), p. 134,
I,,
4.
5.
Rouffaer, B.K.
n
;
ff.
6.
10, p. 14.
7.
SUVARNADVlPA
MEVILIMBANGAM.
Karmaranga, the
the Isthmus of Ligor 1
.
177
VALAIPPANDURU.
or Phanrang 8 but this
,
with Pandurang
is
very doubtful.
It
is
TALAITTAKKOLAM.
country
is
almost
certain
that
the
Takkola of Milindapanha and Takola of Ptolemy, the word 'Talai' in Tamil signifying 'head' or 'chief It must be located in the Isthmus of Kra or a little
identical with
.
to the south of it
3
.
MA-DAMALINGAM. A short inscription found in Caiya refers to a country called Tambralinga, which is to be located on the eastern side of the Malay Peninsula, between
Bay of Bandon and Nagar Sri Dharmaraja (Ligor). Damalingam has been identified with Tambralingam, ma being
the
equivalent to maha. It is evidently the same as Tan-ma-ling which Chau Ju-kua includes among the tributary states of
San-fo-tsi.
ILlMUEIDESAM.
often
prefixed in
identified
Leaving aside the initial i which is to foreign names, this can be easily with Lamuri of the Arab geographers, and Lambri Tamil
Polo,
of
Marco
situated in
the
northern part of
is
Sumatra.
included
among
Chau Ju-kua.
the
first
Ml-NAKKAVARAM.
Nikobar
islands.
Taking
syllable
as
1.
J.A., Vol.
(1923).
2.
3.
There
is
a vast literature on
I
'Takkola
In addition to the
S.
Le*vi
authorities cited
by Coedes,
II,
may
(Eftudes
Asiatiques, Vol.
pp. 3
ff.).
23
178
M.
Ccedfes
has
shown good grounds to prove that Kataha is the same as Kie-tcha referred to by the Chinese as a port as early as 7th century A.D. The same place is referred to in later times as Kie-t'o and Ki-t'o, which may be equated to Kada and Kido. As the change of a lingual' to liquid' was very common in those days, the same place may be identified with Kalah or Kilah of Arab geographers, and also with Ko-lo, which Kia Tan places on the northern side of the Straits of Malacca, and Sin t'ang Chou places at the south-east of P'an-p'an. All these different names thus correspond, both phonetically and geographically, to the modern Keddah. In a Tamil poem it is
referred to as Kalagam.
It has been seen above that Ilafigaogam is also to be placed in Keddah. But as Ilangalogam or Gimong Jerai is placed too far in the south of Keddah, Koddah is also
named
separately.
It
may
1
.
be
mentioned
that
in
Nagarakrtagama
both
Keddah and
discussion clearly shows that Rajcndra extended practically over the whole of the eastern coast-region of Sumatra, and the central and southern
detailed
The
Cola's conquests
Malay Peninsula, and included the two capital cities and Srl-Vijaya. That the story of this victory is not Kataha merely an imagination of the court-poets, but based on facts,
parts of
is
proved, beyond
states.
all
vassal
states
It
is
interesting
note that
many
of these
are
included in
by
Chau Ju-kua. a
The date
tolerable
it
certainty.
The
Ins.
No.
4,
later
Nagarakrtagama, Ch,
2.
SUVARNADVIPA
Rfijendra Cola,
179
Now,
oversea conquests.
one compares the Tanjorc Ins. (No. 6 above) with the Tirumalai Ins., it would appear that the former
repeats,
word for word, the entire passage in the latter, describing the inland conquests of Rftjendra Cola, and then adds the passage, quoted above, describing his oversea
conquests.
It may,
therefore,
these oversea conquests had not taken place at the time the As the Tirumalai Tirumalai inscription was recorded.
inscription
is
we may presume
that
between
the drafting of this record and that of the Inscription No. 4. In other words, the oversea conquests of Rfijeudra Cola took place in the 13th year of his reign, i.e., A.D. 1024-5, possibly
during its latter part. We may, therefore, provisionally accept A.D. 1025 as the date of the great catastrophe which befell the Sailcndra empire.
But, according to the plain interpretation of the Inscription 2, quoted above, the hostility broke out much earlier, and
No.
it,
naval
There
is
nothing
surprising in it, for the Inscription No. 1, quoted above, clearly shows that as early as 1007 A.D., the Colas had begun an
Although
cause
it
is
of either the
impossible outbreak
now
of
to
ascertain
hostility,
may be made to which contributed to the one or the other. According to the Cola records, the conquest of Kalinga and the whole eastern coast up to the mouth of the Ganges was completed before the oversea expedition was Prof. S. K. Aiyangar concludes from a study of all sent.
at least
collapse of the
some important
j.
Ep.
ft.
180
the
oversea
expedition
was in from
actual starting-point of the the coast-region of Kalinga. 1 this fact that the conquest of
KaliAga was undertaken by Rajendra Cola as it "was partinecessary in view of the oversea expedition that cularly
other."
He
holds further "that the Kaliiigas were possibly rivals in the oversea empire in connection with which the oversea " expedition was actually undertaken.
Now
these
two
statements
are
somewhat
vague
and,
But it is quite clear that the perhaps, even contradictory. conquest of Kalinga and the whole coastal region furnished the Cola emperor with ample resources for his oversea
The mastery over the ports of Kalinga and Bengal gave him well-equipped ships and sailors, accustomed
expedition.
to voyage in
The naval
India
resources
thus
the very regions which he wanted to conquer. of the whole of the eastern coast of
were
concentrated
in
the hands
of Riijendra
Cola, and it was enough to tempt a man to get possession of the territory, which served as the meeting ground of the
trade and
commerce between India and the western countries on the one hand, and the countries of the Far East on the
other.
The geographical
it
enabled
position of the Sailendra empire almost the whole volume of maritime to control
dazzling
prospect which its conquest offered to the future commercial supremacy of the Colas seems to be the principal reason of the oversea expedition undertaken by Rajendra Cola. But
it is the conquest of the eastern coastal regions of India that alone brought such a scheme within the range of practical
politics.
the
Colas
seemed
be complete, but, from the very nature of the case, it could not have possibly continued for long. The task of
I.
J. I.
H., Vol.
II, p.
345-
SUVARNADVlPA
181
maintaining hold upon a distant country across the sea was too great to be borne by the successors of Rfljendra Cola,
difficulties
at
home
to
think of
of
the
Rajftdhiraja,
the
eldest
son
Rajendra,
His whole reign was a period of unceasing struggle with the neighbouring powers, and he himself fell fighting with the Calukyas at the battlefield of Koppam in A.D. 1054. VirarSjendra, who ascended the throne in 1003 A.D., no doubt inflicted a severe defeat upon the Calukyas, but his
succeeded him in A.D. 1044.
death in 1070 A. D.,
civil war,
followed by a disputed .succession and weakened the prestige and authority of the Colas. To make matters worse, Kalinga freed itself from the yoke of the Colas, and this crippled the naval resources of The supremacy of the Colas was revived to a that power.
seriously
considerable
extent by KulottuAga Cola ( 1070-1119 ), the grandson (daughter's son) of the famous Rajendra Cola. Ho reconquered Kalinga and established peace and prosperity
1 over his extensive dominions during a long reign of 49 years The relation between the Colas and the Sailendras, and
.
the
(1044-1119 A.
D.), of
which a short historical sketch has been referred to in Cola inscriptions and Chinese
summary
of
them before
Cola Inscriptions
Ins.
(a)
The Perumber
of
:
Virari5jendradcva
dated in
"Having
of)
Kadaram,
(he)
was
(his)
pleased to give
who worshipped
of
V. A. Smith, Early History of India (3rd. ed.), pp. 467-8. Some the dates are given on the authority of Prof. N. Sastri (Sastri-Colas
1.
P- 293)2.
S. I.
I.,
Vol. III.
Part
II,
p. 202.
Prof.
N.
of the seventh
These, according
182
(b)
in
the
20th
ytar of Kulottunga Cola (1089-90 A. D.) says "At the request of the king of KidSra, communicated by
Samanta and Abhimanottuftga the village Samanta, Kulottunga exempted from taxes called the Buddhist Sailendramonastery granted to
his
envoys
Rsjavidyadhara
Cfldamanivarma-vihara
(i.
e.
the
one
established
Calamanivarman as referred
II.
to in the Larger
Chinese Documents
is
The
following account
given by
Ma-T wan-Lin
s
.
in respect
in A. D. 1106
the
(a) "The Emperor at first issued orders to accord them same reception and treat them in the same way as was
But the President of the Board of Rites observed as follows "The Cola is a vassal of San-fo-tsi. That is why in the year hi-ning (A. D. 1068-1077) it was thought good enough to write
:
to the king of that country on a strong paper with an envelope of plain silk. The king of Pagan, on the other hand, is ruler of
a grand kingdom
"
gives
the
following
"In 1017 the king Ha-ch'i-su-wu-chVp'u-mi sent When with a letter in golden characters and tribute envoys
to him, ''mention that
in
Virarajendra conquered Kaclaram on behalf of a search of his aid and protection, and handed it
Colas,
p. 332).
(Sastri
why he
differs
from Hultzsch.
As regards
Sastri gives it as A.D. 1063-69 on died in 1070 A.D. On p. 341, the ;th year of his reign
Sastri does not explain the date of Virarajendra, p. 293, but says, on p. 338, that he
Prof.
is
regarded as
India,
Vol.
IV, pp.
226
ff.
revised
Cgtdts,
Epigraphia Indica, Vol. XXII. being published de Saint Denys Meridionaux, p. 586, quoted by D'Hervey B.E.F.E.O., XVIII, No. 6, p. 8, and Gerini-Researches,
in
pp. 624-2$.
StVARNADVlPA
183
they went back, an edict was issued addressed to their king, 1" accompanied by various presents.
(c)
Deva?) sent envoys to carry tribute. The custom was that envoys from distant countries, who brought tribute, got a this time girdles girdle adorned with gold and silver, but
entirely of gold
(d)
their
high chiefs,
of
called Ti-hwa-ka-la,
The
title
Great
General who
was given
edict.
3"
to
"During the period Yuan-fung (1078-1085) envoys The from the country bringing silver, pearls came first forwarded to the court from letter they brought was Canton, where they waited until they were escorted to the
(e)
capital.
far,
that they
to return."
taels of silver
"The next year he gave them 64,000 strings of cash, 15,000 and favoured the two envoys who had come
with honorary titles.*" (f) "In 1082 three envoys came to have an audience from
the emperor and brought golden lotus-flowers etc. 5" received honorary titles according to their rank.
(g)
They
all
who
all
received
honorary
1.
"
Groeneveldt
the king of
Sumatra
(J.
A., ii-XX,i922,
19 and
2.
f.n. 3.
Groeneveldt
(J. A.,
3.
n-XX,
name
1
Deva.
Groeneveldt
restore the
Notes,
p.
66.
(op.
cit.)
(B.E.F.E.O., Vol,
4.
name XXI I J, p.
as 'Deva Kala
47o).
p. 66.
Groeneveldt
Notes,
5.
Jbid.
184
(h)
"In the period Shau-Sheng (1094-97) they 1 appearance once again ."
Ma-Twan-Lin, an embassy sent by Lo-cha-lo-cha, king of Chu-lien, reached China in A.D. 1015".
(i)
According
to
8
.
Shih-li-lo-cha-yin-to-lo-
chu-lo in
S.
8
.
Prof.
name
as SrI-Rajcndra
Cola
Now,
rajendra
conquered Kadaram
I-a
had regained independence in thus appear that, for nearly half a century since 1024-5, when Rajendra Cola first conquered the country, the struggle
between the two continued with varying degrees of success.
Even
Virarajcndra,
the one
does
not
On
hand Kulottunga
Kadaram,
power
on
the.
subordinate to Sri-Vijaya (Il-a). This conflicting statement perhaps indicates the continuance of the struggle,
to be
The embassy from Kadaram to the Cola king in A.D. 108990 (I-b) seems to mark the beginning of a new era of good1.
Groeneveldt
Notes,
p. 67.
2.
Meridionaux,
p.
574.
3
4.
6.
Researches,
p. 609, f,n. 2.
5.
J.R.A.S., 1896,
Prof.
in
letter,
Kadaram.
II., p.
355.
SUVARNADVlPA
will
185
But if the and friendship between the two states. Chinese statement that "Cola is a vassal of San-fo-tsi" be true
of the year 1106 A.D., when it was recorded, it would indicate the renewal of hostile relation between the two.
On the whole, it would be safe to assume that in spite of the arduous nature of the task, the Cola emperors tried to maintain their hold on the distant oversea empire, at least for
nearly a century.
It
could ever hope to exercise a rigid control over the distant land. The utmost they could fairly expect was to have their suzerainty acknowledged
The
latter
must
have seized every possible opportunity to shake off even this nominal sovereignty of the Colas. On the other hand, the Coin emperors were unwilling to give up altogether their pretension of suzerainty, and able monarchs like Vlrarajendra and Kulottuiiga would occasionally fit out a naval expedition
to re-establish their authority
beyond the
of the
sea.
In
state.
spite
of the
claims
Colas to have
destroyed
Kadaram,
the
that
is
This
kingdom never ceased to function as a separate proved by the regular despatch of embassies to
eleventh
century A.
1).
(II. b-h.).
The embassy of 1017 was sent by a king, whose Chinese name has been restored by Fcrrand as Haji-Sumatrabhiimi or
king of Sumatrabhumi (Il-b). It must be regarded as somewhat unusual that this general term is substituted for the proper name of the king which was used in case of the two
immediately preceding embassies. The next embassy was sent in A. D. 1028 by a king, whose name seems to correspond to Srl-Deva (II-c). The Cola
emperor must have conquered Kadaram shortly before this date, and it may be presumed that this Srl-Deva refers to him or to It is to be noted that the Chinese emperor showed his viceroy. unusual honours to the envoy. This is perhaps due to the mighty fame of Kajendra Cola, who himself sent an envoy to
the Chinese court, five years later
(Il-i).
24
186
The
is
who
visited
the imperial
called
Ti-hwa-ka-la
(Il-d),
and
is
dignitary.
an embassy to China 10 years later, was also called Ti-wa-kalo (II-j). Now, this Cola king is undoubtedly Rajendra-DevaKulottunga, and the Chinese name was made up of its second
He was
the daughter's
son of Rajendra
was the ruler of Vengl. But when his father died in c. A.D. 1061-2, he did not, or, perhaps, could not succeed him, and indeed his position about that period is a "One would naturally mystery. Prof. S. K. Aiyangar writes
his
and
father
expect this
Rajendra (Kulottunga) to succeed his father, when he died in 1061-62 or the next year. In all the transactions about the appointment of Vijayaditya VII as Viceroy of Vengl we do not hear of the name of Kulottunga 9 ".
Then, again,
the
early inscriptions
of Kulottunga
affirm
that he "gently raised, without wearying (her) in the least, the lotus-like goddess of the earth residing in the region of the
rising sun."
Prof.
identity of the
K. Aiyangar, although unaware of the two names Ti-wa-ka-lo (the Cola king) and
8.
on
if the conquest of part of Burmah I is accepted, as it must now be, this would (sic) by Rajendra only mean that Rajendra Kulottunga distinguished himself as a prince in the eastern exploits of his grandfather, cither during
1.
(J. I.
proposed
by
Prof.
S.
K.
Aiyangar
H., Vol.
2.
p. 353).
p. 129.
'Ancient India',
this point
cf.
SUVAKNADVlPA
Rajendra
Cola's
187
reign
1
or
under
Virarajendra
when
he
reconquered Kadaram
".
For 'Burmah' in tho above passage we must now read Kadaram. Now, since Kulottunga ruled till 1119 A. D., it is impossible to believe that he was old enough in A. D.
1024-5 to accompany his grandfather reference is therefore possibly to the
rajendra 1069-70
viz.,
Rajendra
Cola.
of
The
ViraA. D.
which
(I-a).
took
fits
place
in
some
This
with
the date of
the embassy,
A. D. 1067.
view be correct, we must hold that Virarajendra's conquest was an effective one, and, for some time at least,
If this
the
occupied the kingdom of Kadarani. Kulottunga evidently held a very high position in the conquered province, and possibly paid a visit to China as an ambassador
Colas
definitely
from Kadaram, with a view to establish a friendly relation with that power. All these, however, must be regarded as pure
hypotheses for the present.
Kulottunga must have returned to India shortly after, he ascended the Cola throne in 1070 A, D., and the Perumbar Ins. (I-a) indicates that, before doing so, he
as
reinstalled the king of
Kadaram,
and
Once back
in
his
country, Kulottunga
rioted
Evidently the king of grave Kadaram took advantage of this to free himself from the yoke some of the Colas. Possibly he came out successful in
political crisis, as
above.
Ibid.,
pp.
130-31.
Prof,
N.
Sastri
characterises this
view as
'wide of the mark' (op. cit, p. 348 f.n.), but such possibilities should not be altogether discounted at the present state of our knowledge. In addition to what is contained in foot-note 2 on p. 1 88 about 2.
(Cola),
(cf.
J,
413
188
The Chinese who got their information from San-fo-tsi were thus misled into the belief
his suzerainty over the
that
Cola
was a vassal of
Sri-Vijaya
(Il-a).
For,
it
is
difficult
to believe,
evidence,
The
(II, e-h)
1078,
1094
had blown
Kadaram resumed
its
The
political
supremacy of the Colas in the Far East, more than half a century, is, perhaps,
.
echoed in the Malayan tradition about the mythical expedition of 3 It is Raja Suran [Cola?] down the Malay Peninsula
further
indicated by
inscription has
Sumatra.
some records in Sumatra. A Tamil been discovered at Lobu Tua near Baros in It is dated in 1088 A. D., and refers to the
organisation, activities,
tion of Fifteen
Hundred
Nanadesi, Valangai,
possession of
It is
Kadaram took
some
territories in
p. 4.
The
History of Perak by R. O. Winstedt and R. J. Wilkinson, authors think that the Cola raid is alluded to in the account
of the conquest
by a Raja Suran
of
little
The story is given in full in is also said to have founded Singapore. Sejarah Malayu which refers to Deman Lebar Daun, the King of Palembang, as a descendant of Raja Sulan (J. A. ii-XI, p. 483). Tales
of friendly correspondence
may
also
Colas with
Malayasia.
This point
was
first
noted by Biagden
(J. Str.
Br. R.
A.
S.,
No.
81, p. 26).
3.
O. V.
1914, p.
113.
1892,
p.
80.
The
in
Inscription has been translated into English ff. T.B. G., Vol. 72 (1932) PP-
by
Prof. K. A.
N.
Sastri
3M
SUVARNADVlPA
Idangai
referred
etc.,
189
are frequently
to
whose
in
activities
as trade-unions
to
South Indian
records
1
.
According
state,
an
Mysore
the
members
countries ever since the beginning of the Kpta age, penetrating regions of the six continents by land and water-routes, and dealing in various articles such as horses and elephants,
precious
in retail
2
stones,
."
It
perfumes and drugs, either wholesale or may be noted here that a Vaisnava Temple
was
built
at
various countries). 3
Another inscription at Porlak Dolok, in Padang Lawas, and dated probably in A. D. 1245, is partly written in Kavi script, and partly in Indian, probably South Indian, alphabet*.
inscription, at Bandar Bapahat, belonging to the Majapahit period, is written in Kavi, and then reproduced in South Indian Grantha character. 5
third
In addition to
these records,
the
is
intimate
intercourse
by common ceremonials, and Batak clan-names, such as Coliya, Pandiya, Mcliyala, Pelawi, etc. with the Cola, Pandya, Malayalam, and Pallava. Another name Tekang is probably derived from Tekkanam, the general Tamil term for south i.e. South India 8
.
when these South Indian is, names were introduced into Sumatra. In view of the political and trade relations between the two countries in the eleventh
It
1.
Cf.
R. C.
Majumdar
Corporate
Life
in
Ancient
India,
2nd
p. 118.
4.
5.
O.
I.
T. B. G., Vol. 45. (1902), pp. 541-576. Kern, V. G., Vol. K. I., Vol. 74, pp, 263 ff, pp. 67-72, B.
6.
Ill,
190
century A.D., the large influx of South Indian people, and the consequent introduction of these tribal names, may be
referred to that period.
at present,
it
is
Of
difficult
determine
whether
the
more
preceded or succeeded
the political
can easily quote examples of commercial intercourse has led to political interference, and in many others, political supremacy over a foreign land has
led to an intense development of
country.
Whether
paved the way for the oversea conquest of the Cola kings, or whether the process was just the reverse, the future
historian alone will be able to say.
Chapter
HI.
continued
destruction to
the
Sailendras,
of
century, of
the
Colas
finally
maintaining their suzerainty over Sumatra and Malay Peninsula. The Sailendra kingdom, exhausted and humiliated as it was, slowly recovered
the
abandoned
impossible
enterprise
its
former position.
But, although
we can
definitely
kingdom
when
it
was
finally
view.
After
the beginning of the twelfth century A. D., we hear no more of that powerful ruling family that dominated Malayasia
since the end of the
course,
only that
For
all
mean we do not possess any definite information of them. we know, they might still continue to rule over the
eighth century A. D. This does not, of that they vanished, or even ceased to reign, but
kingdom.
The continuity of the kingdom is, however, clearly attested the Chinese, and, perhaps also, by the Arab accounts, which by still refer to the prowess of San-f o-tsi and Zabag. The Chinese annals refer to two embassies from San-fo-tsi
in the twelfth century A.
D.
(
Sri Maharaja
sent envoys to bring tribute. The emperor said : "When distant people feel themselves attracted by our civilising It is therefore influence, their discernment must be praised.
192
that I rejoice in
"In the year 1178 they sent again envoys to bring as tribute products of the country. On this occasion the emperor issued an edict ordering that they should not come to court any more, but make an establishment at Ch'iian-chou in the province
of Fukien."'
According to Ma-Twan-Lin, the ambassadors of 1178 reported that their king had succeeded his father in A. D. 1169.
So the emperor invested the new king with all the titles and 8 privileges of his ancestors and made suitable presents.
The Arab
1203-1283
of Zabag.*
their
),
writers Edrisl
(
1154 A. D.
),
Kazwlni
A. D.
),
Ibn Said
(
and Dimaskl
c.
1325 A. D.
all
refer to the
But
it is difficult
to
as
own many
personal knowledge, or merely quote from old writers, But in any case others expressly have done.
the
existence of
the
kingdom.
Fortunately
of this
we possess an
in the twelfth
(
extent
kingdom
this
work
Trade
1.
Chu-fan-chi
in Fukien.
5
author of
work
of Foreign
Groeneveldt
Notes,
p.
67.
Ferrand
(J.A.,
n-XX,
name
As
to the Sailendra
kings as Maharaja, we may presume that the king belonged to that dynasty. But, then, we must remember, that the term 'Maharaja being the ordinary Indian term for a ruler, might have been confused with the personal name of a ruler, specially as the personal
1 ,
name was
2.
4.
5.
p. 22,
f.
n. 2.
Chau Ju-kua
in
the
twelfth
F.
and thirteenth centuries, entitled Chu-fan-chi. Hirth and W. W. Rockhill, St. Petersburg, (1911).
Translated by
SUVARNADVIPA
As
to the date of this
193
conclude from a remark the author makes in the chapter on Baghdad, that the work was composed between 1242 and
however, shown that the author a We must, wrote the preface to his work in 1225 A. D. therefore, hold that the work was originally written in or
Pelliot
1 1258 A. D.
has,
about 1225 A. D., although additions and alterations might possibly have been made during the next twenty-five years.
M. Coed&s holds
tai-ta,
written in 1178 A. D., and as such the picture which he draws can only be regarded as true of the period anterior to
1178 A. D.
that
this assumption.
There does not appear to be any valid reason for Hirth and Rockhill are definitely of opinion
of San-fo-tsi
is
on
the author
foreign traders."*
As we
(e. </.,
shall
see
later,
some
details given
by Chau Ju-kua
only be explained
we assume
Malacca and thus controlled the maritime trade China and the western countries. San-fo-tsi itself was between a great centre of trade, and fifteen states were dependent upon R it. These were
Straits
of
1.
Pong-fong (=Pahang).
2.
Tong-ya-nong (=Trengganau).
,
i.
Ibid
p. 137.
2.
T'oung Pao,
3.
5.
B. K. I, 1927, p. 469.
Op.
cit., p.
37.
Op.
cit,
pp. 60
if.
The
identifications
of
names given
within
brackets are on the authority of Ferrand (op. cit. pp. 13-14), and Krom On Nos, 3, 6 and 9, see discussions above, pp. (Geschiedenis, pp. 303-4). to S. Lcvi, Nos. 7 and 8 must be looked for in the 78-79. According
25
194
3.
Ki-lan-tan
= Kelantan).
Malay
Fo-lo-an (=Beranang
coast of
on
6.
Ji-lo-t'ing
coast of
Malay
Peninsula).
7.
Ts'ien-mai.
In Semang
8.
9.
Pa-fa.
(Batak?)
(=Tamralinga
or
Tan-ma-ling
Kia-lo-hi
Ligor
in
Malay
the
Peninsula).
10.
(=Grahi=Jaya
of Bandon).
or Caiya, south of
Bay
11.
Pa-lin-fong
Sin-t'o
(Palcmbang).
12.
(=Sunda).
13.
14.
15.
(= Ceylon).
the
general
list
In
addition
as
to
of
countries
subject to
San-fo-tsi,
given above,
Ling-ya-ssi-kia,
separate
Sin-to,
first
accounts
of
Fo-lo-an,
these,
Kien-pi, Lan-wu-li,
and
Si-Ian.
Among
the
two
and the
San-fo-tsi.
last
with Fo-lo-an, king is mentioned in connection "It sends yearly tribute to San-fo-tsi. but the author remarks and Ki-lan-tan are Its Pong-fong, T6ng-ya-nong
No
neighbours
like it."
According to Ling-wai-tai-ta, the chief 9 This may be true of all the four appointed from San-fo-tsi. 'As, however, As regards Sin-to Chau Ju-kua says states.
:
of Fo-lo-an
was
there
is
given to brigandage,
Vol.
II,
pp.
108-9), but
Schlegel
Vol.
and Gerini (Researches, p. 627), p. 135 The identification of No. 5 is on the authority
2-
Chau Ju-kua,
pp. 67-73-
f-
SUVARNADVlPA
there/
195
it
About Kien-pi we
Nothing
is
are told
"Formerly
fight, it
was a depenits
dency of San-fo-tsi,
own."
the brief note which
but, after a
set
up a king of
Chau Ju-kua
kingdom. It would thus appear that Kicn-pi had recently shaken off the yoke of Saii-fo-tsi, but the other fourteen states were tributary to that power. In spite of a few uncertainties, the identification of these vassal states, as given above, would
indicate that the empire
of San-fo-tsi included territories in
M.
Ccedfcs has
is called
1 Malayu or Jambi. His principal argument is that Chau Ju-kua included Palembang among the dependencies of San-fo-tsi, and as San-fo-tsi is identical with Palembang, the seat of the empire must be
was now
San-fo-tsi to
at a place
different
from
Palembang
or
San-fo-tsi.
He
empire of Java
or Cambodgc,
the
list
of
Chau Ju-kua never includes these names in their vassal states. But Coedfcs' argument, as we
have indicated above, only discounts the view that San-fo-tsi The absence of Malayu from is identical with Palembang.
the
list
of vassal states
no longer dependent on San-fo-tsi. of Palembang, nor the exclusion of Malayu, gives us any right to maintain, in the face of the express statement of Chau
Ju-kua about
San-fo-tsi, that that
its
place
of preeminence to Malayu.
support his view by reference to the Caiya inscription, dated 1183 A. D., which refers to Maharaja
Coedfcs seeks to
M.
Srlmat-Trailokyaraja-mauli-bhQsana-varma-deva
and
his
governor of Grahi, Mahasen&pati Galanai. Coedfcs argues that if in 1183 A. D. the name of a king of Malayu appears in a
1.
B. K.
I.,
ff.
196
record of Caiya,
its
authority in place of Srl-Vijaya (sic) over the 1 states of the Malay Peninsula."
own
But
it
is
a mere gratuitous
is
raja-mauli-bhnsana-varma-deva
Rocho
evidently relies on the fact that an inscription, found at in Batanghari district in Jambi, refers to a king
Padang named
Maharaja Srimat-Tribhuvanaraja-mauli-varrna-deva, as ruling 8 in 1286 A.D. In spite of the resemblance in the names of
it would obviously be absurd to regard the royal name as a monopoly of Malayu, and, in the absence of any other evidence, to take the earlier king also as a ruler of Malayu, although his records have been found in Malay Peninsula alone. We must remember
who
lived
a century apart,
names
like
Cudamarii-
varmadeva.
Further, Edrisl (1154 A.D.) clearly says that the king of Kalah, Zfibag, and the neighbouring islands lived in the city of
Kalah which
is clearly
There is thus no reason to disregard the evidence of Arab and Chinese writers that the old kingdom of Znbag or Smi-fo-tsi continued in its old glory and splendour till the beginning of
the thirteenth century.
The Caiya inscription has perhaps name of the only individual emperor of
inscription
6,
was
originally
A.,
n-XX,
p.
179.
Ccedes
says
"his
with
title
is
reference
identical
to
TrailokyarajaHTiauli-bhusana-varma-deva that
that of the kings of
to
inscriptions dating
from
to
1286 to
the
1378 A.D."
of
later
is
Evidently he
I ),
refers
titles
Adityavarman
than
see
who
lived
hundred years
Cf.
intermediate king
3.
known
in
to
nearly but no
my
article
B.E.F.E.O,, Vol.
XXXIII,
p. 131.,
and the
appendix
to Bk. II.
SUVARNADVlPA
San-fo-tsi
197
us.
Grahi
has
For, as
it
Kia-lo-hi,
was a dependent state of San-fo-tsi towards the end of the 12th and the beginning of the 13th century A. D. The ruler, whose
dominions included Grahi as a Governor's province in 1183 A.D., may not, therefore, unreasonably be regarded as the king It would thus be more proper to regard the of San-fo-tsi.
a
Maharaja Srimat-Trailokyaraja-mauli-bhusana-varma-dcva as remote successor of Cadamani-varma-deva, though it is difficult to say whether he belonged to the same family,
is
Chau Ju-kua's account of the great power of San-fo-tsi corroborated by an independent evidence. About the time when he wrote his book, we come across the name of a king
Candrabhanu
in
an inscription at
Caiya, dated
1230 A.D. 1
Ccedfcs
drabhiinu
has established beyond all doubt that this king Canis referred to in the Ceylonese Chronicles as having
detailed account as
2
:
The
given
in
Cullavamsa
may be
summarised as follows
king Parakramabahu a king of Javaka, called Candrabhanu, landed with an army II, at Kakkhala, on the pretext that they were Buddhists and
"In the eleventh year of the reign of
therefore
came on a peaceful
mission.
The
soldiers
of Javaka,
who used
poisoned arrows, treacherously occupied the passages across the rivers, and having defeated all those who opposed
landed at
1.
But the regent Virabahu and forced them to withdraw A few years later, king Candrabhanu again Mahatlrtha, and his army was, on this occasion,
several battles
6. p. 32).
2.
Cullavamsa,
i.
e.,
the later
continuation of
Mahavamsa
Ed.
Geiger, Chap. 83, vv. 36-48* ; Chap. 88, vv. 62-75. The king of Javaka mentioned in the passage was taken by Kern to refer to a Javanese king (V.G. Ill, pp. 27 ff.)> bu * ne is n w usually taken as a king of rI-Vijaya.
For
a more detailed
discussion
ff,
of
the
proposed
identification,
cf,
198
reinforced by a large
soldiers.
After some
army was
surrounded and completely defeated by the Ceylonese troops under Vijayabahu and Virabahu. King Candrabhanu some-
how
fled
with his
life,
hands of the victorious enemy." these events has been variously interpreted. established on good authority that the two invasions of Candrabhanu took place in A.D. 1236 and 1256 \
in the
Now
among the
vassal states
of
San-fo-tsi has been justly regarded as the most surprising of all ; for, although Masudf, in his 'Meadow of Gold' (10th century
Ceylon
9
,
there
is
no
historical
But even
least
in this
all,
respect,
credible of
to a certain extent
by the passage of Cullavamsa quoted above. For the Ceylonese author admits in a way the triumph of the Javaka army sometime in 1236 A. D., before Chau Ju-kua
concluded his work.
Candrabhanu's invasion of Ceylon was an act of extreme imprudence, and had the most regrettable
It is obvious that
consequences. The two expeditions to the distant island must have taxed the strength of the Javaka kingdom to the utmost, and the disastrous end of the second expedition weakened its
prestige
3 Jatavarman ViraIn an inscription, dated 1264 A. D claims to have defeated and killed the Savaka king, Pandya
1.
ff.
assigned to
Parakramabahu II (A.D. 1240-1275) should be pushed back by 1 5 years, He would thus have ruled from Ccedes further points out that the account of Culla1225 to 1260 A.D.
the Ceylonese king
varfisa is corroborated
2.
Ferrand
S.
I.
Textes, p. 93-
3.
No.
in,
SUVARNADVlPA
and in another
the king of him.
inscription,
199
1
,
he includes
the host of rulers conquered by no doubt the same as Javaka, and we can Kadaram to easily take the defeat of the kings of Savaka and and the same king, as in the case of refer to the defeat of one 2 Thus the ill-advised expedition to Ceylon Rajendra Cola. by the king of Kadaram was followed at no distant date by his
Kadaram among
is
Savaka
Pandya
king.
Pandya king boasts also of having conseems to connect the Ceyloneso expedition quered Ceylon, of Candrabhanu with his defeat and death at the hands of Jatavarman. It may be recalled that during his second ex-
The
Candrabhanu was helped by troops and Pandya countries. Perhaps he made an alliance from Cola with these two powers and organised a joint expedition against Ceylon. But as in many other similar allied expeditions, it was dissolved on the failure of the project, and then Vira Pandya
pedition against that island,
advantage of the helpless situation of Candrabhanu and turned against him. It is also quite likely that he betrayed first his two allies and then the king of Ceylon,
presumably
took
temporarily saved by his first betrayal. This would the statement in the inscription of 1264 A.D, that Vira explain Pandya "was pleased to take the Cola country, Ceylon, and the
who was
crown and the crowned head of Savaka." In other words, he turned against both his allies and defeated them, and ended by conquering Ceylon, which was their common objective. This
view seems more reasonable than that a regular naval expedition was sent by the Pandya king against Kadaram or Savaka.
Candrabhanu who thus met with a tragic end was the last great ruler of the mighty kingdom founded by the Sailendras.
The
of
fact that he
is
styled the
felt
Kadaram, and
also,
king
military
Ibid., 1912,
No.
39, p. 72.
cf.
2.
200
above, that Malayu had established its supremacy over the petty states of Malay Peninsula, which once acknowledged the suzerainty of San-fo-tsi or Zabag. On the whole, the available
evidence would justify us in regarding the last-named kingdom as continuing in power and glory till the middle of the
thirteenth century A.D.
In the Caiya inscription, Candrabhanu is said to have been born in the family of lotus. He is also called Lord of Tambralinga. It is almost certain, therefore, that he did not
belong to the family of the Sailendras. Chau Ju-kua describes Tambralinga as a vassal state of San-fo-tsi having a separate
ruler.
It
We
have scon above that Kien-pi, another vassal state in Sumatra, had also successfully rebelled against San-fo-tsi about the same
time.
of the empire of
San-fo-tsi,
both in
end of Candrabhanu completed the and gave a unique opportunity to the Javanese king disruption Kptanagara to extend his authority over the dominions of the Sailendras. He conquered Pahang in Malay Peninsula which was a vassal state of San-fo-tsi. He also sent an expedition against Malayu (Jambi) in 1275 A.D., and converted it into a
catastrophic
The
separate state under his own authority. The Padang Rocho inscription of 1286 A.D., referred to above, clearly shows that
the
far
planted important outposts in the very heart of the empire of San-fo-tsi, from which it could gradually extend its power and authority
in all directions.
vassal
Maharajadhiraja Krtanagara.
Thus
Java
being, however, these calculations were upset end of Kj-tanagara and the fall of his kingdom. by the tragic The Javanese army of occupation was withdrawn from Malayu,
SUVARNADVIPA
But
201
and therewith the Javanese authority vanished from the land. San-fo-tsi, which was not strong enough to resist the Javanese encroachments, was yet too weak to take advantage
of this opportunity to re-assert its authority
over
Malayu.
The fact is that San-fo-tsi had not only to reckon with the growing menace from the side of Java, but also to contend with another great military power, the Thai, who had conquered Siam and were extending their power towards Malay Peninsula. The
rise of the
Towards the
century A.D. they had conquered the northern part of the Malay Peninsula. We know from the inscription of king Rama
Gomhcng
raja
of
Sukhodaya, dated 1292 A.D., that Srl-DharmaLigor, one of the vassal states of San-fo-tsi, had
of
already
hemmed
Siam 1 Thus conquered by the king of in between the rising power of the Thais in the north
been
.
of
Malayu
in
the
south,
the
discomfiture of San-fo-tsi was complete. She lost her position of supremacy and sank into a local power. Henceforth her
possessions in the
continued this
inglorious
nearly
as
a century.
Wang
.
king
a local ruler,
and says nothing of the great power and splendour of the Maharaja 8 The Nagarakrtagama (13G5 A. D.) includes
Paleinbang among the list of vassal states Chinese accounts refer to the conquest
of
Java,
and
the
of
San-fo-tsi
Ming Dynasty
Ccectes
3
,
Inscriptions de
Sukhodaya
ff
;
2.
T'oung Pao,
Groeneveldt
3.
Notes, pp. 68
Ferrand, J.A.,
n-XX
(1922)
pp. 24
ff.
26
202
in 1370 A. D. "to
in
next
year
(1371 A. D.)
the presence of this country, and the king, who was called
letter
written
By
states,
was divided
into three
and
their
1
,
rulers,
named
Tan-ma-sa-na-ho,
Ma-na-
and Seng-ka-liet-yu-lan* sent envoys with ha-pau-lin-pang tribute to the imperial court respectively in 1373, 1374, and
1375 A.D.
In the year 1376 A. D. king Tan-ma-sa-na-ho died and In 1377 AJD. he his son Ma-la-cha Wu-li succeeded him. sent tribute to the emperor and asked permission of the
imperial court to
envoys
to
San-fo-tsi."
"The Emperor ordered ascend the throne. him a seal and a commission as king of bring The interference of China in the affairs of a
of the
Javanese who
had conquered
envoys.
San-fo-tsi.
Thus there can be no doubt that Java now exercised an over the kingdom of San-fo-tsi, which effective authority was hopelessly divided and sank gradually into insignificance. "After this The Chinese historian pathetically remarks San-fo-tsi became gradually poorer and no tribute occurrence
:
this country
any more."
years the destruction of condition in 1397 A. D. is
next
twenty-five
Its
Ming Dynasty
8
.
San-fo-tsi
San-fo-tsi
its
name
to
Ku-Kang
name
When
Ferrand
Ferrand
as Maharaja
is
Palembang.
with
the
suggests
that
this
identical
in
(op.
cit.,
p. 25,
f.
n. 2).
is
3.
Ku-Kang
the Chinese
p.
name
for
Palembang up
but
it
day
(Groeneveldt
Notes,
7*
f.n.i.),
cannot
be taken
as
SUVARNADVlPA
203
went down, the whole country was disturbed and the Javanese could not keep all the land. For this reason, the local Chinese residents stood up for themselves and elected as their chief a man from Nan-hai in Canton, called Liang Tau-ming, who had lived there a long time and roamed over the sea, and who had the support of several thousand men from Pu-kien and Canton/'
In other words, a Chinese pirate set himself up as a king a part at least of what was once the flourishing kingdom
in
Java.
This was no doubt due to the weakness of Java was able to destroy the old kingdom, but could not build up a new one in its place. Krom even goes so far as
of the Sailendras.
was a deliberate act on the part of Java. In order to wipe off from the face of the earth a power that had been in the past, and might be in future, a great rival in political and economic spheres, she intentionally
to suggest, that the destruction of San-fo-tsi
and systematically laid waste the country, which afterwards became a stronghold of Chinese adventurers.
From
One
that
or more
Chinese
time
the
adventurers
to
land from
time, but
court,
is
history
and
intercourse
with
imperial
described in detail in the History of the outside the scope of this work.
Ming Dynasty,
in
In conclusion we may refer to Kadiiram. If we are right refer to Keddah identifying it with Kcddah, we may
Annals (Hikayat Marong Mahavamsa) for the seven Hindu last one adopted Islam in
It must have denoted equivalent to San-fo-tsi. only a part of that kingdom. I have discussed this point in an article in B.E.F.E.O., Vol. XXIII, p. 135, and also in the Appendix. i.
R. O. Winstedt
History of
Kedah
J. Str. Br,
R. A.
S.,
No.
81,
p. 29.)-
APPENDIX
1.
Sailendras
was Dr. Coedfcs who first set the ball rolling. In an article, which has now become almost classic, he sought to prove that Srl-Vijaya is the original form of the name which
has been rendered variously as Fo-Che, Che-li-fo-chc, Fo-tsi and San-fo-tsi by the Chinese, and Sribuza by the Arabs. As
these places could be positively located at Palembang, SriVijaya also must be identified with that place.*
M. Cocd&s then
tion that the
authority of
Srl-Vijaya had
northern part of Malay Peninsula by the end of the eighth He further assumed that the king of the century A. D.
Sailendra dynasty, referred to in face B of the Ligor the same as king of Srl-Vijaya referred to in face
3
Ins.,
was
of that
inscription.
1.
This
Appendix
forms
the
part
of
another article
xxxiii, pp. 121-141. corresponding to Chapter I, Bk. II buted an article ''On the origin of the Sailendras'
(
B.E.F.E.O.,
Vol.
On
M. Coedes
in
J.
contri-
G.
I.
S.,
Vol.
1,
pp.6iff. in footnotes.
2.
his
will
be noted
B.E.F.E.O., Vol.
xviii,
:
No.
6.
I
3.
M. Coedes
States
"Although
had not
formulated
this
hypothesis in a sufficiently precise manner in 1918 (i.e. in article referred to in the preceding footnote) I willingly recognise my part of the ailendras with the responsibility for the identification of the kings of ri-Vijaya" (op, cit,, p. 64),
SUVARNADVlPA
205
1
and incluSumatra and Malay Peninsula, was thus the logical ding conclusion of M. Coedfcs* studies. He also regarded as probable the views of Chavannes and Gerini, that this empire was
Sailendra empire, with
Palembang
as capital,
identical
with the one described by the Arabs as Zflbag. Ferrand* went a step further, and declared this identity to be beyond all doubt, by equating Zabag with San-fo-tsi. The
came
to be
regarded as
writers.
of which glowing
many Arab
Further light on the greatness of the Sailendras was thrown 3 by Krom and Vogel.* These two scholars, writing independently filmost at the same time, brought out the important part
which the Sailendras must have played in Java. The Kalasan and Kelurak inscriptions clearly indicated Sailendra supremacy in Java in 778 and 782 A. D. Starting from this basis, Krom
pointed out the great influences which the Buddhist Sailendras must have exerted on the art and religion of Java. In short,
he held the view that these Sailendras imported the Mahayana form of Buddhism into Java and were instrumental in building
1.
in
his
recent
article
op.
cit.,
p. 63, f.n.
(
).
"Everybody
of a note in
including myself
has had
(
my
first
I
article
on
ri-Vijaya
B.E.F.E.O., XVIII, 6,
note
where
cautiously
will
said,
Palembang' which
is
a convenient designation
in
employing
however,
at
do not wish
1 '
to
was always
Palembang.
rivijaya/ J. A. t
G. Ferrand
161-244
L'Empire Sumatranais de
;
u-
XX,
pp. 1-104,
3.
cf.
ff.
Krom
De Soematraansche
French summary of denis, Leiden, 1919. Vol. XIX, No. 5, p, 127. B.E.F.E.O.,
4.
J.
article
appeared
in
P.
Vogel
'Het Koninkrijk
Sri-vijaya'
B. K.
I,,
1919,
pp.
6556
ff,
206
such famous
structures
APPENDIX
as
Barabudur,
Candi Kalasan.
period in Javanese history, with far-reaching consequences in the political and cultural history of Java.
The table was, however, completely turned by Stutterheim, who amazed the world of scholars by his bold hypothesis, that
the Sailendra dynasty belonged to Java, and, later, conquered Sri-Vijaya. Thus, instead of a Sumatran period in Javanese
history,
we
of
a Javanese period
in
Sumatran
view of this radical difference among the scholars, we propose to review the whole question again from the very
Iii
beginning, in the clear light of positive data, without any theory or prejudice to obscure our view.
In the
first
place, let us
examine Dr.
relies is
Coedfes*
Sailendras were
originally
refers to
and Sri-Vijayanrpati.
'king of Sri-Vijaya/ but Stutterheim proposes the translation "king over the lords of Sri-Vijaya" for the first two expressions.
The
mean
Vijaya/
this
lord/ remarks
intentional indication
'king of Sri-Vijaya', which, in the people of that country."Now, without fact, he was for ignoring the force of this argument, it must be conceded that
by
the short
indication of
the probability
i.
lies in
Although,
W.
The
F. Stutterheim
Javanese
Surakarta, 1929.
3.
Ibid., p.
14.
in
was
also
shown by Mus
P.E.F.E.O., vol.
xxvm,
p. 520.
SUVARNADVfPA
therefore,
207
we may
not regard
it
as
certain,
we may hold
for
the time being that the king of Sri-Vijaya was intended by those expressions.
But when
this
king of Sri-Vijaya
is
identified with
the king
we
the
must express a serious doubt. The word beginning of the second inscription shows that it was an entirely new record, and not a part of the first. A comparison of the
at
alphabets of the two records certainly indicates that they were contemporary or nearly so, but were not incised by the same
Then, in the long eulogy of the Sri-Vijaya in the first inscription, he is nowhere referred to as belonging to the Sailendra dynasty. On the other
king
hand, Sri-Vijaya is not mentioned in the second inscription, which not only refers to a Eajadhiraja and Frabhu (Lord) of
the Sailendra dynasty, but gives us two of his
appellations,
Visnu and Maharaja. It is thus legitimate to hold that the two must be regarded as emanating from different inscriptions
the face being obviously later in point of time. Thus the only reasonable conclusions that we can draw from the Ligor inscriptions arc that the locality was included in the kingdom of Sri-Vijaya in
persons until
we find proof
to
the contrary
it acknowledged the suzerainty of a king Sailendra dynasty at a subsequent period. There is nothing to prove that the king of Sri-Vijaya belonged to the
varman
that kings Cudamanithe Mara-vijayottungavarman, belonging to Sailendra dynasty, arc referred to in Cola records as rulers of
and
Sri-Vijaya,
and
of Ligor
Ins.
may
also
On
in
Ka$aha=Kedda
Malay
i.
This
208
Sri-Vijaya.
as rulers
APPENDIX
In
all
of Kataha,
Kadara or Kidara.
the
Even
in the one
exceptional case,
portion refers to
m.,
Cudamanivarman
refers to
while
Sri-Mara-vijayottungavarman
and extending the suzerainty of Kataha This last phrase hardly leaves any doubt that
who
had extended
in
While the records of the Sailendra kings have been found Java and Malay Peninsula, none has yet been found in
is
It is interesting to note the Sailendra dynasty is not referred to in this connection, that
in
already begun
Krom and
Java.
We have
were
ruling over Malay Peninsula and Java about the end of the Now the story of the grand empire of eighth century A. D.
Zabag,
islands of Indonesia and Malay Arab writings in the middle of the Peninsula, 9 The earliest Arab writer, Ibn ninth century A. D. Khordadzbeh (844-848 A. D.), makes the statement that the king of Zabag is named Maharaja. This immediately recalls to our mind that in the Ligor Inscription, face B, the Sailendra emperor is said to be 'Maharajanama', 'whose name is
consisting
first
of the
appears in
.
Maharaja'.
This is interesting, but can not be regarded as a conclusive argument in favour of the view that the empire of
1.
These
Nos.
inscriptions
1-2).
II.
B.E.F.E.O.,
Vol.
XXX,
2.
Cf. Bk.
Ch.
SUVARNADVlPA
Zabag and the Saileudra empire are one and the same.
general grounds,
it is
209
But, on
reasonable to hold, that there was only one such empire, rather than two, in the Pacific in the ninth and subsequent centuries, as is described by the Arab writers.
the Sailendras undoubtedly ruled over an extensive empire in Malayasia during this period, a prima facie case is estato
As
blished for the hypothesis that the Sailendra empire is referred by the Arabs as the empire of the Maharaja of Zabag. But
discussed
we have
to
As stated above, it is now generally accepted that the name Zabag and its variants, used by the Arab writers, denote the same country which the Chinese designate as Che-li-fo-che,
or San-fo-tsi, i.e., Sri-Vijaya. The question is, not certainly free from doubts or difficulties. Ferrand, however, the latest writer on this subject, has given the following reasons for the identification 1
Fo-Che,
1. is
called
all
refer to
2.
Maharaja (S'rl-Mahartija-nama). The Arab writers Zabag as the kingdom of Maharaja. Abulfida states, on the authority of previous writers,
that "the island of Maharaja is the island of Sribuza", which means that the two refer to the same island. Sribuza, undoubtedly, stands for Sri-Vijaya. The island of Maharaja, according to Dimaski, is "the mother of the islands
belonging
to
Maharaja",
the
or,
capital
It,
of the islands
forming
Zabag.
domain of
Maharaja.
therefore,
denotes
We thus get the following equation. The island of Maharaja = Zabag = Sri-Vijaya.
the
first
Now
of
said before.
As
to the second,
we can
is
easily
"island
of Maharaja"
identical
Ferrand, op.
cit.
pp. 163
ff.
27
210
with Zabag.
It is
APPENDIX
also proved
by the
Arab
writers describe some peculiar characteristics of the kingdom which they refer, sometime to Zabag, and sometime to the
island of Maharaja,
is
Thus,
there,
the cocks crow in the morning, the cry is taken up by those in the next village, and in this way the sound is taken up for nearly a distance of 100 parsangs.
so that
when
The same
in
writer
tells
in front
of the
which the king of Zabag throws a brick of gold palace, everyday. Now Ibrahim bin Waif Sah relates the first story about the island of Maharaja, while Ibn Sa'id reproduces
the second in connection with the island of Maharaja.
island of
identification
with
For
Ferrand
relies,
clearly
and gives ( SrI-Vijaya ), This view is supported by different longitudes for the two. 1 which Ferrand has the testimony of other Arab writers,
Sribuza
for example, Ibn definitely Sa'ld, Sribuza from Zabag. The former he places in distinguishes 3-40' Latitude and 88-30' Longitude, while the Latitude and
altogether
ignored.
Longitude for the latter arc given respectively as 12-30' and 151. This is fully in keeping with his general statement that to the south-east of Sribuza is a large number of islands which
constitute the archipelago of Zabag.
also
clearly
distinguishes
Zabag from
Sri-Vijaya. After describing the kingdom of the Maharaja, "Among the kingdoms of which Zabag was the capital, he says
:
over which
Similarly
and Kami/'
is
within
empire of Zabag, thus distinguishing the two. enumerates Zabag and Sribuza as separate islands in HarakI
the
Yakut
is
still
more
A.,
i
definite.
He
ff.
not only
cf. J.
i-XX, pp. 52
SUVAKNADVlPA
211
mentions the two separately in the list of islands, but further remarks that while Zabag is an island at the border of India
is
an island
in India itself.
same as Sri-Vijaya, there are definite statements by a large number of Arab writers that Zabag and Sri-Vijaya arc two separate islands.
the
The Arab
definitely,
writers do not
enable us to
locate
Zabag
its
position.
(1)
but they make certain general statements about These may be summed up as follows 1
is
India
Zabag
(62,54)
bounded on the south by the kingdom of which is midway between China and the
(62). Zabag is at the eastern end of India beyond the sea of Harkaiid (Bay of Bengal), and to the west of China (66)
Balhara kingdom
is
(2) Zabag separates China from India (62), and about a month's journey by sea from China (56)
(3)
its capital
as Zabag.
The Khmer country is situated on the same longitude The distance between the two is ten to twenty days'
(59).
is
The relative position of Khmer and Zabag Madura and Ceylon (62).
like
that of
(4) There is a 'bay of Zabag', and the sea of China forms numerous creeks on the coast of Zabag (62). The islands of form a large archipelago (63). Zabag
(5)
in
south of
China and passes through the island of Zabag (which contains gold) between the islands of Kalah and Sribuza (65, 73)
of Zabag, as given by the do not always agree, and as their mode of calculation differs considerably from ours, the utmost that we
(6)
Arab
writers,
i.
in
refer to
u-XX).
212
APPENDIX
is
Thus Ibn
Zabag
Sribuza
Sa'id (70)
Latitude.
Longitude.
12-30'.
151.
88-30'
(Abalfidft
(p.
3-40'
74)
this
Jawa Lamuri
5 5
Pancfir(Fancur)l-30'
145.( ) ) (a) According to a 145.( ) [ quotation of Abala 145.( ) ) fida (p. 74)
Abnlfidfi (p. 74)
Atwal quoted by
Zabag
Sribuza
115
(p.
74)
The only
identified is
place in the above list that can be definitely Larauri or Lanibri in Northern Sumatra which
evidently
It will
is
referred to as Jawa.
appear that the island of Zabag is definitely located about 6 to the east and about 7-30' to the north of Northern
Sumatra which contains Lambri. The Longitudes given for all of them place it to the west of Lambri. All these data would point toward Malay Peninsula which,
Sribuza differ widely, but
like Sumatra,
of a
to
be very
is
on
this
point
It says that to
the
south of
As
the towns of
Lamuri and
to
must be
Thus the
island of
is
Maharaja
is
be placed
that the
confirmed by the
either of
fact,
south-east,
the island of
Maharaja, or of Jawa. In any case as Kalah denotes the well-known place Keddah, the island of Maharaja must be
placed to
its
north.
The Longitudes
for
Jawa
(the western-
most
point),
SUVAENADVIPA
151, and 154.
213
placed between Latitudes 1 and 5 while the island of Maharaja is placed at the latitude of 12-30'.
is
Jawa
Further, Ibn Sa'ld places the islands of Maharaja not far from Andaman in a south-easterly direction. All these would fit in
Malay Peninsula. The earliest Arab writer Ibn Khordadzbeh (844-848 A.D.) refers to the island kingdom of Djaba, and although he sometimes uses the form Djawaga, the following considerations show that the two places were identical
1
.
(1)
He
refers
to the
island of
Kilah
(i.e.
Kalah) as
belonging to the
Kalah-bar, the
kingdom
of
Djaba
contemporefer to
Arab
a
writers
dependency
28),
of
Djawaga.
(2)
He
(p.
refers to the
volcano at Djaba
(p.
which
Sulayman
to
(3)
Arab
writers
(p. (50)
place close
Djawaga
and Harladj as lying in 27-8), whereas Ibn Rosteh (903 A.D,) puts Djawaga, Salahat, and Harladj as neighbouring
refers to Djaba, Salahit,
close proximity to
He
Now
Salahat,
and Haridj (variant of Harladj) 2 as lying in close proximity, about two parsangs from one another, but he further states that all these form the territories of one king, who lives
in Kilah,
all
and
is
called
In other words, the lord of Djaba title from Djaba, but his headquarters
.
were in Kilah.
Djaba
Malay Peninsula, and in the 12th century, the overlord of this and the neighbouring
also,
and
therefore, Djawaga,
was
in
This
fits
Cola records
Cf.
Ferrand
Textes (Figures
n. 9.
within bracket
refer to
pages
of
this book).
3.
Ibid. p. 27 f
f.
3,
Ibid,
pp. 184-5.
214
APPENDIX
arrive at the same conclusion by a general study of the geographical conception of the Arabs. The early Arab writers refer to a country called Rahma, and, from the details
We
Pegu, as
is
:
no doubt that by that term they meant 1 indeed admitted by Perrand Now Ibn al.
Paklh says "In India there is a kingdom called Rahma which is situated on the sea-coast. Next to this is the country of Djawaga
whose king
is
called Maharaja.
There
is
Now if Rahma
Djawaga
in
denotes Pegu,
we have
Malay
Peninsula, and to an
Arab
writer,
perhaps
ignorant of
Borneo, regarding China, Combodia, and as a series running from north to south, Malaya Peninsula the expression 'there is no country behind (i.e. to the east of)
and
Djawaga' is not very far from the truth. Of course we must not forget that the name Djawaga is also used by almost all the Arab writers in the extended sense of Malayasia, and the
statements of Ibn al-Faklh
supposition.
may
easily
Some
other
statements
refers
may
to the volcano in
also describes
4
.
FancQr
as
province or country
at least a part of
it,
designation of Zabag, his statements are not difficult to understand, and do not appear to be inconsistent with the view that
Zabag proper denotes Malay Peninsula. As against Fancdr, note, for instance, that Ka-Kula which Kia-tan places to the west of Kalah, and which has thus to be located in
we may
Malay Peninsula
R
,
is
Kalah
is
Zabag was the borderland between location in the Malay Peninsula. referred to by the Arab writers as the
its
2.
Ibid., pp.
29,36,43
(f.n. 2).
Ibid,, p. 64.
Ibid., p. 65.
3.
5.
Ibid., p. 59.
46.
Ferrand
Textes, p, 308.
SUVARNADVlPA
first
.
215
Indian country in the neighbourhood of China, and 300 1 If we remember that also Rahma parsangs from the latter
(Pegu) and
that
are both regarded as parts of India, and described as 'separating China from India, or at the eastern end of India, beyond the sea of Harkand, and to
Khmer
is
Djawaga
of
the west
China 3
'
we should
naturally take
Djawaga
as
denoting the northern part of the Malay Peninsula and countries adjoining to the north of it.
the
that
India and China might induce us to include within it Laos and the vaguely defined hilly country on its north which was In this vague extended actually known as Java or Sava.*
sense,
Davaka,
The view
that Zabag
to
be located
in
Malay Peninsula
is
The South strikingly confirmed by independent evidence. Indian literature refers to an oversea kingdom called Savaka, Savaka, or Javaka. We find references to it in the famous epic
which mentions its kings Bhumicandra and and says that the latter was ruling the earth with Punyaraja, That this country is the same as his capital at Nagapura.
Manimekhalai
I.
Ibid, p. 313.
Ibid,,
2.
Ibid., p. 64.
3.
From
we may conclude
that although
Zabag was
f
in the
was
technically
(
included in
borderland between India and China, it the former. But an earlier writer, Ibn
definitely says that 'behind Multan are many kings as far as Djawaga, The king of Djawaga is not included among Indian kings because he lives in the island' ( Ibid p. 78.)
Rosteh
c.
903 A. D.)
4.
5.
Gerini
Researches, p. 131.
of
The connection
Zabag
with Java,
Sava
or
Davaka,
is
very far in
the
V.R.R. Dikshitar
Studies in Tamil
Literature
and History,
147,
p.
83
S.K. Aiyangar
Manimekhalai
216
APPENDIX
Zabag admits of no doubt. As Ferrand has remarked, the two names Javaka and Zabag are the only ones in Indonesian
1 geography which can be equated with certainty.
Cullavamsa
has
preserved
king of Tambralinga, has been found at Caiya, near Ligor. Dr. Coedfcs has shown, by a comparison of the dates, that king Candrabhanu of Ligor, who issued this inscription in 1230 A.D.,
It Ceylonese Chronicle. is thus definitely established, that by J&vaka, the Cullavamsa meant a part of the Malay Peninsula.
to in the
in his
But, sometime later, the PSndya king boasts in his of having defeated the Javaka king as well as
inscription of
Jatavarman Vira Pandya, dated A.D. 1264, he claims to have defeated and killed the SSvaka (king), and in an inscription of the following year we
find
Now in an
among
the
list
4
Kadaram
(and no
that
king of Savaka)
The conclusion
Kadara both
is
almost
irresistible,
refer to the
kingdom of
in the Malay Peninsula. Thus the Ceylonese Chronicle agrees with the Arab writers in locating Javaka in the Malay Peninsula. Further, the Arab writer Sulayman,
writing in 851 A.D., has remarked that "Kalah-bar and Zabag are ruled over by the same king." Kalah-bar is, no doubt, the
Op.
cit.,
p. 172.
2.
36-48; Ch. 88
See ante,
pp. 197
3.
ff,
See ante,
p.
198.
4.
These
1917,
J. A.,
and
reported in S. I. Ep Rep. (No. 588 of No. 356 of 1906). Their contents are summarised by Ferrand,
pp. 48-49.
inscriptions are
n-XX,
SUVAKNADVlPA
217
The Arab writers of the tenth century A.D. refer to the extension of the authority of Zabag over the various islands of
the Pacific.
c.
916 A.D.
),
our earliest
capital
city
called Zabag,
Sribuza,
former.
In Sribuza
is
we
Thus
it
Zabag was
its
originally
a different
at
Zabag over the various islands, that the Arab writers gave the name of Zabag to the whole of Malayasia. But the island of Zabag proper was always distinguished from the Zabag empire comprising the archipelago. In view of the agreement between the accounts of Arab writers and the Cullavamsa, we are justified in locating the kingdom of
least as early as the tenth century A.D. this extension of political authority of
no doubt, due to
Peninsula,
probably
in
the
The
closed
now
generally
accepted that the kingdom referred to as San-fo-tsi in the Chinese documents from tenth to fourteenth century A.D. is the same as Zabaj or Zabag. But there are two implications
in this theory which, in
without sufficient
my opinion, have been tacitly accepted, evidence. These are (1) that San-fo-tsi,
:
Che-li-fo-che, Zabag, and Sribuza are and (2) that all these are to be Vijaya
;
all
equivalent
to
Sri-
identified
with modern
Palembang.
As
regards (1)
we have
obviously
equivalent to Sri-Vijaya, but the same cannot be said either of San-fo-tsi or of Zabag. M. Aurousseau, no doubt, equates San-fotsi
with Che-li-fo-che,
i.
but Ferrand
2.
is
of opinion
that
it
Ferrand, op.
cit, p. $6.
p. 476.
28
218
is
APPENDIX
impossible
to
equate
San-fo-tsi
with
Sri-Vijaya from
1 Further, the Chinese accounts philological point of view. do not seem to imply that Chc-li-fo-che is the same as San-fo-tsi.
The
history of the
Ming Dynasty*
(
was
or Kan-to-li
to
Ju-kua 8
San-fo-tsi
began Both
have
relations
these
statements are
It is
proposed
identification.
true that
Cuda-
manivarman
to
as
and
of
kings
was Sri-Vijaya. For, as stated above, we have no right to infer from the Cola records that these two were primarily kings of Sri-Vijaya. We should rather regard them as kings of Kadaram, and Sri-Vijaya was included in their realm. Thus the fact remains that no satisfactory evidence
that San-fo-tsi
is
equiva-
to
Che-li-fo-che
in
its
noteworthy that there is no reference Chinese records after 742 A.D., ''while
San-fo-tsi
makes
Zabag by Arab writevs. Of be the same as SriVijaya, we have to dissociate the former from Zabag. The identity of San-fo-tsi and Palembang also does not
shortly after the first reference to
appear to be beyond question. It evidently rests upon the "Ku-kang is following statement of Ma Huan ( 1416 A. D. )
:
the
called Palembang,
same country which was formerly called San-fo-tsi it and is under the supremacy of Java."*
;
is
also
The
History of the Ming dynasty also informs us that sometime before 1397 A. D., "Java had completely conquered San-fo-tsi
and changed
i.
its
name
cit.
to
Ku-Kang.
Ferrand, op.
p. 170.
p. 68.
2
3. 4.
Groeneveldt
Notes,
Ferrand, op.
cit. p.
24.
Edited by Hirth and Rockhill, p. 62. Ferrand, op. cit, p, 14. Groeneveldt Notes, p. 73. I have substituted San-fo-tsi
for
San-bo-tsai of Groeneveldt.
5.
Groeneveldt
Notes, p. 71.
SUVARNADVlPA
These statements appear to be decisive
identification
219
in favour
of the
But
when we
read the detailed account which follows the statement quoted above from the History of the Ming dynasty, the view is It tells us in effect that when the bound to be changed. Javanese had conquered San-fo-tsi, they could not keep all the
land and the whole country was disturbed. It then describes how two Chinese adventurers set up as kings of San-fo-tsi and Ku-Kang. From this Groeneveldt has made the obvious
inference that
It
Ku-Kang and San-fo-tsi were different might appear that Ku-Kang was the name given to
places.
that part
kingdom of San-fo-tsi which was under the and by a natural process, the name of the former kingdom, San-fo-tsi, came to be applied to the latter, which originally formed merely a part of it. But then we should remember that San-fo-tsi and Ku-kang are treated as two
control of Java,
different places in Tao-yi Che-lio ( 1349-50 A.D. ), i.e. long before Java finally conquered San-fo-tsi. All these certainly go against the view that San-fo-tsi is equivalent to Ku-kang
of the extensive
or
Palembang.
That
who
of,
of San-fo-tsi.*
and therefore
We
Palembang. It is needless to add that the identification of Srl-Vijaya with Palembang, so far as it is based on these two identifications, cannot be seriously maintained. At the same
1.
Ibid., f.n,
cf.
also p. 76.
167.
2.
Ferrand, op.
cit. p.
The attempts
of
to explain
the difficulty, and maintain the identity of do not appear to me to be at all successful
;
T'oung
1933. P- 376).
220
time
it is
APPENDIX
only fair to add that there
this
is
a strong
presumption
locality,
The only
regard
it
to
In that case
circumstances
The Chinese
to-li
Kan-
the Liang
dynasty refers to several embassies from Kan-to-li to China, one between 454 and 465 A. D. and three others in 502,519 and
520 A. D. The history of the Chen dynasty refers to another embassy from the kingdom in 563 A. D. a Gerini was the first to point out that "there was, and Khanthuli or Kanturi district on the east coast of still exists,
Malay Peninsula which may very well be old Kan-to-li of First Sung and Liang periods/' But the chief objections
against this view were the generally accepted identification of San-fo-tsi with Palembang, and the fact that Kan-to-li is
was
mentioned as a separate state in 820 A. D., whereas Palembang called by the Chinese as Chc-li-fo-che for at least 150
these
years before that. Now the view propounded above disposes of both
objections,
is
which
and I may point out that Kan-to-li (or Kin-to-li), regarded by the Chinese as the old name of resembles to a great extent Kadara or KidSra, the San-fo-tsi, Cola name for the kingdom of Cudamanivarman and Srl-Maravijayottungavarman
not
who
Chinese records
as kings of San-fo-tsi.
improbable
hypothesis,
the
first
ff.
J.G.I.S., Vol.
ff,
I,
p. 63, f,n. 7.
2.
Gerini
SUVARNADVlPA
221
Except for the addition of a nasal sound in both Kan-to-li and San-fo-tsi, these two names seem to correspond quite well with Kadara and Zabaj. Further, it is to be noted that
corresponding to the variant forms Kadara and Kidara in the Cola records, we have Kan-to-li and Kin-to-li in the
Chinese annals. 1
The
by the
by
Gerini,is supported
and
Yii mention Kan-to-li along with Champa and Kamboja. Ma-Twan-lin also enumerates in a course with Kan-to-li, P'anp'an,
Han
definitely located
the location of
first two of which can be Malay Peninsula. All these would suit Kan-to-li in Malay Peninsula far better than in
Sumatra, as Ferrand does, on the authority of Ibn Majid ( A.D. 1462 ) who mentions Kandari as a general name of Sumatra.
indebted to Dr. Coedfcs for an additional argument, which the Chinese sources supply, in favour of locating SanI
fo-tsi in the
am
Malay Peninsula.*
of Father
Ricci
beginning of the 17th century) place Kieou-Kiang and 3 San-fo-tsi in the middle of the Peninsula. Dr. Coedfcs,
(
however, observes that the Charts give fantastic localisations for this region besides their late date takes away much of the
;
But taken in conj action with the weight of their evidence.* other Chinese evidences quoted above, the Charts constitute, in
my
to the
to
the Sailendra
sinologue or a philologist I do not stress these offer a suggestion to scholars who are competent to deal with them. It may be noted that my main thesis does not rest on these identifications.
1.
Not being a
2.
J.G.I.S., Vol
I., p.
63.
3.
4.
The Geographical
Op.
cit. f.n. 3.
222
APPENDIX
Suvarnadvipa. Pandit H. Sastrl repeats the generally accepted view when he says "The Yavabhuini and the Suvarnadvipa arc evidently identical with the Yavadvipa and the Suvarna:
dvipa islands spoken of in Sanskrit works like the Ramayana or the Kathasaritsagara, and are unquestionably the modern
none of these identifications is beyond Ferrand has challenged the identification of Yavadvipa question. of Ramayana with Java, and whether one agrees with him or
not,
difficult to ignore altogether the arguments of is it considerable weight which he has brought forward in support 8 of his thesis that Yavadvipa denotes Sumatra and not Java.
But we
that Yavabhuini
is
perhaps
to
be
As
from Suvarnabhumi/ above in Bk. I., Chap. IV, and it has been shown that the name Suvarnabhumi or Suvarnadvipa was indifferently used to denote a wide region including Burma, Malay Peninsula,
and the islands of the Indian archipelago.
I
m., 'that Suvarnadvipa is different The question has been fully discussed
am
the author
of the Nalanda plate regarded Yavabhumi and Suvarnadvipa as one and the same. If this view be correct we can easily equate YavabhQmi with the Arabic Zabag and its variants, and
may
As
result of the
preceding discussions
the Sailendras
we can
with
now
relations of
Sumatra
and Java.
i.
p. 312.
3.
s e ante, pp. 98
ff.
SUVARNADVIPA
It is
223
all
well-known
locate
It will
that,
scholars
the
seat
authority
of
the
Sailendras in
Sumatra.
there
is
appear from what has been said above that In view of the no warrant for such an assumption.
it is it
way
will
barring the identification of San-fo-tsi with Palembang, which is at best a very doubtful one, there is no evidence to regard Sumatra as the home of the Sailendras. Only in the Cola
Inscriptions of eleventh century A. D. they are
referred
to
as
kings of Ka^ana and Sri-Vijaya, very much in the same way as the Arab writers from the tenth century onwards regard Sribuza as one of the dependent states of Zabag. The growing
commercial importance of Srl-Vijaya, and perhaps its past historical record, invested it with special importance, and hence
it
formed an
Empire.
this.
The evidence
important centre of the growing Sailendra at our disposal proves nothing beyond
is
much
stronger.
We
find here
two records,
definitely
belonging to the earliest period of their history known to us. At least one of these kings, Rakai Panamkarana, appears in the
famous
Kedu
inscriptions
among
the predecessors
of the
Javanese kings of Mataram. It is also possible to identify Samarottuiiga, mentioned in a Kedu record dated 847 A.D., with
These facts, Samaragravlra of the Nalanda Inscription. added to the existence of Barabudur and other famous temples, may tempt us to the view that Java was the original home of
the Sailendras.
The temptation
is
increased
if
we remember
how easy and natural it would be to derive Zabag from Yava, and how certain statements of Arab writers would admirably
suit
Java.
We
may
refer, for
i.
See
later,
Bk,
III,
Chap
I.
224
of
APPENDIX
Djftwaga
which
are
constantly
referred
to
by Arab
writers.
(1)
(2)
There
is
There
is
it is
the last
of the islands.
The whole country is fertile, and the villages succeed (3) one another without interruption, so that the cries of cocks in the morning would be heard continuously for 100 parsangs.
Now all those characteristics would be more applicable to Java than Malay Peninsula. The statement that Djawaga is situated on the borderland between India and China may not be
regarded as a decisive argument against Java,
that
this
the,
curly
respect.
if we remember Arab writers had a somewhat vague notion in It is clear, however, that some of their positive
and longitude of Djftwaga, as compared with those of Sribuza and other welllatitude
known
the
It is thus legitimate to places, cannot apply to Java. hold that Djawaga perhaps originally meant Java, but later,
Malay by the transference of the scat of authority of the Sailendrag from Java to Malay Peninsula in the ninth or tenth century A.D.
writers
it
Arab
located
in
some
place
in
the
Peninsula.
new
seat of authority.
which can be justified by Djawnga, and therefore the seat of authority of the Sailendras, in Malay Peninsula from the
alternative view,
is
available evidences,
to locate
beginning.
Malay Peninsula is indeed poor in antiquities as compared with Java, but not poorer in this respect than Sumatra, where Zdbag is usually located. Wilkinson goes even further. Referring to the antiquities and some other characteristic
features of the northern
The
part of the Peninsula he remarks "All these facts point to the past existence of powerful states
SUVARXADVlPA
and high standard of wealth and luxury Malay Peninsula."
1
225
in
Quite
recently,
Dr.
of
II.
G.
Quaritch
Wales made an
Malay archaeologieal survey Peninsula, and has emphatically endorsed the hypothesis that the centre of the mighty empire of the Sailcndras was in Malay
Peninsula.
capital
several
He
of this
in
Khmers
was the first was overrun by the, the twelfth century, the capital was transferred
holds
that
Caiya or Jaiyu
this city
empire, and
when
further south to
Nakhon
Sri Thauimarat."
Indeed
it
is
rule of the
beginning South Indian inscriptions referring to friendly or hostile relations of Tolas with Soilcndra* of Kat&ha or Kadfira, tho continuity of similar relations between Kacjftni and Siivaka king on the one hand and the Pilndya and (.'eyloncse
kings on the other, and tho location of Zabag or Siivuka in Malay Peninsula, all these constitute a strong argument in favour of regarding Malay Peninsula as the home of the Sailondrus,
Sailcndras from
to
end.
ruled.
Such an assumption would further explain tho spread of the Malay people and their language all over Indonesia, and the extensive application of the name Yavn, Jiiwa or its
In other equivalents in Sumatra, Cambodia, Laos, mid A imam. the trace rf tho old Malay empire of tho Sailondras words,
called
Javaka can
still
of tho
Malay
be found in the wide-spread charartor all over Indonesia, and the wide
name
80.
Iii
conclusion
we must
lay
stress
on
tho
wero now This would explain the introduction of NSgari alphabet in their inscriptions and of a now namc,Kalmga,
that the
Sailondnis
from India.
1.
R. G.
WilkinsonHistory
of the Peninsular
2.
No
i,
pp. 1-25.
p. 15.
29
226
for Malayasia, as
APPENDIX
we know from
the Chinese records.
The
portion of the western coast of Bay of Bengal, which was known as Kalinga in old days, contained the famous port 'Paloura'
which was from very early times the port of embarkation for The same region was ruled over in the sixth 1 and Sailodbhava* and seventh centuries A.D. by the Ganga
dynasties,
region,
we
find
In the preamble of
an
from Gangs,
first
the daughter
is
8
of
Himalaya
the
and
the
king
Saila
referred to as
family).
Thus
be the source of a
name
like Sailendra.
a wide-spread tribe,
being the Gangas of Kalinga and Mysore. According to the tradition preserved among the Gangas of Kalinga, Kamarnava,
to his uncle, set out with giving over the paternal kingdom his four brothers to conquer the earth, and took possession of
The
4
accession of
Kamarnava would
fall
the eighth
But, before him also, Ganga kings supplied in their records. ruled in Kalinga, probably from the sixth century A. D.
The
title
'Lord of Tri-Kaliiiga' was borne by the Ganga kings century A. D. till a late period. Now the
expression Tri-Kaliiiga is an old one, and is perhaps preserved even now in the Teliiiga or Talaings of lower Burma. If so, we may find here an evidence of the Ganga conquest of lower
Burma in the eighth century A. D. From this Burma they might have rapidly spread to the Far
1. 2.
base in lower
East.
Cf. e.g.,
Cf. e g.,
Ep. Ind.. Vol. XVII, pp. 330 Buguda Plates, Ep. Ind., Vol III, p. 41*
plates,
Urlam
if.
3.
4.
Cam,
39
Eng. Translation of
I,
Inscriptions,
ff.
APP.
pp. 285
p.
17,
and the
XVIII,
ff.
SUVARNADVlPA
It is interesting to note that the
227
Gfifiga
names of the
kings
end
in Maharaja or Mahadhinlja, as e.g. Visnugopa-MahadhirSja, and Srl-purusa Prthvi-Kongani-Maharaja. In the former of these we get an almost exact form of "Visnvakhyo MaharajanSma," which we meet with i.e. having the name of Visnu Maharaja,
in the
Ligor inscription. It is not, of course, suggested that the two kings were identical, but the agreement in the very unusual fashion of including Maharaja as part of the name is
certainly striking.
Reference may also be made named Gangganegara (see p. 188, f. n. 2). Thus while no definite conclusion is possible at
state
to the city
the present
came from
Kaliiiga,
and spread
in
the
Since
the
publication pp.
of
my
paper on
the
Sailendras in
appendix is the English original several views have been put forward regarding the origin of the Sailendras. Dr. Coedes suggested that they were kings
B.E.F.E.O.,
Vol. XXXIII,
121
this
ffof which
of
in
Funan, and being evicted therefrom, carved out a kingdom in Java the 8th century A.D., and claimed back their own possessions in the
Dr. J. Przyluski opooses this 9th cent. A.D. (J.G.I.S., Vol, I, pp. 66 ff.). view and holds that Sailendravams'a derives its origin from 'Sailendra',
an Indonesian deity of the Bataks, enthroned upon a high mountain, who has been successively identified with Siva Girisa and the supreme Buddha (J.G.I.S,, Vol. II, pp.28 ff.), Prof. K. A, Nilkanta
originally
Sastri
infers
from
that the
Hinduand their rulers, and he thinks it possible that Javanese immigrants ( T. B. G., Safijaya himself was a member of the Sailendravamsa. The last two views do not appear to me to be 610-11). 1935, pp,
Pandyan
some
Ins. of
Safijaya
of the
even plausible,
The view
Sastri's
of
Coedes
is
my
it is
theory.
partly
As regards
Prof.
criticism (op.
of this
theory,
based on misunderstanding of my arguments. For the rest, I may point out to him that my view is a tentative one, and is not to be regarded as
my
Indeed this was definitely proved. paper, and has been properly understood
quite
in
clearly
spirit
this
by
others,
Book
KISE
III
BOOK
Chapter
III
I.
seen
above
that
several
fifth
Hindu
kingdoms
or sixth century A. D. But we do not possess any detailed knowledge of the history About of the country till we coine to the eighth century A. D. the beginning of this century, a powerful kingdom was founded
flourished
in
central
his
Some
information about
1
furnished by the Cangal inscription. This record is engraved on a stone slab, which was discovered among the ruins of a Saiva temple at Cangal, on the plateau of
the
him and
Wukir
Hill in
Kedu.
It begins
by
stating that a
was
set
up
in the
Saka
732 A. D., by a king named Safijaya, son of year 654, Sannaha. Then, after an invocation of the gods Siva (w. 2-4), Brahma (v. 5), and Visnu (v. 6), it praises the island of
i.e.
Java
(v. 7),
and refers to
its
who
ruled
righteously like
Manu
for a
was succeeded
by was
to
who was
scholars to
Certain statements of the inscription have led think that the dynasty had recently emigrated
locality
Java from a
relationship
The
i.
Edited by
and commen-
ted on by B. C. Chhabra, J. A. S. B. L. Vol. i pp, 34 ff. The latter has no definite statement in the record in support of pointed out that there is son the generally accepted interpretation that Sanjaya was the had some share in the sister that of Sannaha, and Safljaya's
Administration,
230
generally presumed to be that of father and son, cannot be regarded as absolutely certain on account of some lacuna in
the record.
King
Safijaya
is
referred
to
in
this
inscription
as
"conqueror of the countries of neighbouring kings." Ordinarily such a vague statement really does not mean much, but there is literary evidence to corroborate it in this particular instance. A long list of the countries conquered by king Sanjaya, son of
it says there Safijaya proceeded to the "From he fought with Kernir (Khmer), the rahyang
:
Malayu country
Gana
is
defeated.
defeated.
fought Then rahyang with China, pati Srikaladarma is defeated. 1 Sanjaya returned from his over-sea expedition to Galuh ".
It is difficult to decide
He
Again he fought with Keling, sang Sri-Vijaya fought with Barus, ratu Jayadana is defeated.
is
He
how
far
we can
accept, as historical,
the detailed account, given above, of the victories gained by SaSjaya. While Dr. Stutterheim is inclined to take the passage
at its face value
8
,
Dr.
Krom
finds
in
it
s possibility that SaSjaya led some expeditions across the sca. Dr. Stutterheim even goes further. He takes SaSjaya to be
Sailendra dynasty, referred to above in and regards his conquests, as mentioned in Carita II, Parahyangan, as mere precursors of the military expeditions, which the Sailendras sent against Champa and KSmboja in the latter part of the eighth century A.D. (sec ante pp. 156 ff.)
Book
pp. 417 ff. Quoted by Stutterheim in Sumatran History," p. 18. Carita Parahyangan "Javanese period A short account of the book, together is written in old Sudanese.
i.
T.
B.
G.,
1920,
in
is
given
by Poerbatjaraka
in
T. B. G., Vol.
substitute
59,
pp.
394
for
if,
402
ff.
2*
Op.
cit.
Stutterheim
would, however,
Champa
China.
3.
Krom
Geschiedenis 2 , p. 126,
SUVARNADVlPA
,
231
This revolutionary theory of Dr. Stutterhcim is based upon 1 which are now in a Grant, engraved on two copper-plates Srivedari Museum, Solo, but of which the original find-spot is unknown. The inscription is almost an exact copy of two other
inscriptions,
which were previously known. But as some parts of the inscription were missing in both, the identity could not be recognised. Of these two copies the find-spot of the stone inscription is not known, though it was believed by Ilouffaer to
have come from eastern Java. The copper or rather bronze plate was found at Nagadireja, Kedu.
The copper-plate grant at Solo is dated 907 A.D., but the stone inscription bears a date, which was formerly read as 84x Saka, and then doubtfully restored as 830 Saka (928 A. D.).
In view of the fact that the Solo inscription gives the date that clearly as 907 A.D., Dr. Stutterheim naturally suggests as the date of the grant, which may hereafter be referred to
as the
Kedu
grant.
The inscription records a grant made by Sri Maharaja Fakai Watukura dyah Balitung Sri Dharmodayu MahaSambhu in A. D. The most interesting part of the inscription, for our 907.
line of past kings present purpose, is the reference to a long whose names are invoked as the protectors of the kingdom.
The
list
1.
of kings
is
as follows
Saiijaya.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Warak.
Garung.
Pikatan.
6. 7.
Kayuwangi.
8.
9.
Watuhumalang. Watukura.
LXVI1
i.
T. B. G., Vol.
232
of
all identified
list,
Panam-
karana, the Sailendra king referred to in the Kalasan inscription. This identity of a king of the Mataram dynasty of Java with a Sailendra king is the starting point of his theory. He then proceeds to identify SaSjaya with the grandfather of Balaputradeva,
called
Tira-vairi-mathan-anugat-abhidhana'
in
the
Nalanda copper-plate, mainly on the ground that the name of the former, "All-conqueror," could be quite well a synonym
of the latter
further,
Proceeding
still
he
of T&ra ( Kalasan ins. ) with SarnarSgravira who married TarS ( Nalanda charter }, on the assumption that the queen
Tara"
was
identified
with
the goddess.
Lastly he identifies
Dharmasetu, the name of the father of Tara, as read by Pandit II. Sastri in the Nslanda charter, with DharmapSla, the famous emperor of Bengal, on the ground that the name
Dharmapala
Dharmasetu.
first
1
could,
in
poetry, be
regarded as a synonym of
two kings of Mataram referred to in the Kedu grant, are regarded by Dr. Stutterheim as the first two Sailendra kings mentioned in the Nalanda charter as grandfather and father He then draws the obvious conclusion that of Balaputra.
really the Javanese ruling dynasty a son, perhaps the youngest son of Panangkaran, Mataram, ruled over Sumatra, which was a part of the Javanese empire
of
must be admitted
at the very
outset,
that the
somewhat
elaborate structure,
raised
by
rather
weak foundation.
is
The
it
that
is
the amount of positive evidence which he has yet been able to bring forward is insufficient to command a general assent to
his views.
i.
"Javanese Period
etc.,"
pp. 6-13,
8UVARNADVIPA
the
23S
As regards the identification of Dharmasetu and DharmapSla, name of the king, as written in the Nalanda charter, is
Varmasetu.
Dr. Stutterheim has referred to the use of
clearly
the word Dharmasetu in the Kclurak inscription. But the word is very commonly used, in the sense of a pious foundation, in
the inscriptions of the Pfilas and other dynasties
1
,
and no
on
the
emphasis, therefore, need be laid upon it. The identity of Panariikarana and Samaragravlra
basis of the
Tara, can hardly be accepted as and the same may be said of the identification of satisfactory, Sanjaya and Vlra-vairi-mathana.
common name,
Dr. Stutterheim
his
that
would
readily
identification
of Panangkaran,
the
second king in the Kedu list, with the Now same name, mentioned in the Kalasan inscription. one identification would have gone a great way to support theory of Dr. Stutterheim, if we could readily agree with
that the
Sailendra king of
the
this
the
him
names of kings mentioned in the Kedu inscription are If that were so, Sanjaya and his descendants. the identity of any one of them with a Sailendra king would have certainly justified us in regarding the kings of Mataram as belonging to Sailendra family. Unfortunately, as Dr. Bosch
those
of
has pointed out, there is nothing in the Kedu inscription to the assumption that the kings mentioned in it all belong justify
to the
same
family.
It
who
protected Mataram before king rakai Watukura, in whose Thus while all these kings must be reign it was recorded. regarded as having reigned in Mataram before rakai Watukura,
they
cannot,
regarded as his
ancestors.
may, therefore, resume the history of Java, from where we left it, without any further reference to the theory of
1. (
We
E. g. in
line
47 of the
Monghyr
).
copperplate
of
Ill,
Devapala.
pp.
Ind.
Ant,
2.
Vol.
Cf. J.
G.
1. S.,
Vol.
no-u.
T.
30
234
Dr. Stutterheim, which would put an altogether new complexion We have seen that early in the on the whole situation.
eighth century A. D. king Sannaha had founded a kingdom in where his son and successor SaSjaya, a great
central Java,
Tradition of a
age credits this king with extensive conquests, but the The in it we are unable to verify.
very fact, however, that such traditions have gathered round a historical king, would justify us in regarding him as a powerful
ruler,
who extended
1
.
his
own realm
Now
as the
list,
Kedu
A. D., the first king may be presumed to have flourished about the beginning or middle of the eighth century A. D. It would,
inscription, reigned at the beginning of the tenth century
king Sanjaya
inscription
that
list
with
king
Sanjaya
of
the
Cangal
dated, 732 A.
D.
Bosch has
justly
raised
doubt
if
Sanjaya',
one person, rakai Mataram, or to two persons, one VIA., king Sanjaya, 8 called 'rakai Mataram', and the other called 'sang ratu Sanjaya'.
of kings begins, really refers
In view of the
refers to Sanjaya.
'rakai
titles
fact,
that
all
referred
the probability is that 'rakai Mataram' So far as the Kedu inscription goes, the title
title,
significance
But the
fact
remains
from
the
1.
temple
2.
Pojok
Ins.
(B.
K.
I.
if.).
T. B. G., Vol.
69 (1929)1 p. I3 6
f- n
4-
SUVARNADVlPA
beginning
inscription
his
235
of
the
tenth
century
A. D.,
was
recorded, the
kingdom
of rakai
successors,
officially
who
styled
was
rakai Mataram,
kingdom
'the kingdom of Mataram'. SaGjaya, thus be looked upon as the founder of the may at least there is no doubt that he was regarded
D.
Now, Mataram was the name of a famous kingdom in Java, ruled over by Muhammadan Sultans since the last years of the
sixteenth century A.
as the scat of the
D.
old
Krom
is
kingdom
points out that the adoption of the title 'pmice of Mataram' by some members of the royal family of Majapahit shows that
the
and it is, therefore, exceedingly the by no means certain, that likely, though Muhammadan Sultans merely revived the use of an old
of use,
course
name.
On
make
it
further north.
Now,
Kraton
was
at
first
Medang.
place with
Mendang Kamulan
Grobogan (Semarang) on the basis of a local tradition a recorded by Sir Stamford Raffles But, as Krom points out, the new Kraton, according to the tradition recorded by Raffles,
.
so
in
the
old
Kraton
of
The proximity
of
or near
Krom
Geschiedenis 2
p. 169.
2.
(
!
"Javanese
kings
Period etc",
p.
19.
Cf. also,
B. K.
I.,
Vol. 89
93 2
of
the
the vicinity
of
the
Kratons
(royal palaces).
5.
Krom
Geschiedenis 2
p,
170.
236
we have seen
the
above, there
are
good
grounds
to
identify
second
king
of
the
Kedu
inscription,
that
It
name mentioned
Panangkaran with the Sailcndra king of in the Kalasan inscription, dated 778 A. D.
in that case that during the reign of king or his successor, a part at least of central Java Sanjaya, was conquered by the Sailendras.
would follow
How
Sailendras ?
The
question
is difficult to
answer.
seems to be certain.
as
The
find-spots
of
Sailendra
well
as
the reference to
Sailendra
king as
one
of
the protectors of the kingdom of Mataram, leave no doubt that that kingdom, or the Jogyakcrta district, passed from the
But, as
list
we
shall
see
later,
the
supplied by the Kedu must have been ruling in the same region. These inscription kings may be presumed to belong to the family of Sanjaya, or at
three or four kings
of the
least to claim
their rights
to the
kingdom from
it,
him.
Thus
central
belonged to
the kingdom
founded by SaSjaya's
father,
of the eighth to the beginning of the tenth century A. D., except for the period of Sailendra supremacy. The question naturally
arises,
this interval ?
passage in the New History of the T'ang Dynasty perhaps It says "The king lives enables us to answer this question.
:
in
the
On
different
there
are
all
supplemented by two
important details
transfer
From
these
we
during
as
the period
A. D. 742-755,
B. E, F.
i.
Groeneveldt
Notes,
p.
13,
corrected by Pelliot,
SUVAENADVlPA
and that the new
capital
237
to the
east
There are good grounds to believe that the information given in the New History of the T'ang Dynasty is true of Thus the Chinese the last part of the ninth century A.D.*
account almost inevitably leads to the conclusion that when the dynasty ruling in central Java was ousted therefrom
by the Sailendras, about the middle of the eighth century A.D., it was forced to shift its headquarters to another town, about but that 100 or 150 miles ( 8 days' journey ) to the east before the end of the ninth century A.D. the dynasty had
;
recovered
its
old capital.
We may thus conclude that the Sailendra supremacy in Java extended from the middle of the eighth to the middle or end of the ninth century A. D., and that during this period, the
indigenous dynasty quarters to the east.
ruling in central Java
had
In the present state of our knowledge we cannot be sure outline of events. The few this broad records of the period from central Java, that are known to us,
of anything except
do not enable us to
the whole period.
lift
copper-plate from Pengging in Surakarta contains an order issued by rakarayan i Garung, who is probably the same as
rakai Garung,
the
fifth
king of the
Kedu
list.
The date
not in conflict
Saka 751 or 761 (A. D. 829 or 839), is also with the proposed identification. But then the
ibid.
1,
Pelliot,
of the
new
capital
of
Java
has been rendered by Ferrand as Ba-ru-ja-sik=(Kawi) Waruh Gresik. According to Ferrand this place is still well-known under its abridged form Gresik, being the port popularly known as Grisse, within the
Residency of Surabaya (J. A. ii-XIH, (1919), pp. seems to correspond to Sanskrit Bharukaccha.
2. It
304-6).
The name
was evidently
later
also
Krom
Geschiedenis,
238
title
Another inscription, found at wanting. in Magelang, and dated Saka 753, probably belongs to Bolong the same king, but no royal name is mentioned in the record".
Next
in
chronological order
is
the
stone
inscription
of
Karangtengah (Kedu) dated 847 A. D. which refers to king noted above that this It has been already Samarottu&ga. has been identified by some with the Sailendra king king
Samar&gravira. But this is by no means certain, as the name is also borne by purely Javanese kings of later date. Besides,
Paminggalau
An
inscription
found at Argapura,
pu Manuka
with the
rakai Pikatan appears to be also issues the stone inscription of Perot, dated 853, but
title
and dated A. D. 804, any royal title. This named pu Manka. Now one
rakai Patapan.
we come
across
rakai Pikatan occupying a lower position than rakai Patapan. The identity of these two, and of both, with the sixth king in the
Kedu
list, is
After
all
we
enter into a
somewhat
clearer
of the series.
all
atmosphere with Sri Maharaja rakai Kayuwangi, the seventh king He is known from three copper-plate inscriptions,
found at Ngabean, near Magelang. These are dated in the 7 From the last we know years A. D. 879% 880, and 882
.
1.
2.
3.
O. V. 1920, p. 136 ; Ibid, 1928, p. 65. T. B. G., Vol. 70 (1930), PP- I57-I70. O. J. O., No. IV. The date is corrected by Goris in T. B.
1
1930, p.
4.
60, f.n. 5.
O.
J.
formerly dated 847 A. D. But according 787 A. D. (T. B. G., 1930, p. 160, f.n. 3.) K. O., No. X. 6. O. J. O., No. XII.
7,
K.
O.,
No. XV.
(
rl
in
a record of 886 A. D.
O.
J.
Kayuwangi.
SUVABNADVlPA
that the
23d
He may
name
official name of the king was Sajjanotsavatungga. be identified with Svarni Kayuwangi, with the proper 1 a record dated 861 A. D. Sukri, mentioned in
Kayuwangi appears
as the
name
of a locality near
Dieng
in
With
Indonesian
titles,
which were
Their Sanskrit
names,
unknown
to us.
Sajjanotsavatungga, dated 880 A. D., refers to the dedication of a silver umbrella to the Bhat&ra of
The
inscription of
SalingsiiHjan.
deifying a king after his death, and then referring to him as the God (Bhatara) of the locality where his body is cremated.
This custom was very familiar in Java and other countries in the Far East, and very often a temple was erected on
the cremation
deity
(
ground,
containing an
etc.
)
Buddha, Siva
instances
as
with
In
many
Javanese
simply such a place. In the present instance, we must presume that one of Sajjanotsavatungga's predecessors was cremated at Salingsingan, and deified after death. A later
documents
such and
His
Majesty
record refers to an
endowment
made
in
O.
J.
O.
No. VII.
16-
Geschiedenis pp. 154, 181.. King Airlangga was, 3. e. g., called rakai Halu, because his coronation took place in a locality of that name. The raka title assumed by a king might have been borne
Krom
by other persons
king himself.
4.
too,
but
not
life-time
of the
Krom
Geschiedenis
2
,
pp.
179-181,
240
The
Watuhumalang
is
known from an
all
these
inscriptions
It
were
of
Kedu and
in
Prambanan.
would
Kedu
But
region
in addition to
series
region.
this
inscriptions
of
other kings
who seemed
to have
ruled in the
same
period.
copper-plate
A.D. 8
issued by a king
refers to
Sri Devendra.
was Another
,
undated copper-plate, most probably originating from Dieng region, 3 Another His Majesty Gwas Sri Jayaklrtivardhana.
undated inscription belonging to this period refers to the 4 king cremated at Kwak (in the neighbourhood of Ngabean) Whether these kings really belong to the same series of kings,
assuming different raka titles at differcnjt times, or whether they were independent rulers in different localities, we do
not know.
definite
In any case
it
would be hazardous
to
to
draw any
conclusions from
Java continued
authority
and
political
throughout
eighth
and ninth
centuries A.D.
With
we
definitely
pass to eastern Java. As we possess several inscriptions of this king, with variations of names, and as the find-spots of
these records have formed the basis of important conclusions,
1.
K. O.,
No IX
also
O.
V.,
1925, p. 42.
that
Stutterheim thinks Rapp, Oudh. Comm., 1911, pp. 6-9. Devendra was really an official and not a king, the royal title being applied to him through mistake in the copy of the original
2.
inscription
3.
(B. K.
1.,
O.
O.,
No. CIV.
4.
O.
J,
O.
No.CVI.
StJVARNADVtPA
we
shall
241
arranged in
begin with a
list
of these
records,
chronological order.
Serial
1
No.
Date
898 A.D.
901 A.D.
Find-spot.
Name
Sri
haji
of the king.
I.
Penampihan
(Kediri)
2.'
Panaraga (Madiun)
3.*
002 A.D.
Unknown.
(probably E. Java/
ga.
003 A.D.
Vanagiri
Sri
G.
007 A.D.
Blitar.
As
in No. 3.
4.
7-9."
As in No.
Kedu
Do.
Inscription.
10.
7
907 A.D.
(at
present in
Amsterdam)
11.
Do
010 A.D.
Watu Kura X
Sri
12."
Surabaya
(rake
2. 4.
O.
J. O.,
No. XXIII.
p. 269.
3.
5.
6.
T.B.G., 1934,
in
above
connection
cf.
with the
O.
J.
O.,
Nos.
XXVII andCVIIl.
7.
Nos.
(
ff.)
and
Naerssen
PP. 135
8.
Aanwinsten
van
31
242
The
raka-title,
form of the royal name thus consists of a special an Indonesian proper name (Balitimg) and the
coronation name.
Sanskrit
different
The most
striking thing
is
the
coronation
Uttungadeva,
ttunga and
Dharmodaya MahaSambhu. Even the personal names and rake titles are changed, for we have both dyah Balitung and dyah Garudamuka and rake Watukura and
These records show that the king reigned at least from A.D. 898 to 910, and that his dominions certainly included both eastern and central Java. This is further corroborated
by the fact that an officer named rakryan i Watutihang Sri Sangramadhurandhara, serving king Balitung in the east
in 901 A.D.,
2
is
also
self-same
year at Baratengah in Bagelcn, i.e., to the west of Matariim.% and in two other records in central Java, dated 902 and
906 A.D.*
in
Dharmodaya MahaSambhu was succeeded by Daksottama or before A.D. 915. He is referred to as rakryan ri Hino
901
Sri Bahubajrapratipaksaksaya in the Panaraga inscription of A.D. 5 , as Mapatih i Hino in another record dated 906
fl
Mahamantri Sri Daksottama Bajrabahu ( or Bahu7 and bajra ) Pratipaksaksaya in two records dated 907 A.D. Bahubajrfiprapaksaksnyj, in rakryan mahamantri i Hino 8 These records the Surabaya inscription dated 910 A.D.
A.D.
,
as
clearly indicate
position
during
that he
may be presumed
official titles
and
following passages,
2.
4.
5.
7.
J.
O., No.
XXII.
88.
n. 5.
O.,
No.
XXV.
p.
f.
8.
6. O. V., 1917, O. J. O., No. XXI. Krom-Geschiedenis 2 p. 186, O. J. O., No. XXVIII.
SUVARNADVlPA
Of Daksottama,
The
earliest definite
243
four
inscriptions.
as king,
we
possess
There
2
are,
besides,
two
copper-plate
grants of
this
king.
As
his
records have
it
been found both at Singasari and Prambanan, he also ruled over both like Balitung, that,
central Java.
is
certain
eastern
and
The
stone
inscription
of Daksottama,
found at
Gata 3
(Getak) near Prambanan, is dated in the Saiijaya era. It is difficult to determine the epoch of this era, which is at present known only from this and another record, found at Taji*,
in the
same locality. The dates in these two records were read as 693 and 604, and Daksottama is known to have reigned between A.D. 910 (the last date of his predecessor) and A.D.
919
(
the earliest
).
It
is,
therefore,
must have been started sometime between A.D. 217 and 226. But no era, either in Java or in India,
obvious, that the era
is
known
to
this time.
.
5 Recently Dr. Goris has offered a solution of this difficulty lie reads the dates of Gata and Taji inscriptions respectively
as
176 and 172 (or 174), and there remains, therefore, no difficulty in ascribing the foundation of the era to the wellSaiijaya.
known king
by Sanjaya
started
Linga temple in A.D. 732, referred to in the Cangal inscription. The date 176 of the Gata inscription of Daksottama would then
correspond to A.D. 908. This is in conflict with the fact, recorded above, that we possess a record of king Balitung dated 910 A.D. Goris, however, points out that this date is
and, barring this doubtful record, the latest
to
Balitung
i.
907 A.D.
O.,
3.
5.
O. O.
J.
No.
XXX.
J. O.,
No.
XXXV.
I.
4.
O.
(1929), pp.
244
he regards Daksottama as having ascended the throne in 908 A.D. The Taji record, dated in year 172 (or 174) of the Safijaya era, and corresponding to A.D. 904 (or 906), would
then
the
fall in
Balitung's reign.
of dates
new
readings
must be added, however, that Goris have not yet met with by
It
general acceptance.
the
was
originally
a king
his
of Kediri in eastern
authority towards the west, till he became master of Prambanan some time after 904 or 906 A.D. Goris thinks that Balitung
member
probably married in the Mataram dynasty, and thus became a In Balitung and his successor Daksottama, thereof.
of central Java,
who made an attempt to link up the past with the present by putting Safijaya's name as the founder of the family, and using an era associated with
his
Mataram house
name.
Stutterheim, while editing the
Kedu
to
inscription, suggested
name
Dharmodaya MahaSamBut
this
bhu
in 907
is
A.D.
which
well
as the theory of Dr. Goris, that Balitung gradually extended his authority towards the west, is in conflict with Ins. Nos. 4 and 5,
noted above, and also with the two records, dated 901 A. D.,*
of SaAgramadhurandhara, a high official of Balitung,
in eastern
found and central Java, showing that by respectively that year both these territories were in possession of king 5 It is, however, just possible that Balitung was Balitung.
originally
ruler of eastern
Java,
his
marriage in
c.
901
A. D.
made him
the legitimate
ruler of
Mataram,
and he
i.
T. B. G., Vol. 67
(1927), p. 179.
2
,
2.
See
p. 242, footnotes
23.
3.
Krom
Geschiedenis
p.
187.
SUVABNADVIPA
Thus although Dr.
Goris' view offers a
it is
1
it.
245
simple and novel
difficult
to
give
an unqualified support to
Still less
the famous temple of Lara-Jongrang, at Prambanan, was the burial-temple of Balitung, constructed by his minister and
successor Daksottama.
This theory
is
of,
was
ttama.
east-Javanese
Perhaps the only basis of this conjecture is the style which distinguishes Lara-Jongrang from
But
be more
art.
Javanese
We
we
king,
must yet
Dyah
the
dynasty, he regarded the name as "the remainder of an old apanage name from the time of Mataram's hegemony
s
Mataram
The very fact, that so many theories have been evolved round the names of king Balitung and his successor Daksottama, shows that their importance in Javanese history is being gradually realised. For, whatever we might think of these
theories, the
first
fact remains
that these
Java, so
judge.
at
least,
as
enable us
to
1.
Dr. Stutterheim
ff),
fully
in
I.,
Rouffaer has made B. K. I., Vol. 74, (1918), pp. 151-163. 2. other suggestions about Daksa, but they must be regarded as merely of a tentative character.
5.
Stutterheim
246
Daksottama was succeeded by Tulodong in or before 919 A.D. Although we have no definite epigraphic record of this king in central Java, there is hardly any doubt that he ruled over both central and eastern Java. This plainly appears from
the fact that during his rule the self-same officers are
known
to
his
have held
office in
Besides,
central
Java, apparently
under
Two
919 A.D.
and a
at Sukabhumi dated in 921 A.D. *, refer to by name, while two others may be doubtfully attribua The full name of the king is rake Layang dyah ted to him.
stone inscription
this king
was buried
1.
in the forest.
It has
been suggested by
194.
Krom
Sarkar
Krom
Geschiedenis 2
pp. 189-90,
Mr. H.
B.
has shown good grounds for the view that the copper-plates of this king, dated 841, were granted in central Java (Dacca University Studies
No,
i,
pp. 102
ff).
A Copper-plate (K. O. No. XX) confirms the grant of the 2. king, cremated at Pastika, referred to above, by rakryan mapati i Hino Ketudhara in Kartika, 919, A. D. The grant, which was confirmed
f
before by Daksottama, evidently related to certain places in central ravana, Java. But as Tulodong was already a king in the month of
in
month of Kartika, 919, should be Ketudhara may be the same Daksottama with the name Ketuvijaya
the
This supports the view that Tulodong ruled over This view is also confirmed by the
absence of invocation to Hindu gods in the imprecatory formula of his a custom followed invariably in eastern Java. record,
3.
5.
K. O., No,
I.
4.
O.
V., 1924,
p.
no.
p,
Krom - Geschiedenis,
O.
V.,
p.
188,
f.
n. i.
O.
V,,
1919,
67.
SUVAHNADVlPA
that he is identical with the
247
high dignitary rakryan mapatih i Hino, Mahamantri Sri Ketudhara who figures in the record of 1 A.D. 919., and served under both Daksa and Tulodong
.
of
Wawa
as
are
known.
The
2
,
colossal
now
known
Minto-stone
probably
belonged originally to Ngendat to the north-west of Malang. It is dated in 924 A. D., and gives the full title of the king
Sri Vijayalokanainottunga. The as rakai Pangkaja dyah verses of the inscription are identical with those of opening
Wawa
the
inscription
of
Daksottama
an
endowment
The second
inscription
of
Wawa
third inscription* near Kediri, and is dated in 927 A. D. on stone (now in the Museum at Majakerta) is dated probably
in 926 A. D.
official
Sri
The
fourth record of
Wawa's
reign
only partially
known
from one only of the six copper-plates of which it originally 8 It was found in the slope of the Kavi hills, consisted
.
name of the king as Sri Maharaja rake Suinba dyah Wawa. This different raka title is also met with in the Berbek inscription. Thus all the records of Wawa's reign come from east Java, and there is no positive evidence to connect him with
near
by.
The record
gives
the
central Java.
There
is,
shows that
1.
Wawa
f.
was the
ruler of
Mataram.
2
This
is
See
n.
2 on p. 246.
Krom
B.
Geschiedenis
I
,
2.
3.
O. O.
J.
K.
J. O.,
No. XXXII.
J.
4.
cf.
Not.
5.
portion of this record is published in O. Bat. Gen., 1888, p. 84. Kern- V. G., Vol. VII, pp. 179 ff.
O.,
No. XXXIII
4$
THE KINGDOM
Otf
furnished by a comparison of the benedictory formulas used in official records. Up to the time of Wawa, the formula used
is
:
"May gods
is
Me<Jang in Matartai".
the formula
protect the Kraton (palace) of His Majesty at In the time of his successor Sin<Jok
changed into "May gods protect the Kraton of the divine spirits of Medang." These divine spirits no doubt
refer to the deified ancestors of the king.
after
It is
Wawa's time MatarSm had ceased to be the land of living kings who no doubt shifted to the east As the old formula is used in a record of 927 A. D., and the new one of Sirujok
its
first
makes
appearance
in
may be
traced the history of the kingdom of Matar&m in central Java, from the time of its founder Safijaya (732 A. D.)
We have thus
up
Wawa
(927 A. D.),
who may be
regarded as the last king who ruled from a capital in central 1 Henceforth central Java gradually loses its importance, Java.
and
its place is taken by eastern Java as the seat of political authority and the centre of culture and civilisation. The kingdom of Mataram occupied the most prominent
place in Java during these two eventful centuries (732-927 A. D.), and it is quite in the fitness of things that its history should
But other smaller states also same period, and we must now
first
place to the
stone
Dinaya
to
n.
the north of
i.
Malang.
Poerbatjaraka
2.
Agastya,
Cf. p,
p. 65,
f.n,
i.
f.
Krom
Geschiedenis
(pp. 189-90).
3.
254
The
inscription
was
originally
Vol.
57,
pp. 410-44.
pp. 29-35.
Some
additions
O.
V., 1923,
T. B. G., Vol. 64
SUVARljfADViPA
also called
249
This inscription refers to king Devasimha and his son Gajayfina, Limwa. GajaySna's daughter Uttejana was married
to Pradaputra.
The son
of Uttejana
of Agastya
legible,
1
.
unfortunately not
also
built a fine
made
was
This image was consecrated in A. D. 760 by with elaborate rituals performed by priests versed in Vedic lore,
and the king endowed the temple with cows, slaves, and other and other sacrificial necessaries for performing the cam
ceremonies of the god.
The
Agastya-worship,
of
recorded
in
it
this
inscription,
SaSjaya.
It is
dynasty of SaSjaya originally must have brought with it the cult of Agastya,
so very prevalent in that region,
with the
which was
author
and
of the Dinaya inscription probably also belongs to the same dynasty. As this inscription belongs to the eastern part of Java, it is presumed that the dynasty shifted there from central Java,
as the Chinese annals have clearly recorded. Poerbatjaraka has even gone so far as to identify GajaySna of Dinaya inscription with king Ki-yen who removed the capital.
exposition is
ID any case, at given by Krom and Poerbatjaraka was, best, a working hypothesis, particularly as there is no direct
.
Y. v
1.
This
is
the
view of
Poerbatjaraka
(Agastya,
p.
53).
Dr.
Bosch,
He
edited the inscription, interprets the inscription differently. holds that Uttejana, the daughter of Gajayana, was married to
who
king
Janantya, son of Prada, and that this Jananiya was the author of the
inscription.
2.
(
op.
cit. ).
Poerbatjaraka
Krom
Geschiedenis,
pp. 141-42.
32
250
Agastya-worship in the Cangal inscription. This view was so long upheld, mainly because of the absence
of any definite information regarding the successors of SaSjaya, but it has lost its force with the discovery of the Kedu
inscription.
It is
not,
reference to the
mentioned in the Dinaya inscription belonged to the family of Saiijaya, but until more definite evidence is available, it is
better to regard
them as belonging
Java.
to the
There
is
likely that
the decline in the power of the dynasty, as a result of the conflict with the Sailendras, gave opportunities to a subordinate
chief to establish an independent
therefore,
kingdom.
On
the whole,
we
must
hold that
eastern
was another, perhaps even more than one, kingdom Java, until the time of Dharmodaya, who is
definitely
known
to
have
Java.
If
to above,
known
in
assume the
families
Java, including the Sailendra and Sanjaya dynasties, and the century ruling family of Dinaya inscription, during the commencing from the middle of the eighth century A.D.
The Chinese
during
this
period,
and
it is
difficult to ascertain
of these
sent.
We
above
Book
I.
Chap. VI.
that the
T'ang dynasty refer to Java as Ho-ling. But from A.D. 820 onwards they use the term Cho-p'o. Whether this change in name reflects any political change in Java, it is difficult to say, though, as has been pointed out above, the period probably
coincides with
revival of
the end of
the
Sailendra power,
and
the
Mataram dynasty.
SUVAKNADVIPA
At
least
251
embassies were sent from Ho-ling to China dates of these six embassies, during the Tang period. The
six
813 according to Pelliot, arc A.D. 640 (or 648), 666, 767, 768, Two embassies were sent from Cho-p'o (or 815), and 818 A.D.
in
1 A.D. 820 and 831.
Two more
in the History of the Tang Dynasty, one between 827 and a It is 835 A.D., and the other between 860 and 873 A.D.
Chinese gathered evidently from these embassies that the the detailed account of Java which we find in the two histories
of the
Tang
Dynasty.
of the
gives us interesting 8 information regarding the general condition in Java. in the southern "Ho-ling ( Kaling ) is situated on an island
Tang Dynasty
ocean
"The walls
of the
city
are
made
of palisadoes
there is
two
stories,
and he
sits
on a couch
"When
they
cat,
"They have
letters
"Wine
is
made out
;
cocoa-nut tree
feet long
and as
and made
these are cut and the juice is collected large as a man's arm into wine, which is sweet and intoxicating."
of the
Tang Dynasty
;
gives a
somewhat
of Java.*
also
called
Java
it is
fortifications
of
wood and
even
the
are They have largest houses skin of bamboo. couches of ivory and mats of the outer
covered
with palm-leaves.
1.
2.
3.
Groeneveldt
Ibid,
Notes, p. 15*
4-
pp.
12-13.
Ibid,
PP-
3-5-
252
gold mid
is
silver,
;
riiiuo*
The country
very rich
there is a
make wine
drink of
it,
they become rapidly drunk. They have letters In eating they do not use
when one "In this country there are poisonous girls has intercourse with them, he gets painful ulcers and dies, but
;
his
"The king lives in the town of Java. His ancestors Ki-yen had transferred the capital to Po-lou-kia-sseu towards the
east
1
.
On
different
sides
there
are
twenty-eight
of Java.
small
supremacy countries, all are thirty-two high ministers and the Da-tso-kan-hiimg
first of
acknowledging the
There
is
the
them.
the mountains
is
"On
"When
at
the
summer-solstice
gnomon
is
erected of
eight feet high, the shadow at noon falls on the south side is 2 feet 4 inches long.
and
of
colours,
The Emperor
honoured the envoy with the title of Left Defensor of the Office the envoy wanted to waive this title of the Four Inner Gates
;
Emperor praised
title
on both/'
History of the T'ang Dynasty the condition in Java towards the close of
in the
it
New
refers
to
an embassy during
i.
above,
IV,
p,
is
amended
f.
Groeneveldt's translation of this paragraph, as already noted in the light of Pelliot's criticism in B, E. F. E. O., Vol.
n. 2.
225,
SUVARNADVlPA
A. D. 860 and 873.
at
at
is
253
would appear, then, that there was that time a powerful consolidated kingdom in Java, with This least 28 small subordinate states under its suzerainty.
It
in full
we
the sketch of
political
history
The account
Java
;
locates
the capital
in
at least that
the
literal
meaning
of
passage.
literal
Pelliot,
however,
thinks
that
although that
the
meaning, the spirit of the passage seems to be that the capital had been transferred from Java to the east, and there it
remained
at the
translation would,
information
derived
which
even in the subsequent period, c.g. History of the Sung dynasty (9GO-1279), Java is still regarded by the Chinese as the 8 Whether this view is right or wrong, it capital of Java.
appears that the Chinese were, even at a later date, under the
impression that the capital was at Java, and this possibly would not have been the case, if the New History of the T'ang Dynasty definitely recorded a permanent transfer of the capital
in the
from Java
capital
to the east.
We may
a brief
kingdom throughout the T'ang Period, except for period of interval when it was transferred to the east,
of the
The
determined.
The
History of the
"Going gives the following particulars regarding its location from the capital to the cast, one comes to the sea in a month.
On
is at
a distance of forty-five
days.
On
the
south
three days to
the sea.
is
On
five
days".
f,
Now
this
descrip-
B. E. F. E. O., Vol.
IV
p.
225,
n. 2.
3.
Groeneveldt
Notes, p,
15.
Ibid.
254
Surakarta, and
is
to be noted that
many
inscriptions of the
known
as
Mataram
in later days,
the
kingdom of Mataram.
There
is also
Java,
kingdom, and the picture of the powerful kingdom of with twenty-eight small subordinate states under it,
refers to a period
when
the
central
I.
some
theories of
g,,
He
in
thinks, e.
into consideration, in the above account, of Dr. Stutterheim based on very recent discoveries. that Kayuwangi was a descendant of Pu Apus mentioned
found at Krapjak (T. B. G. 1934, p. 89). He has also advanced a hypothesis about the relationship of the last three kings of Mataram which will be noted in connection with Sinciok's reign
an
inscription
(T. B.
ff -).
The copper-plate grant of a king named ri Maharaja Wagisvara found near Gorang gareng (Madiun) raises interesting problems. The date of the record has been read by some as 829 and others as 849.
Stutterheim, accepting the latter view, suggests that this king Wagisvara or ruled after him and before Sinqlok. is either identical with
Wawa
Stutterheim
identifies
this
kayu ramya XVIII), the date of which was hitherto read as 746, but which Stutterheim proposes to read as 846 Saka. This would mean that Wawa succeeded
ri
lumah
king with Sri Maharaja Wagisvara sang mentioned in another record ( K. O., No.
Wagisvara, was succeeded by him, and again followed him on the throne In other words, they were identical, or rival kings. (T. B. G., 1935, PP
420
ff.
J.
G.
I. S.,
1 1
i-a).
Chapter
II.
we
notice a
central Java.
complete collapse of culture and civilisation in The reason for these twofold changes, and the
of the problem.
According to one
view
the* governor of
the
eastern
master, regions successfully struggle between the two powers, accompanied by massacre
revolted
against his
and the
scale,
kingdom but
it may be pointed out that the bear no signs of wilful destruction, monuments of central Java and while the successful revolt of a governor may bring about the political change, it cannot account for the sudden
Java.
As
against this
end of a flourishing culture and civilisation. sec later, even when the political authority
As we
shall
passed from
Kediri to Singhasari, the former continued for many years to be the seat of culture and civilisation. Besides, the facts Java still invoked the aid of that the new king of eastern
the gods of
officials
Mataram, and
continued to
in central
Java,
central
between
and eastern
Cf.,
e. g.,
Veth
Java,
Vol.
(1896),
p.
45.
Brandes
Enc.
Ill, p. 112.
256
propounded
by
attributes
that
some
Ijzerman, He thinks
give rise to the notion that it was divine manifestation to the effect that central Java should no longer The account of a severe epidemic in eastbe inhabited.
volcano, might
Javanese
tradition has
been
traced by
some
to
a vague
central
recollection of an
Java.
In either case, the eruption or the epidemic would be interpreted by the priests as a token of divine wrath against
fit
in with
who would
flight.
naturally be anxious to
seek their
own
safety
by a timely
abandonment of central Java. But then we should expect a sudden and wholesale migration of a people struck by an overwhelming panic or disaster. According to Krom,
the total
for several
records indicate the continuity of a social and cultural life Java in the early years of the east Javanese in central
period.
relied
It
must be remembered,
however,
upon by Krom,
records might refer to the ninth or tenth century A.D. As a matter of fact, there is not a single inscription from central
Java which we can definitely ascribe to a period after Sindok's 8 A third view, suggested by Krom, 3 accession in 929 A.D. attributes the change to a deliberate policy on the part of
the kings of Java.
possible danger to
of the Sailendra
The kings were not unmindful of the which they were exposed from the side kings. They had exercised authority in
and possibly a section of
nabij
ff.
1.
3.
Krom Krom
1928., p. 64.
SUVARNADVlPA
the
257
people had still sympathy for them. They undoubtedly cherished the ambition of reconquering the lost territories.
was easy for their fleet to transport an army to central Java within a comparatively short time. All these would induce the kings of Java not only to shift their seat of
It
authority to the east, but deliberately to leave central Java to its fate, so that it would soon be reduced to a no-man's
land and act as a protection against the possible invasion of the Sailendra kings from that side.
This view satisfactorily explains the removal of the seat of authority to the east, but it would be too much to believe that the kings of Java would deliberately sacrifice a flourishing
region merely at the possibility of a foreign invasion. Nor is it necessary to resort to such a hypothesis in view of the
new
facts discovered.
of
was once more formally restored, epigraphic evidences cited above leave no doubt that the political centre of gravity, if we might use the expression, still remained in the east. This might be partly an effect of
probably the
the
official capital
the
change, and partly the result of a deliberate policy, as suggested by Krom, but the fact admits of no doubt. The
first
culture
and
civilisation
this,
century
after
but
its
gradually
the
shifting
of
political
natural effect.
life
but
change, and central Java lost political importance as well as cultural pre-eminence. Some unknown reasons,- such as a
volcanic eruption, outbreak of an epidemic, or the ravages by the fleet of the Sailendras might have hastened the progress of
decay, but the decay itself had become inevitable on account of the transfer of the seat of authority towards the east.
33
258
But whatever may be the reasons, the broad fact remains that from the middle of the tenth century A. D. the Hindu culture and civilisation began to lose its hold in central Java, as was the case in western Java about five hundred years
Henceforth the political centre shifted to eastern Java, which remained, for another period of five hundred years, the only stronghold of Hindu culture and civilisation.
before.
Sindok, the
first
seems to have
left
A century later with this king, although the relationship Airlangga 1 genealogy had to be traced twice through the female line the author of Smaradahana-kfivya says, In the twelfth century,
of his
with
life
regard
to Sri
Kanadharma
be regarded as the founder of a new dynasty, and seems to have In the gained the throne by ordinary rules of succession.
reign of Tulodong
we
find
him mentioned
as rakai
Halu Sri
.
3 occupying the position of the second high official When Tulodong was succeeded by Wawa, Sindok occupied the highest rank in the kingdom, next only to the king, and is
Sindok,
referred to
as
rakryan
mapatih
to
all
Hino dyah
precedents
Sindok Sri
he was thus
ISanavikrama*.
According
designated as the future king, and there is no reason to suppose that his accession marked any new departure in any respect.
There must, therefore, have been some special reason why his name was singled out by posterity, and he was regarded as the
remote ancestor of a long line of Javanese kings which came to an end with the rise of Singhasari. For the time being we can only suggest that probably he was not the son of his
predecessor, but belonged to a different family, and was hence regarded as the founder of a long line of Javanese kings.
1.
2.
Calcutta Stone Inscription ; Kern V.G., VII, pp. 38 15. Cf. T.B.G., Vol. 58 (1919), P. 472.
:
85.
flf.
3.
4.
SUVAKNADVlPA
In this connection
259
we may
refer to
about Sindoka.
the daughter of
who
Later, one rakryan Bawang was the Stutterheim advanced the view that the daughter of this rakryan
father-in-law of Sindok.
Bawang, named rakryan binihaji Sri ParameSvarl dyah Kebi, was not the wife, but the grandmother of king Sindok, and the queen of Daksa. Stutterheim thus regards Sindok as the grandson of Daksa. He further suggests that Tulodong and
Wawa were
these
(?)
who
succeeded,
one
all
It is needless to
add that
can at
at
the
time
three inscriptions
was Sri Isana-Vikrama Dharmottungadeva. In 3 known to us only from later copies, his coronation name is given as Vikramottungadeva, Vikramadharmotsaha, and Vijayadharmottunga. As regards his raka title, an inscription of the month of VaiSakha in his first year calls him rake Halu*, but from the month of Sravana of that
,
very year
A stone inscription changed to rake Hino 6 Saka (935 or 933 A. D.) dated 857 or of Tengaran ^855 is said to be issued by rakryan Sri Mahamantrl pu Sindok sang
5
it
is
SriSanottungadcvavijaya together with rakryan Sri ParameSvarl Sri Varddhani Kevi. It gives no royal title to Sindok, although
the
name
1. 2. 3.
added
after his.
This
T.BG., T. B.G
O.
1930, pp 182-3.
5
ff1932, pp. 618-625 ; 1933, pp. 159 No. XXII. O., Nos. XL1I, L. ; K.O., J.
,
ff.
4.
6.
:
5is
given
it
edition
2nd Ed.,
Evidently 835
apd 833
260
RISE
OF EASTERN JAVA
can hardly be interpreted as indicating a loss of rank on the part of Sin^ok. The whole thing is an anomaly and
is
nearly
large
number
to
this
period are
known
to
us,
very
little
we
are to judge
kingdom comprised
only the valley of the Brantas river, viz. the southern part of Surabaya, the northern part of Kediri, and the whole of the
Malang
district
between mounts
this
area.
But
we
have
no
means
in
beyond the narrow region indicated above, which must 1 any case have formed the nucleus of his kingdom
.
The
to judge
to Sindok,
attribute many pious copper-plates and these are mostly Saiva in character.
foundations
If
we
are
from the monuments and records, Saivism was the dominant religion with a little of Vaisnavism in the background. No reference to Buddhism is found in the records, but the
composition, or rather a
new
edition,
of the
Buddhist tract
indicates
time
Java.
the
The
edition
preserved in
and
is
was one
of the
most favourite
texts studied
by king Kj*tanagara.
I. 3,
But
cf. f,n. 2, p.
261 below.
supremacy
77,
p.
over
is
Malay, Peninsula
grounds.
(B.K.I.,
Vol.
114),
based on very
insufficient
SUVABNADVlPA
Sindok was succeeded by
queen
Sri
1
,
261
as
his
IfiSnatunggavijayS.
The
of
our only source of information about the successors of Sindok, compares her to a swan and uses
Airlangga
which
is
One
The meaning
but in the case of the queen it can only refer to her association with the sect of Buddha (Sugata). The daughter of Sirujok, thus appears to be a follower of Buddhism.
Airlangga, lg&natunggavijay& was married to king Sri Lokapala, and the issue of this marriage was king Sri Makutavamfiavardhana.
According
to
the
Calcutta
pra&asti
of
He is described as belonging to the family of IdSna, i.e. Sindok, to whom he owed the throne, and not to the family of his father
Lokapala,
who
we
name, but
difficult
to identify
any of them
with the
son-in-law of Sindok/
1.
The
and
in
partly in
stone bearing this inscription, written partly in Sanskrit Kavi, probably stood originally at Surabaya, and is now
the Calcutta
for the
Museum.
cf.
It
85)
Kavi portion
also
was edited by Kern (V. G., Vol. VII, O. J. O., No. LXII.
p.
An inscription of a king Lokapala is preserved in a copy of 2. the Majapahit period. It is dated in 782 aka, but Krom argues from internal evidence that the date is too early ( Geschiedenis, p. 215 ).
He
to
and
king LokapSla, son-in-law of Sindok. In that case Sinctak must have ceased to rule before 950 A.I). On the other hand we possess an ri Isana Vikrama i.e. Sincjok dated 971 A.D, inscription of rake Hino
(O. J. O. LVI). But its genuineness may be doubted awful mistakes even in the king's name.
as
it
contains
of
Recently Stutterheim has deciphered the first portion of a record king Lokapala, the rest of which was edited a few years ago. This portion contains a date, which is read by Stutterheim as 802 or,
possibly,
812
and
the
palaeography of the
262
King Makutavaihgavardhana had a daughter Mahendradatta, She was married to also known as Gunapriyadharmapatnl.
Udayana, who
belonged
to
is
is
renowned
royal
family.
Mahendradatta, none of whom apparently enjoyed the royal power, had a son named Airlangga. Airlangga was married Java east to the daughter of DharmavamSa, king of
(parvayaviidhipati). This short account preserved in the prasasti of
raises certain difficulties.
is
:
Airlangga
The question
Dharmavaihsa ? His title, king of cast Java, may indicate that he was one of several kings in that island. But the Sanskrit expression might also mean an old (purva)
who was
this
king of Java, or, as has been suggested by Krom, east Java of the might have been used by way of contrast to the expansion kingdom under Airlangga. In any case, as we have seen above,
ing
Sindok was undoubtedly the ruler of east Java, and at the present state of our knowledge, it is best to take DharmavamSa as belongPossibly he was the successor of to the same royal line.
MakutavamSavardhana.
His
name,
which
literally
means,
to a different 'family of Dharma', may indicate that he belonged 1 as Krom suggests, he possibly married a daughter family but, of MakutavamSavardhana, of perhaps the elder sister
,
Mahendradatta.
inscription,
him, is fully in keeping with this date. Stutterheim also refers to another inscription of Lokapala, dated 778 S found in Ratu Baka, and suggests that these two as well
according
to
(-8$6A.D.), as the Majapahit record refer to one and the same king Lokapala, who (O.V. 1925, would thus have ruled from A.D. 856 to 880 (or 890). This would raise T.B.G. 1935, PP- 437 ff-) 60. PP- i7-3 ; 1926, p.
the problem of the relation of this king with the kings of Alataram, noted in the last chapter, and it would be impossible, in this case, to
identify king
I.
This
gives a
different
explanation of the
to
name
(T.
B.
G.,
Vol. 70,
PP-
i?!-'^).
a royal
According
family
him,
Dharmavarhsa means
relationship
with
by
Carriage, something
like prince-consort.
StJVARNADVlPA
As
regards
Mahcndradatta,
alias
Gunapriyadharmapatnl,
we
learn from
name was
discovered
Now
a
a few inscriptions,
are issued
by
married
is
name
of
Gunapriyadharmapatnl
husband
Dharmodayanavarmadeva.
not
difficult
to
recognise in the latter the full name of Udayana, the father of Airlangga. Thus the parents of this monarch were ruling
in the island of Bali,
fact that the
title.
The
name
the
of
placed before
own
It
right as
king's
Udayana, perhaps a
authority
and
Udayana and
Mahcndradatta
were
Dharma-
vamSa.
Dharmodayana and Mahendradatta between 989 and 1001 A.D., while the name of the former
of
alone
appears in records dated 1011 and 1022 A.D. It would thus appear that Mahendradattii died some time between 1001 and 1011 A.D., and Udayana alone ruled from that
time.
1
i.
The tomb
at Jalatuno!a,
in
the
gunggan,
generally
A,D.
977-
name Udayana and the date 899. It was regarded as indicating that Udayana was cremated there in This view cannot be upheld, as we have seen that Udayana
contains the
was
up to the year 1022 A.D. Recently at the time of repair, the old-Javanese word 'gempeng'* has been found at the end of the date ; and it has further come to light that the name Udayana stands beneath
alive
a series of figures in relief, a long with another name Mrgayavati. the meaning of the word 'gempeng* is not definitely known,
Now
and
Mrgayavati was not the name of Udayana's queen. Stutterheim takes gempeng as equivalent to gempung meaning vinata (destruction) and
holds that
Udayana
died
in
of Jalatunda
person
who
D. 977.
264
Calcutta
prasasti of Airlangga,
as
his
father-in-law,
ruled in
Java
beginning of the century A.D. His name is associated with two important books in old-Javanese language, viz., the law-book and the old-Javanese translation called Siva-Sasana of
eleventh
towards the
close of the
MahabhSrata. From these we learn that his full name was Dharmavam^a teguh Anantavikramottunggadeva.
Sri
As
inscription,
in
(near Magctan)
dated A.D. 991, found at Sendang Kamal 1 the Residency Mcdiun, mentions Sivathus be
referred
to the
6asana and
may
period of king
sent
it
Dharmavamsa. The very next year an embassy was from Java to China, and the following account of
preserved the history of the
is
Sung dynasty.
"In the 12th month of the year 992, their king Maraja sent an embassy consisting of a first, a second and an
assistant envoy,
:
to go to court and bring tribute. The first envoy said "Now that China has a rightful master again, our country comes to perform the duty of bringing tribute."
"The envoys were dressed in a similar way as those of Persia who had brought tribute before. With the assistance
of an
khi,
from Kien-
of
many
vessels
Udayanas may be identical, and explains the discrepancy of date by supposing that Udayana prepared his tomb long before his death. 2 Stutterheim regards Udayana, husband of (Geschiedenis pp. 234-5).
Gunapriyadharmapatni, as an inhabitant of Bali (For Stutterheim 's views Oudheden Van Hali, Vol. I, p. 16, cf. B. K. I., Vol. 85, 1929, pp. 479-483
;
f.n. I).
devl
As regards the identity of Gunapriyadharmapatni and Sang Ajflawhose name appears in a record at Sembiran, dated 1016 A.D., the
1
question will be discussed later in connection with the history of Bali. For the Balinese records cf. Ep. Balica (1926) pp. 27-30.
1.
O.
J. O.,
No. LVII. This record is the oldest Mediun in East Javanese kingdom
Notes, pp. 17-18.
positive evidence
Groeneveldt
SUVARNADVlPA
had come many times
to his country
265
come
to
He
(
also
told
).
that
his
king
was
Aji
Ma-ra-ya
Maharaja
"The envoy was treated well, and remained for some time When he left, he was presented with large quantities in China. of gold and silk and also with good horses and military arms, according to what he had asked."
This description clearly shows that Java was not in touch with China for a long period. The embassy to China may, therefore, be taken to indicate a new epoch in the foreign
policy of Java,
when
of isolation, she
was
neighbours. imposition of political supremacy over Bali, referred to above, showr< that she had begun to pursue a policy of aggressive imperialism. After the conquest of Bali she evidently turned
intercourse
with her
The
her attention to her neighbours, the Sailendras. The Javanese envoy, sent to China in 992 A.D., related "that his country
enmity with San-fo-tsi and that they were always shows that the struggle with the together". This fighting Sailendras had probably begun a long time before 992 A.D.
was
in
But, as
we have seen in a preceding chapter, the struggle assumed a serious turn about this time, and about 990 A.D. the kingdom of San-fo-tsi itself was invaded by Java. Indeed
kingdom was reduced
to
that
envoy even sought the aid of the Chinese emperor against Java. Possibly the Javanese embassy of 992 A.D. was sent to counteract the activity of the enemy in that direction. In
any case there can be hardly any doubt that Java took the offensive and gained great success at about 990 A.D. Thus under king DharmavamSa the international glory and prestige
such
straits
that
its
of
Java were
revived
towards
the
close
of
the
tenth
century A.D.
of the king
was
shortlived.
By
1003 A.D.
266
RISE
OF EASTERN JAVA
Java and was able to send an embassy to China without any hindrance from tho latter.
four years of this a great catastrophe involved Dharmavams*a and his kingdom in a common ruin. The exact
Within
is
not
known
to
us,
but we learn
from tho Calcutta prasasti of Airlangga that in 1006 A.D. Java was destroyed by a great catastrophe (pralaya) which
overwhelmed it like a sea. 'Then the flourishing capital city, which was hitherto a seat of joy and merriment, was reduced to ashes, and the great king met his end in 1007 A. D/
It has
is
to a natural
calamity like
story
and arduous
fight
vix. 9
the restoration
of
was caused by
Who this
king was,
it is difficult
to
say.
throw a direct light on in Airlangga's prasasti which "Haji Vuravnri an vijil sangke this question reads as follows LvarSm" i-e. "the king (of) Vuravari when he came out of
seems to
:
LvarSm." Now this might mean that the king of Vuravari was the invader. But, then, we hardly know anything of Vuravari, not even if it was in or outside Java. The whole an attempt to identify question then resolves itself into
Vuravari,
had
to carry on Unfortunately, none of them has been satisfactorily identified. Rouffaer has proposed to locate these places in the Malay
Peninsula
3
,
but his
arguments
are
far
from
convincing.
There
1.
is
nothing to show
Djawa, Vol.
I.
2.
3.
This view is put forward by Krom (Geschiedenis, pp. 234-5). According to Rouffaer Vuravari, which means clear water, is an
(c.
SUVARNADVlPA
267
But whoever the invader may be, the complete success which he attained in his object of destroying Java may indicate
that he
This
is
Krom who
Sailendras did not take any direct part in the struggle, they set up a third power to destroy their powerful enemy. Apart
state of hostility
Further, as Krom points out, it was a question of life and death for a maritime and commercial power like the Sailendras
to keep down their powerful rival state which had lately evinced a desire to become a sea-power, so that it might not again
endanger not only the sea-routes as it had lately done, but also the Straits of Malacca which was the only means of communication between Sumatra and Malay Peninsula, the two essential
parts of the dominions of the Sailendras.
These arguments, no doubt, have great weight, but it is to difficult explain why, under these circumstances, the The two Sailendras should remain in the background.
countries had lately been engaged in open hostilities, and there
was nothing
fight against Java, or from taking advantage of the situation when Java had gone down before her enemy. And yet the Sailendras
by king
of Vuravari or
we
locate
Vuravari
meaning
Malay Peninsula.
Similarly
Lvaram,
sweet water,
later
is
Lengkasuka, i.e. old Johor. Among the places where Airlangga fought battles, Galu (jewel) is identified by him with Johor (Jauhar) and Hasin with I-tsing's Mahasin i.e. Singapore. (B. K. I. Vol. 77, 1921, pp, 43 73, 90-92, 112-125,133). But many of these names occur in Java
Krom-Geschiedenis 2 pp. 241-2.)
^cf.
268
as
of the ^ailendras.
at
The fact that the restoration a time when the kingdom of the
enemy may be
a
pure coincidence. On the whole, it is difficult to maintain with any degree of certainty that the Sailendras had anything to do with the catastrophe which overwhelmed the kingdom
of Java.
be, his efforts were eminently and the disruption of Java was complete. King DharmavamSa died, and his palace and kingdom perished with 1 then only sixteen him. His young son-in-law, Airlangga,
successful,
few
faithful
followers.
clothed monastery, they shut themselves up in a small in bark of trees, and lived on food supplied by themselves
monks and
Evidently
the partisans of
Dharmavamsa came
to
know
his
whereabouts.
In 1010 some people, including eminent Brahmanas, met him with a request to assume the royal authority. Evidently he
was then
merely acclaimed as the legitimate king by the partisans of Dharmavamsa, and it does not appear that he had gained any real power and authority. In that portion of his
is
piwsasti which
i.
written in
is
Kavi language,
as Er-langga.
it is
The name
some
Rouffaer
also
spelt
Of
of
late,
been
langga.
discussion
about
the
as
meaning
had
sipped
the a
name
Er-
name
i. e. t
water-sipper,
(
enemy
)
symbolic waters
of the sea
B. K.
I.
Stutterheim
name
of a place, in Kediri,
dowry by Dharmavamsa
in
Java,
like
title
Dyah
Balitung
'Er
Prince of Balitung)
(Feestbundel,
Vol. II.
According to Poerbatjaraka
(
Er-langga
means.
'He who
1
we know
for
(
langg= Sanskrit Langh = 'to cross. ) As certain that Er-langga came from Bali, this meaning is very
water
appropriate
Djawa, Vol.
10, 1930, p,
163
).
SUVARNADVXPA
ceremony of
his
269
reverend
priests
consecration by
the
of
held in 1019 A. D.
As
it
royal
name
of "rake
AnantaAirlangga After his consecration the king offered Vikramottungadeva". worship to his great-great-grandfather who was buried at
ISanabajra, viz., king Sindok to
Halu
Lokesvara
DharmavarhSa
whom,
in
We
to the
that Ifianabajra
was
situated a
certain that by 1019 A. D. Airlangga made himself master of the territory in the neighbourhood of Pasuruhan. The earliest record of Airlangga, 1 dated 1023 A. D., refers
on the Surabaya river, and thus his kingdom at this time may be regarded as having extended on the sea-coast from Surabaya to Pasuruhan with a belt of inland region It could not have been a very large corresponding to it.
to places
subsequent story of Airlangga's expeditions that Java was at that time divided into a large number of small independent states. Whether
kingdom.
Indeed
it
this
was the natural consequence of the destruction of the central authority, or whether it was due to deliberate policy
of Java's
foreign
enemy
to
in order to
It
weak,
that
it is
difficult
say.
may be
Airlangga
seems
to
have kept
By
1028 A. D. Airlangga
felt
number of petty kings during the first four years. Some of them submitted to his authority and those that refused to do In 1029 a king Bhlsmapraso were either killed or expelled. bhava was defeated at Vuratan. During the two following severe contest ensued with the king a somewhat years Adham&panuda. Airlangga achieved a complete victory and
j,
K.O., No. V,
270
RISE
OP EASTERN JAVA
burnt his enemy's capital city. In 1032 Alrlangga defeated a powerful queen of the south and returned with a large booty.
same year he had to finally reckon with the king As of Vuravari, who was the cause of Java's calamity. already remarked, Vuravari was most probably a place in
The
Java
itself
in
any case
soil
it
is
safe to
fight
of Java.
Vengker
still
1 think of military expedition outside Java. tell us that the king of Vuravari perished.
The
If he
inscriptions
a foreigner
Java.
it
may
also
mean
a
that he
The king
district
of Vengker,
its
small
state
the
modern
of Madiun, with
capital
at Setana,
now remained
the only powerful foe of Airlangga. Already in 1030 A. D. had inflicted a defeat upon this enemy. Although Airlangga
it
was not
of a decisive
character,
it
Vengker, to remain on the defensive and left Airlangga free to reckon with his other powerful enemies. In 1035* in the month of Bh&dra Airlangga led an expedition against Vengker
and gained a great victory. Two months later Vijaya was imprisoned by his own troops and killed, thanks to the diplomatic move of Airlangga, learnt from the
on a large
scale,
book of Visnugupta. With the fall of Vengker, the war of restoration came to an end, and Airlangga became the undisputed master of Java.
and
solidarity
of
his
dominions
inscription,
An
We should presume on the same ground that Hasin, whose 1. was defeated by Airlangga, was also in Java and not in Malay king Peninsula, as suggested by Rouffaer ( B. K. I., Vol. 77 (1921), pp.
73-75-)
Kavi language, portion of the inscription, written in as 1037. Possibly it is a mistake for 1035. Kern, however, gives the date thinks that 1035, the date given in the Sanskrit portion, is a mistake
2.
The
for
1037.
SUVABNADVlPA
271
dated 1031 A. D., 1 places it at Vuatan Mas, but from another 2 we learn that it was removed record, dated six years later to Kahuripan. None of these two places has been identified
,
yet.
The
seal of the
king was
Garudamukha, an indication
During
Airlangga's
reign
foreign lands.
8 Truneng contains a passage which has been taken to mean that he had overthrown his enemies in foreign lands (paradvlpa paramandala). But the
An
inscription at
many
lacunae to be properly
understood,
case there
and
no
perhaps
the
reference to his
is
peaceful relation
outside Java.
Even
his
relation
with
On
the other
hand
his records
contain a long
list
of foreign peoples
who
Annam, and Cambodge. Three other countries vix. Aryya, Pandikira, and Remen are more difficult to identify satisfactorily. The first possibly means North India as opposed to Dravida
country in the South, and Pandikira may be a combination of Pandya and Kerala. Remen, which has been identified by
Krom
with Pegu, may be the same as 'Ramin' or Ramni of Arabic writers and thus a part of Sumatra. 6
1.
O.
J.
O.,
it
No. LVIII
The
date
p.
is
given here as
;
1021,
but
Krom
(
reads
),
as 1031
(Geschiedenis,
258)
Cf. T. B. G.,
Vol.
59
1921
p. 423-
2.
3.
4.
5.
O. O. O.
J. O.,
J.
No. LXI.
O.,
No. LXIV.
L1X, LXIV.
Ferrand
Textes,
Vol.
I.,
Krom
n. 2.
Geschiedenis, p. 260,
p. 97
p. 25.
f.
272
RISE
OF EASTERN JAVA
Brantas river
The Kelagen
burst
its
banks at Varingin Sapta (modern Vringin pitu) and 1 caused great havoc when Airlangga built a dam to stop it. It is interesting to note that even irrigation works undertaken
in the nineteenth century
Airlangga.
The same
have profited by this dam built by inscription informs us that the work of
joy to
Airlangga caused
captains
of ships
is
great
the foreign
merchants and
Now
it
who thronged the port of Hujung Galuh. evident from the context that Hujung Galuh was
of the Brantas river
at the
mouth
Surabaya itself, or a former port in its immediate neighbourhood which played the same r6le as Surabaya docs now.
From another
inscription
which,
though undated,
to
may be
period,
we come
know
of another
sea-port Kambang-putih at or near modern Tuban. All these indicate that maritime trade and commerce flourished in Java
of
In the early records of Airlangga we come across the name a lady as the most important official next to the king.
full
Her
not
name
is
"rakryan mahamantri
Hino
She
Sri
Sangramaevidently
vijaya
Dharmaprasadottungadevl."
was
this for the period usually queen, queen at assumed the title 'Sri ParameSvarl'. She has been regarded She evidently held the high as the daughter of Airlangga.
the
position
up
to A.
D.
1037.
an inscription dated A. D. 1037, we find another same position in the Pandangkrayan inscription 3 person dated A. D. 1037, the Calcutta stone inscription dated 1041 4 The A. D., and the Pamotan inscription dated A. D. 1042. full name of the latter has, unfortunately, not been preserved.
full titles in
in the
But
its
first
part
is
Sri
Samaravijaya and
it
ended with
1.
2. 3. 4.
O. O. O.
J.
J. O.,
No. CXVIII.
;
V., 1915, p. 70
cf.
1925, p. 20.
Unpublished,
Inv.
No.
1827.
SUVARNADVIPA
'Uttungadeva',
royal family.
It
273
and so the person probably belonged to the may be mentioned here that Narottama, who accompanied Airlangga in his flight in 1007 A. D., remained his trusted official to the end, and his full title was rakryan kanuruhan pu Dharmamurtti Narottama DanaSura. 1
in 1041 A. D., a monastery at Pucangan,
According to the Calcutta inscription Airlangga established, modern Penanggungan, the place where he found a shelter in his dark days. According to a Javanese tradition, Kili Suci, a nun belonging to the royal
family of Kahuripan, practised asceticism at Rouffaer concludes from this that this royal nun
this place.
is
no other
than the daughter of Airlangga, and the monastery was founded 9 for her sake
.
retired
ascetic
According to a later Javanese tradition, Airlangga himself from the world in his old age and lived the life of an
(named
rsi
Gentayu).
An
edict
dated A. D.
1042,
is
mpungku sang
lived in the temple of Gandhakuti. This singular combination of secular and spiritual titles perhaps points to a monarch who adopted a religious life but still continued to
who
The
record is no other than king Airlangga himself. In that case Airlangga must have left the world some time between the month of MargaSlrSa, 1042 A. D.,
the date of the
of the
Pamotan inscription, and the month of Magha same year when the edict referred to above was issued.
inscription*
An
1.
Tlrtha,
O.
No. LXl,
is
in
II
2-3,
given here,
inscription
is
preserved
in
a later copy.
4.
(
1887
),
p. 376.
35
274
RISE
OF EASTERN JAVA
1
and another later record confirms a boon originally granted in 1039 A. D. by Bhatara Guru with the seal of Garuda-
was the well-known seal of and thus the reference is apparently to the same Airlangga king who, after his ascetic life, was thus cremated at Tirtha.
across Tirtha as the name of a monastery near an inscription of Sindok. 8 The findspot of this names of places contained in it, and the inscription, the
Pavitra, in
detailed
mukha.
Now Garudamukha
Now we come
Hayam Wuruk
as
given in
Nagarakrtagama
all
slope of Penanggungan. Now near this place are found the remains of an old site, the bathing-place of
in the eastern
among
other
things a
fine
statue
of
Visnu on
Garuda.
made
the suggestion
that Belahan
was the
king himself is figured as Visnu. The identification of Tirtha with Belahan, on independent grounds, lends a strong support 8 The figure of Visnu is a beautiful piece of to this view.
sculpture,
it
and according
life.
to
Rouffaer's theory,
an eventful
We
may
also infer
of Airlangga.
That the
first
literature, too,
book of
Kanva.
its
kind,
by poet
The book military expeditions. was thus apparently written before 1035 A. D. when Airlangga
set out
on his
O. O.
J.
J.
1.
No. LXX.
2.
T. B. G., Vol. 55 (1913), pp. 596 ff; Vol. 56, pp. 442-44 3. Vol. 65, pp. 222-5. Stutterheim, in the last named article, explains Tirtha as a burial place, and not a proper name. Published by Friederich in Verh. Bat. Gen., Vol. 4. 23 (1850),
and by Poerbatjaraka
in
B. K.
I.,
Vol. 82 (1926).
SUVARNADVlPA
With
the
275
adoption of an ascetic life, king Airlangga passes from our view, and we do not know anything about the There is no doubt that his career was one last days of his life.
of the
most interesting
life
in
The
various
phases of
married,
at
personality.
through which he passed ever since he was age of 16, mark him out as a striking He was indeed a hero, in the arts of war as well
the
as in those of peace.
Chapter
HI.
life
should have himself sacrificed his life-work by such a fatal measure. There must have been very strong reasons for
inducing
him to this decision. According to Nagarait was out of pure affection that Airlangga crowned krtftgama
1
both his sons as kings. An older document, an inscription dated 1211 Saka ( = 1289 A.D.), throws a new light on this A learned Pandit named Bharada is said to have question.*
divided Java into two parts, named Janggala and Pafijalu on account of quarrel between two princes eager to fight. Bharada
is
also
the
is
referred to in Nagarakj* tagama as the person to whom work of division was entrusted, and in both cases Bharada
Java by Airlangga. Now the reference to quarrel between two princes, eager to fight, as the reason of the division, seems to be significant. It is clear that two sons of Airlangga
1.
2.
I.
Inscription
on the Image
Vol.,
of
Mahakobhya
189 ff;
cf,
at
VII, pp.
also
SUVARNADVlPA
to contest
277
claimed succession to the throne, and both felt powerful enough It by force. It seems that the aged father, unable to reconcile them, and in order to avoid the inevitable civil war,
was compelled
to take the only step which offered some reasonable chance of a peaceful succession after his death. It was not then a pure sentiment, but a stroke of dipolmacy which
have seen in the last chapter that a daughter of Airlangga held the highest position in the state till 1037 A,D. She was evidently the crown-princess, and legitimate heir to the throne
through her mother, the daughter of king DharmavamSa. But she took to an ascetic life, and it disturbed the regular order of succession. This was undoubtedly the main cause of the
dispute between the two sons of Airlangga by junior queens. For, while the right of the eldest child by the chief queen to succeed to the throne was not questioned by any, positive rules
We
among
the
Perhaps
each
of
ful civil war loomed large before the eyes of the aged king, he cut the Gordian knot by dividing the kingdom among the two claimants.
and Janggala. kingdoms cannot be clearly ascertained. According to Nagarakytagama, and the inscription of the thirteenth century referred to above, the sage Bharada fixed the boundary by means of magical water (Kumbhavajrodaka). These statements, together with other traditions
of PaSjalu
of a later date, convey the idea that from the northern coast the sage flew in the air while water was flowing from his pot all along the way, indicating thus the boundary between the
two
Unfortunately, he could not complete his aerial journey up to the southern coast, as he was stopped by
kingdoms.
his
water pot beneath the ground. Evidently the boundary between this spot and the southern coast was marked by other means.
278
THE KINGDOM OF
KAI3IRI
Various opinions have been expressed on the nature and meaning of this popular tradition, and attempts have been
made
to
line
on the basis of
this
popular story
It is
seems to be generally agreed, that PaSjalu comprised the western half of the kingdom, including the modern districts
whole
it
of Blitar, Kcdiri,
including Malang, Pasuruhan, Rembang, and Surabaya, excepting the south-western part of the last which belonged to the former. How far to the west the authority of
eastern half
PaSjalu extended, it is difficult to say, and included at least a portion of central Java.
it
name of the western kingdom, was soon and towards the close of the thirteenth Kadiri, century it was called Gelanggelang. The capital of the kingdom was, throughout, the city of Kadiri also called Daha. There
PaSjalu, the
official
changed to
this place is now represented by the town of has thus preserved the old name. Kediri* which
is
no doubt that
Nothing
of Janggala.
is
known
as to the
name or
position
5
of the capital
Bakong
on
the
Porong
river, at Sidukari*,
or at Jedong
hill.
on the northern
however,
continued to be
slope of
is
the
Penanggungan
The
probability,
still
ff Stein E.g. Bosch T. B. G., Vol. 58 (1919)-, PP- 4*9 106. ; Rassers ( 'De Pandji roman/ pp. O. V., 1916, p. Callenfells
J
135
Vol.
ff.,
229
ff,
299
ff
ff.;
89
(1932),
pp.
regards
to
Bayalangu
Formerly
Kediri.
Daha used
have
annals and
inscriptions
satisfactorily
Daha and
3.
p. 230.
I,
4.
Hageman-Indisch.
Archief,,
I.
pp. 616
ff.
5.
De
Kopiist,
I,
p.
389.
SUVARNADVlPA
the
capital
279
of the
eastern
kingdom.
For
it
seems quite
when
into two, the old capital with the territory in its neighbourhood
This seems to get some corroborafrom the fact that in NagarakptSgama, two daughters of
the founder of the kingdom of Majapahit are referred to as queen of Kahuripan and queen of Daha.
We possess very
this record is only
Majapahit period,
named Mapaiiji Alanjung Ahyes. But known from a very corrupt copy of the 8 and its authenticity may be doubted.
Next comes the Surabaya stone inscription of a king whose full title is 'rake Halu pu Jurau (?) Sri Samarotsaha Karnna8 keana DharmavamSa Kirttisingha Jayantakatunggadcva. The rake-title of the king is, the same as that of Airlangga, and the seal-mark of the latter, viz. Garudamukha is also adopted by the king. Further he uses the family name of Dharmavamla, which the kings of Kadiri never did. The contents of the inscription relate to the use of some water-works.
The
is
for hundreds
The
first
other two figures are 8 and 2. Now figure indicate that it cannot be 8,
lies therefore
But the
out of the question, if we consider the and the form of the alphabet. may
of the king
We
thus
reasonably
(=1060
A.D.).
With the exception of these two records, no other certain document of the kingdom of Janggala has come down to us.
Indeed,
1.
it
may be doubted
is
if
the
kingdom
p.
of
Janggala
This
the view of
Krom.
not
yet
Geschiedenis,
275.
).
2.
The
It is
record
is
published
p. 282).
now
in
the
Surakarta
Geschiedenis,
O.
V,,
1928,
pp. 64,70.
3.
280
that a queen
Kamelvara
is
said to have
is
On the whole, the available evidence leads to the conclusion that the kingdom of Janggala did not last long, and while a portion of it was annexed to
no mention of any king or kingdom.
Kadiri, the remainder was
semi-independent chiefs. About the end of the twelfth century a new kingdom was established at Tumapel near Malang,
and although
it
kingdom, the ground than the fact that Tumapel once formed a part of the
defunct Janggala kingdom.
to
pretended to represent the old Janggala claim was probably based on no more solid
We
find a large
number
all
of records
belonging hardly any exception, originate from the present district of Kediri. It may, therefore, be safely presumed, that in the
of them, with
twelfth century A.D. Kadiri was the principal kingdom in Java and the centre of its culture and civilisation, and that to the
outside world
The
represented the kingdom of Java proper. Javanese embassy to China in 1109 A.D., the honour
it
1
shown by the Chinese emperor to the king of Java in 1129 9 and the reference in Annamesc records and 1132 A.D. to merchant vessels of Java plying to Annamite ports in the
,
all
is
the
kingdom of Janggala.
The
Sri
Sastraprabhu and Jayaprabhu. His stone inscription, dated A.D. 1104, has been 3 found at Sirahketing in Madiun Probably this Jayavar?a
titles
.
name
is
known
to us is
is
the same as Varsajaya under whose royal patronage the poet Triguna wrote the famous old-Javanese poem, Krnayana*
1.
Groeneveldt
2.
3.
4.
515
ff.
SUVARNADVlPA
which
later
281
temple of Panataran.
the concluding stanza of Sumanasantaka by Monaguna , but as he is not mentioned as a king, it is doubtful if we have
to take this
name
From 1116
onwards,
we come
across
a scries of records 9
referring to kings bearing exactly the same titles, but with the first part written variously as BameSvara, ParameSvara
and Kame6vara.
is
Kame^vara, and the two other forms are due to wrong 3 On the other hand Krom says that of inscriptions reading the two forms Bamesvara and Kamcfivara are clearly legible on records. In view, however, of the identity of titles,
really
.
Krom
to
agrees with Poerbatjaraka in referring these records and the same king, whose name was probably As a stone inscription of Brumbung 6 dated Kame^vara*.
one
1115 A.D., gives all the titles, KameSvara must have ascended the throne in or before that year.
The
difficulty
latest
record of
is
dated
respectively in A.D. 1135 and 1136. Poerbatjaraka has inferred from this that the two were contemporary kings
kingdom
7
.
This
is,
however,
not very
same part
has shown good grounds for the belief that the date, which has so far been read as 1140, is really s to be construed as A.D. 1130
of the country.
.
Krom
1.
Brandes,
P.
Beschrijving
der
Handsch,
Van
(
der
Tuuk
Vol. 3
(1QI5)
2.
cf.
(
T. B. G., Vol. 56
)>
1914
pp. 242-252.
3.
T. B. G., Vol. 58
1919
PP- 479-483.
4.
Krom
5
6.
8.
7.
),
T. B. G., Vol. 58
pp. 419-424.
(1919), p. 488.
1921
36
282
THE KINGDOM OF
KAI3IRI
King Earned vara, whose reign thus covers the period A^ D. had a grandiloquent title "Sri Maharaja
Sri
Kamevara
Parakrama
SakalabhuvanatustikSrana
Digjayottunggadeva.
SarwSniv&ryyaviryya
tions
His
His inscripis 'death's head' called Candrakapala. record gifts of land, but supply very little historical information. It is curious to note that the name of one of
his
officials,
rakryan Kanuruhan,
the
highest
minister
of
The name
of another
"Sang Juru Pangjalu" reminds us of the official name of the kingdom which occurs but twice in the records of the
Kadiri period.
Smaradahana 1
by
Dharmaya
a king KanieSvara, who may be identified with the under discussion, if not with the later king of the same king
name.
He
calls
the
country
the position of Java in the middle of the Archipelago location of the kingdom of Kamesvara in the middle
island
or the
of the
It is
its
east
and west.
connection referred
Kashmir, was, by a curse of Siva, transformed into the While it no doubt refers to the prevalence island of Java.
of Saivism, the shape of Java like an old Indian manuscript
for immediately after this the poet an weapon called 'Lipung' which is pointed at both the ends and thin in the middle, which serves
also
to,
may
be referred
compares the
as the handle.
island to
The poet
Kama
(Cupid),
Sri
and
wonder
of the world,
is
called
Dahana.
i,
Isanadharma
Poerbatjaraka
ft.
Agastya, p.
T. B. G., Vol.
58,
1919
),
pp. 461
SUVARNADVIPA
the family.
283
his
descendants,
to Sindok-lgSna.
KSmeSvara's queen is referred to as Sri Kirana, the daughter of Vajadrava and the best of women in Janggala. As no royal title is bestowed on Kirana's father, it may be presumed
that while the geographical
it
name Janggala was still in use, did not form any separate kingdom but was part of Kadiri.
According to Poerbatjaraka, King KameSvara and queen Kirana are the historical personages round whom the whole cycle of PaSji-legends have been evolved (cf. Bk. V, Ch. IV.).
KameSvara was succeeded by his son Jayabhaya, one names that have lived in popular tradition
of
in
Java.
In the case of Jayabhaya, the explanation is perhaps to be found in the fact that he was the patron of the famous 1 poem Bharatayuddha. Two of his records are dated in 1135
and
title
1136
Sri
A. D.,
while
third
record
Maharaja
Suhrtsingha
Sri
nindita
These records
personal
name
one case, as
royal
Sang
is
case, as
the
end.
The
seal-mark
1157,
is
most
flattering
terms.
He
regarded as incarnation
of
Visnu,
whom
the
All the king's enemies bow down before him, even the king of the golden land (Hetnabhupati).
to refer
to
SuvarnabhQmi
1.
2.
The
date,
read
here
(1914),
as
1146,
should be
Vol. 59
3.
(
corrected to 1136
),
cf.
T. B. G., Vol. 56
p. 243,.
1921
p. 420.
Inv,,
O.
and
284
with Sumatra
any historical not improbable, it conclusion on the extravagant eulogy of the court-poet. The poet Sedah could not complete his poem Bharatain the reign of Jayabhaya.
yuddha, and the task was accomplished by Panuluh presumably For Panuluh also wrote a poem,
to
GhatotkacaSraya refers to king Sri Jayakrta. He may thus be regarded as the successor of Jayabhaya, but this docs not tally with the tradition that the son of king Jayabhaya was
called Jayakatvang.
latter,
1
Nothing
more
is
known about
the
but he
to
is
ing
jagat
whom
invokes at the beginning Sri KameSvara, most probably the son of king Kamesvara
however,
necessarily the
case,
as
Kama
invoked
elsewhere, without any reference to king Kainesvara. The difficulty is increased by the fact, that an inscription of
i. e. only Kajunan, south-east of Kediri, dated 1160 A.D. later than Bharatayuddha, gives the name of a three years king which is neither Jayakrta nor Jayakatvang, but His Majesty rake Sirikan Sri Sarwesvara Janarddhanavatara
8
Vijayagraja
SamasinghanadSnivaryyaviryya Parakrama
Digin
is
jayottunggadeva.
homonymous
royal
name occurs
date
Pikatan*
whose
lost.
The seal-mark
is
a flying figure.
hardly anything more than the name of the next king, His Majesty rake hino Sri AryycSvara MadhusudanSvatSrarijaya Muka. . .ryya Parakramottunggadeva, referred
We
know
dated 1171
II. (
I,
Van
T. B.
der
Tuuk, Kawi-Bal.
1914
Nederl,
Woordenb.
2.
1899)
1
p.
179.
j.
Cat.
Ibid.
p.
80.
G., Vol. 56
),
PP.245
ff-
<*
p. 246.
SUVAENADVlPA
A. D., 1
with
the
figure
8
285
as
its
of a
Ganea
seal.
An
inscription at
gives the
near Blitar, whose date is illegible, Waleri, same seal and the same royal name, with slight changes, and may thus be referred to the same king.
found at Jaring, stone inscription, dated 1181 A. D. near Blitar, furnishes the name of the king His Majesty Sri
Parakramanindita Handabhuvanapiilaka Sri Gandra. The inscription refers to Digjayottunggadeva a royal officer 'Senapati sarbajala' which evidently means
Kroncaryyadipa
an admiral.
The
to
kingdom of Kadiri possessed a fleet. This was evidently necessary for maintaining the hold of
Javanese
see,
the
shall
kingdom
in less
authority over eastern archipelago, and so there is nothing surprising in the fact that the kingdom of Kadiri should
is
known from an
is
inscription
Sri
title
His
Majesty
Digjayottunggadeva. south of Kediri, refers to the kingdom of Kadiri. It is only partially legible and does not supply any valuable historical
information.
It
that case
said
I,
on
the
basis
II.
8
work,
to
KameSvara
1.
Ibid.
The
V.,
inscription
is
now
at Kediri
cf. Inv.,
No.
1873.
2.
3.
is
O. O.
1917, p. 62.
J.
corrected to
4.
5.
The reading Hantfabhuvanamalaka O., No. LXXI. Handabhuvanapalaka by Krom (Geschiedenis, p. 293).
Krom.
in
This
He
arguments
I
favour
K^mesvara
are not
286
THE KINGDOM OF
After KameSvara II
KAI)IRI
name
to
we come
is
across the
of king 1200 A. D. 1
The
full
name
of the king
SarvveSvara
TrivikramSvatSrSnindita
Spnggalaficana
According to one of
his records,
established his power over the kingdom of Kadiri by driving out somebody from the kraton of Katangkatang. Another 8 record of the king , found at Panataran and dated 1197 A.D.,
refers to the temple of Palah,
account of journey of king Hay am Wuruk that it refers to the group of temples at Panataran. The building, whose remains
we
may
is
no
doubt that
was
cessor of
KSmeSvara
II.
A.D. It is not, however, was the immediate sucking Srngga A stone inscription,* found at Sapu
Angin, and dated in 1190 A.D., contains the name of Krtajaya above the seal in the middle of the record. The text of the record also refers to Krtajaya, but does not give him any royal
convincing
pp. 491 rather
ff
).
cf.
T.
B. G.,
Vol.,
58
1919
PP- 47$
ff 5
Bosch,
follows
:
ibid,
The
indicates
Lubdhaka,
to
the
refer
to
the
other
It may its foreword, was written shortly before the fall of Kadiri. thus be reasonably inferred that Vrttasaficaya was written shortly before 1222 A. D., the date of the fall of Kadiri, and Lubdhaka was
composed some time after that. Smaradahana, the work of an elder contemporary of Tanakung, should, therefore be referred to the period 2 of Kamesvara II ( cf. Krom Geschiedenis, pp. 298-9 and foot-notes ).
1.
For the
first
three,
which are
J. O.,
No.
Not. Bat. Gen., 1883. (2) O. V. LXXVI. For the other two see the
O. O.
J. O.,
No. LXXIII.
if,
3.
O.
J.
O., No.
LXXIV.
4.
SUVARNADVIPA
title.
287
the
This Krtajaya may be identical with the last king of dynasty, and we must then presume that he issued the
of
inscription
Otherwise we have to assume that he was a king in 1190 and thus preceded king Srngga.
It
AJX
addition
to the
kings mentioned above we have references, in literary works, to two others whose position in the Kadiri royal family we are unable to determine. Reference has already been made to Jayanagara whose full name or! Garbhe,4varar5ja pSduka
jagatf occurs
in
a poetical
at the
may
request
of the
The language
the
poem
indicates that it
then
we
was written during the Kadiri-period. But have no further information about the king
Prakrtivlrya.
last king of the Kadiri dynasty was The Krtajaya. Btone inscription of Wates-Kulen, 5 which is usually ascribed to king Srngga really belongs to this king. It shows all the
The
and
refers
to
the usual
list
of
administrative
contains the
officials.
AD. 4
seal
name Garudamukha.
and
his
A
(40
:
The former
and
scriptures.
king as
i.
p. 180.
3.
O.
J.
O,,
No. LXXVII.
4.
288
when they refused, showed them But far from submitting to the royal command, the clergy left him in a body and sought refuge with the chief of TumapeL The latter attacked Kadiri,
some miracles
overawe them.
make
and Kytajaya, being defeated, took to flight (1222 A.D.) and sought refuge in a monastery. The details of the rise of Tumapel will be described in the next chapter. It will suffice
here to say that with the defeat of Krtajaya perished the kingdom of Kadiri. The author of Nag. Kr. (40 4) has paid a well-deserved tribute to the king. "When the king of Kadiri
:
says he, "a cry of anguish burst forth from the whole land of Java".
fell",
Before,
dynasty,
we must
however, we leave the history of the Kadiri take note of the very interesting accounts
These accounts
two
sources, viz.,
Sung dynasty (960-1279 A.D.) and the Chu-fan-chi of Chau Ju-kua. The agreement of the two accounts leaves hardly any doubt that they both refer more or less to the
and from what has been said above regarding 1 the date of Chau Ju-kua we may easily assume the state of things described by him to be true of the period 1175-1225 A.D.,
same
period,
i&.,
fall
of Kadiri.
of
only be followed in broad outlines. there It were three political powers exercising appears The most authority over the different parts of the island.
condition
Java,
as
described
is
powerful kingdom, comprising the greater part of the island, named Sho-po whose dependencies, both in and outside
Java,
numbered
Sin-to
fifteen.
The
western
named
(=Sunda)
(70)
as stated before.
The
third
1.
See above,
p. 193.
2.
in the
pp. 75-85, 62, 70. The figures within following paragraphs refer to pages of this work.
Chau Ju-kua,
bracket
SUVARNADVIPA
It is
is
289
said to be "a branch of the Sho-po country," but there no doubt from the detailed account that it formed a separate
state under its own king, and its currency, products, and manners and customs differed to a certain extent from Sho-po.
an easy and various conjectures have been made 1 Chau Ju-kua says that "to the west it borders on Sin-to, to the cast it adjoins Ta-pau". Later on, he adds "The country of Ta-pan connects
location
The exact
of Su-ki-tan has
not been
.
matter,
Great Sho-po,
it is (also)
called Jung-ya-lu".
Krom suggests the possibility of its though with the port Hujung Galuh. But although Chau Ju-kua implies in the passage quoted above that Ta-pan
is
the same as Jung-ya-lu, he contradicts himself when he names both these states separately as dependencies of Sho-po.
Leaving out
course
is
this
identification,
the natural
and
obvious
may then be located in central Java, along the northern coast, between Pekalongan and Samarang, while Ta-pan would correspond to the region between Rembang and Surabaya.
no doubt tempting to see in the two kingdoms of author the famous kingdoms of Kadiri and the handiwork of Airlangga, and indeed Rouffaer Janggala,
It is
to identify
Su-ki-tan
the
Chinese
has worked out this hypothesis in some detail. But, then, as Su-ki-tan was decidedly to the west of Sho-po, we have rather to identify the latter with Janggala, and the former
But from all that has been said above, Kadiri have been the most powerful kingdom in Java, and Sho-po has perhaps been rightly identified by all scholars
with Kadiri.
appears to
with this kingdom. An attempt may be made to reconcile these two views by supposing that Janggala comprised both the eastern and northern coast of Java, and the latter alone is referred to by the Chinese authors, under the name Su-ki-tan.
i.
Rouffaer
Vol. 65
B. K.
(
1.,
Vol. 77
(1921),
T. B. G.,
1925
),
p. 126.
Krom
37
290
Sukitan
pointed out in support of this view that 1 used in old-Javanese as equivalent to Janggala
.
proceed with the assumption that Sho-po, equivalent to Kadiri, denoted the most powerful kingdom in Java, with nearly the whole of the island, except Su-kithat as
it
Be
may, we
may
it.
It is difficult to identify
its
the
We
1.
may
Pai-hua-yuan
4.
2.
Ma-tung
above
it
(=Medang);
is
3.
Ta-pan (=Tumapel
)
;
(but as said
5.
most
likely
).
Tuban
The
Hi-ning (=Dicng),
that
which refers
the
oversea
dominions
Among
its
fifteen
According to Chan Ju-kua "each of them has its own chief and they have vessels plying between them" (84).
on islands.
of
these
islands
"The natives
these countries)
arc strong
but savage and of a dark bronze colour. They wrap a cloth round ) their limbs and tattoo their bodies. They cut
their hair
and go barefooted.
;
They use no
vessels
in
eating arc
or drinking
which
"As a standard
and pints of Sago.
of exchange
the
people used
either
only
pecks
or
how
to write
how
it is
to count
it
"(84).
is
Although
almost certain that they refer to the eastern isles of the Archipelago. Rouffaer has tentatively suggested the following
8
identifications.
1.
B, K. B. K.
Ibid.
I.,
Vol.
77
1921
1921
),
p.
136.
2.
I.,
Vol. 77
),
pp. 137-8.
3.
Rouffaer
of
takes
Ping-ya-i,
and
Wu-nu-ku
as
two
states
instead
Ping-ya,
I-wu,
SUVAENADVlPA
6.
;
291
7. Ta-kang (=Sumbawa or Timg-ki (=New Guinea ) 8. Flores); Huang-ma-chu (= South-west New Guinea); 10. Ti-wu (=Timor ); 11. Ping-ya-i 9. Niu-lun (=Gorong) 12. Wu-nu-ku (=Ternate) south-east of Celebes ) (=Banggai,
; ;
13.
Ma-li (=Bali)
14.
Tan-jung-wu-lo
= S.W. Borneo).
It is
only fair to add that excepting the last two, the identifications are purely conjectural. About these two, Bali and Borneo, Chau
Ju-kua adds that they "are rather more extensive than the others they raise large numbers of horses for military service and they have a slight knowledge of writing and counting/'
;
thus quite clear that Java had begun to exercise political domination over Bali, Borneo, and the savage and semi-savage people of numerous other islands of the east.
It is
Kadiri
laid
the
foundation
upon
which
of
the
imperial
structure
vast
Chau Ju-kua has also supplied much interesting information regarding the manners and customs of the people and the system of public administration. As we have had occasion
to
note above, the Kadiri period witnessed a high degree of All these will bo development both in art and literature.
On
the whole
the
Kadiri
period is one of the most remarkable in the whole history of Java. It saw the beginnings of the Javanese empire, and
It is
Rockhill.
cf,
in
addition to
the
article
above,
1925
)
"De
eerste
Schipvaart
der
Nederlanders
II. p. 410.
naar' Oost-Indie
Chapter IV
of
Singhasari,
These have been focussed in the famous work Pararaton which gives a long and romantic account of Angrok from the time of his birth. Bereft of supernatural elements, which make him an offspring
or incarnation
of
Brahma,
Visnu, and
Siva,
Angrok
is
represented in these legends as the son of a peasant at Pangkur, who spent his early life in highway robbery till he was taken
in the service of
of
his
his assassinated master, married Angrok Queen Dedes, and made himself ruler of the
Tumapel. widow,
territory to the
east of
Mount Kavi.
establishment of this
new power soon brought Angrok with Krtajaya, king of Kadiri, whose name is given the personal in Pararaton as Dangdang Gendis, evidently name as opposed to the coronation name. Fortune again
into conflict
The
smiled on Angrok.
As we have
was
the
Angrok took
He
.
took
name
son
over
fertile
to the
cast of
as capital.
a date, the year 1182 A.D. But in view of the great interval between this and 1222 A.D., the date of the fall of Kadiri,
Par,,
p. 62,
j.
Krom
SUVARNADVlPA
than that of his coronation. 1
293
fight
(Singhasari)
became
inevitable.
Rsjasa, evidently
still
helped
by the clergy of Kadiri, declared war against his enemy. A decisive battle took place at Ganter in 1222 A.D. After a and bloody encounter Krtajaya's brother and commanderlong in-chief Mahisa Walungan died in the battlefield, and the army,
bereft of its leader, took to flight.
The
rest of
Kptajaya's
Krtajaya fled from the battlefield of Ganter with a few followers and was heard no
more.
Kadiri was henceforth included within the
kingdom
the
first
royal family.
governor.
He
was
at
first
called
Tumapel.
Gradually
record of 1294 A. D.
the kingdom was called after its capital Singhasari, a name which replaced the old one Kutar&ja. According to the official
version Rajasa
Kadiri.
re-united the two kingdoms of Janggala and Whatever we may think of this, there is no doubt
that with the foundation of Singhasari, we enter on a new phase of Javanese history. The downfall of the dynasty that
traced
its
Matarfim
finally
snapped the connecting link with the old traditions and the Therewith the old Hindu culture and history of central Java.
civilisation
rapidly recedes into the background and and more a purely Javanese element takes its place.
more
reign
we
know
practically
nothing.
The
We
of queen
I.
Dedes by her
Kr.. 40
:
first
2.
Nag,
1-3.
Nag.
Kr., 40
3 44
*i
294
him and his other brothers and he learnt from his mother that he was sisters. enquiry really the son of the former king who was killed by Rajasa.
in the king's attitude towards
to
He, therefore, employed a Pangalasan (probably a high official) murder the king, and as soon as the deed was done,
if
to revenge
the death of
The year
is
of
Rajasa's
death
is
given
as
A.D. 1227
earlier
in
The
date
to be preferred, in view of the greater authenticity of the 1 in Pararaton source, and in view of some details given
.
Rajasa had four children by queen Dedes, the eldest of whom was Mahisa Wong Ateleng. By a second wife he had four
eldest of
whom was
visited
Panji Tohjaya.
The
at
in
Saiva
The
place
was
the temples are described in Nagarakrtagama (37). The place was to the south of Singhasari, but its exact location
cannot be determined. The Saiva temple in which the king was represented as Siva is praised for its beauty, but the Buddhist temple was in ruins. Both have now disappeared.
fortunate.
of
Prajiiaparamita,
at
found
at
Singhasari
Leyden, is locally known as 'putri Dedes'. Krom suggests on this ground that it might be a representation of the famous queen Dedes.
preserved according to Nag. Kr.) who is simply as the eldest son of Rajasa, succeeded officially regarded He maintained his hold on the whole kingdom the latter.
AnQsapati
(Anusanatha,
According to Pararaton he was killed by his half-brother Tohjaya while watching a cock-fight and thus atoned for the foul crime by which he came to the throne.
and died
in
1248 *.
in the
O. V.
Krom
3.
SUVARNADVIPA
south-east of Malang, which
295
1
.
for
the tragic end which had over taken hispredecessors. Here, of his again, Pararaton gives us a long and romantic story death. The king had two nephews, Rangga Wuni, the son of Amlsanatha, and Mahlsa Campaka, the son of Mahlsa Wong At first the king liked them Ateleng, referred to above.
keeping them
called
princes.
alive.
The
king, thereupon,
sent for a
kill
man
ordered him to
The royal priest who overheard the king, warned the princes who immediately took to flight and concealed themselves in the house of one PaSji Patipati. The king,
foiled
of
his
victims,
accused
Lembu Ampal
of treachery,
By latter, seeing his life chance, he took shelter in the house of Patipati, and having met the princes there, he made a common cause with them by a
and the
in danger, took to flight.
solemn oath.
From
his
succeeded, by various
and
to incite
4
in particular Rajasa
and
Sinelir,
1.
F.
M. Schnitger has
a 6iva image
in
the Colonial
).
Museum
at
Amsterdam
it
B. K.
I.,
123-128
cf.
Poerbatjaraka identified
'Agastya' p. 88.
2.
who evidently played Rajasa and Sinelier are the two groups Who they were cannot be exactly part in the revolution.
Krom's
idea
that they were body-guards of the king,
(
be the
most acceptable
The
the guards against the king is ingenious. raising murdered at night a member of one group, and then secretly a few days later a member of another group. This led to a free who accused each other of the foul crime. fight between the two but when he failed to pacify the two groups, he The king intervened,
He
296
When
a mass attack against the palace. The king took to flight, but was attacked 011 all sides by the enemy and died after 1 He was cremated at this he had reached Katang Lumbang
.
place,
in Pasuruhan.
Tohjaya was succeeded by Rangga Wnni, who ^ascended under the name Sri Jaya A.D. a the throne in 1248 Visnuvardhana. He also bore the titles 'Sakalakalanakula madhumarddhana kamaleksana', and 'mapanji SminingratA
The
grandfather of the king, rix. Rajasa, and not to Visnuvardhana himself, as having united the kingdom of Java, as has wrongly been suggested by the wrong interpretation of a passage
in another inscription
3
.
Mahlsa Campaka, the cousin of the king, and his companion in the dark days of sorrow and misery, shared the kingdom with the latter. He took the title 'ratu angabhaya' and the
coronation
in other records
The title is explained a 'subordinate king', and thus shows that he was not the first person although the bearer had royal title, in the kingdom. Perhaps like the two kings in Siam, one
name
'Narasinghamurtti'.
as
on ]y
in
this
case,
of course,
to be killed.
Visnuvardhana
exercised real
Lembu Ampal
Thus both the groups were angry cleverly utilised the situation by
The account
p. 3".)
This date occurs in an inscription (O, V. 1918, p. 169). It 1249 A. D. for the death that the dates given in Pararaton viz. proves of Tohjaya, are all wrong. of Anusapati, and 1249-50 for the reign 2 (1917), pp. Versl, Med. Kon. Akad. V. Wet. Afd. Lett. 5
2.
:
3.
315-7.
(1922),
Poerbatjaraka
pp.
meaning
in
B,
K,
I.,
Vol. 78
440 &
SUVARNADVlPA
king.
297
political
is
stronghold, Mahibit, near modern Terung, on the northern bank of the Brantas, not far from the later city of
1
.
The king made a strong fortification in Canggu, Majapahit on the Brantas river, near modern a point strategic
This place came to be of great importance after foundation of Majapahit, about 20 miles to its south. the It may be that the foundation of Canggu led to the
Pelabuhan.
determination of the
site of
Majapahit.
the at Mandaragiri in 1268 A.D.,* and the only king of Singhasari to die a natural death. He was represented as Siva at Waleri and as Buddha at Jajaghu. At Waleri (modern Meleri near Blitar) only a few decorated stones remain of the building. The other monument, at Jajaghu, is now known as Candi Jago, a famous monument, in a fair
Visnuvardhana died
first
Malang.
Kftanagara, the son and successor of Visnuvardhana, had 8 and already been anointed king by his father in 1254 A.D.
he issued a copperplate under the auspices of his father, in In another partly legible record dated 1256 A.D. 1266 A.D.*
only the
titles of
5
Kftanagara, no * those of Visnuvardhana can Since 1268 A.D. Kjtanagara ruled alone. He
titles
which vary in his different records. 1266 A.D. he is called "Sri Lokavijaya
parakramanivaryyaviryyalanghap. 77.
I.,
Praastajagadisvaranindita
1.
Nag.
Kr., 41
1'ar.,
The
location
of
Mahibit
is
B. K.
in
Nag.
but as
record,
dated
1269 A. D.
earlier date
accepted.
4.
5.
1911,
pp. 117-123.
296
niya'.
cudamani arpitacaranaravinda 6okasantapitasujanahrdayambuj&varodhana-svabhava." The title Narasinghamurtti, assumed by the king after the death of his uncle and father's co-sovereign
Mahla Campaka 9
The
and
political
in foreign politics.
with the
sent to Bali in
The
was evidently a short-lived one for it soon became independent and had to be subdued again in the Majapahit period.
deliberate imperial
was evidently the result of a expansion. The Nag. Kr. tells us that the authority of the king was established over Pahang, Malayu, Gurun, Bakulapura, Sunda, and Madhura.
expedition against Bali
policy of
The
Malayu in this list undoubtedly denotes the kingdom of name in Sumatra, now called Jambi. We have already seen that it formed an independent kingdom till it was conquered
that
and formed a part of it since seventh century A.D. At the time when Nag. Kr. was composed Malayu denoted the whole of Sumatra. But in Krtanagara's time it evidently meant only the kingdom of Jambi. Pararaton refers to a
by
Srlvijaya,
its good and only attributes to this unwise step the downfall of Kjtanagara. But we have reasons to believe that the expedition
which
left
Tuban on
ships in 1275
political
1.
2.
Mah!a Campaka
and was buried
41
at Kumitir
Kumeper
Par., p, 77.
).
SUVAKNADVlPA
the
299
way
of that land.
An
inscription
on the pedestal of an image, found at Padang Roco near Sungai Lansat in the Batanghari district in Jambi, tells us that in the year 1286 an image of AmoghapaSa with his thirty followers
was brought from Java (bhurni Java) to Suvarnabhumi and set up at DharmaSraya by four high officials at the command of His Majesty Vikrama Maharajadhiraja Sri Krtanagara The image was worshipped by all the Dharmottunggadeva. subjects in Malayu Brahmana Ksatriya, VaiSya and Sudra and above all by His Majesty the king Srlmat Tribhuvana-
The assumption of the superior title Maulivarmadeva, by Krtanagara as against the simple royal title of Maulivarmadeva, and reference to the people of Malayu as subjects, leave no doubt that in 1286 A.D. the kingdom of Malayu, which,
raja
according to the findspot of this inscription, extended far into the interior of Sumatra, formed a vassal state of Java. It was a great achievement and
may be regarded
established
as the
crowning
military
his
He
Javanese
land
Among
the other
Nag. Kr., Pahang, which in Majapahit period was used as the collective name for the Javanese possessions in Malay Peninsula,
probably
Peninsula.
that
name
in
the
Similarly Bakulapura, which ultimately denoted the whole of Borneo, is probably used here for the south-western
Gurun, probably Gorong or Goram, means the eastern regions. Thus even according to a restricted interpretation of Ng. Kr. we may credit Krtanagara with having
corner of that island.
established his political authority in
of Borneo and Malay Peninsula, Bali, Sunda, and Madura. Thus under Krtanagara Java rose to be the leading power in
the Archipelago.
i.
The very
Sailendras
Lett. 5
(or their
Versl.
Med. Kon.
2(1917),
pp. 306-339.
300
successors)
could neither prevent Java from obtaining a secure footing in the heart of Sumatra, nor remove her from the position so obtained, shows that the sun of their glory had set
their place.
It is perhaps not altogether unconnected with the imperial policy of Java that we find about this time a princess of that
island,
to
Champa (1287-1308 A.D.) an arduous struggle delivered herself from the yoke of Kublai
Khan, the dreaded Mongol ruler of China. Possibly the alliance between Java and Champa was the result of a common enmity to the Mongol emperor. For the latter had, as usual, invited the king of Java to come in person to the imperial court and
pay homage to the Mongol emperor (1281 A.D.). Krtanagara avoided the task on one pretext or another till the crisis came in 1289. Unable to bear any longer with the importunate and
humiliate himself in the imperial court, pressing invitation to Kytanagara sent back the Chinese ambassador after mutilating
his face.
it
It
was a
defiant challenge
fail
to take organised an expedition against Java, but up. before it could reach that island an internal revolution had removed Kj-tanagara from this world.
He
For,
inspite
of the
brilliant
and
failed miserably in his internal imperial policy, Krtanagara Pararaton draws a very unfavourable picture administration. of the king and represents him as always busy with eating
undoubtedly too exaggerated a picture to be regarded But that the internal condition of Java was far from seriously.
is
satisfactory appears
from
reference to
frequent revolutions.
the rebellion of one
down
who was evidently powerful enough Ten years later he had to suppress
R. C. Majumdar
ChampS, Part
II,
p.
220.
SUVARNADVlPA
301
But the final blow was given by the governor of Kadiri. The details supplied by Pararaton attribute the debacle mainly His first to the wrong choice of his officers by the king.
minister
Mpu Raganatha
But the king not having paid any heed to his advice, he threw up his office in disgust and took up a humbler job, the post of adhyaksa at Tumapel (SinghasSri).
for the welfare of the state.
The king now appointed Kebo Tengah his minister. The new minister's only
Apaiiji Aragani
as
care
was
to serve the
king with good dishes and wine. Another capricious act of the king was to raise a very low man Banak Wide to a high position
when
under the name Arya Viraraja. What is worse still, man proved to be untrustworthy, the king appointed him to be governor of Sungeneb in east Madura
in court
this
!
evil
Aragani was instrumental in sending the expedition to Malayu, thus denuding Java of most of its troops. Viraraja saw the opportunity and entered into a treasonable
correspondence with his friend Jayakatvang, the governor of Kadiri since 1271, who longed for an opportunity to secure the At the instigation of Viraraja, Jayathrone by any means.
katvang undertook the perilous venture. He sent a small part of his army towards Singhasari by the northern route and it advanced with music and banners. King Kptanagara, who all
this while
first
at
whom
he regarded as
favourably disposed towards him. But when at last the sight of the wounded men convinced him of the reality of the
situation,
he sent
all
army
in the north.
The royal army was commanded by two One was prince Nararyya SanggrSmason of
known
Lembu Tal
(i.e.
Mahlsa
Apafiji
in
Aragani
Paftji
may
different
stated
Vijayakrama.
(Mid. Jav.
Trad,
p.
48)
302
Campaka).
himself.
In the meantime, however, the rebel troops another larger and better equipped army from Kadiri advanced along the southern route and reached SinghasSri stealthily
the
north.
without any opposition. They stormed the palace and, according to Pararaton, found the king and his minister drinking wine. Kebo Tengah tried to save the situation, but the king
and the minister both fell by the sword of the Kadirian troops. This took place in the year 1292 A.D. in the month of Jyesja
(Jyaisjiha).
The
detailed accounts of
is
accounts that
we
The
Singhasari inscription
erection of a
This obviously gives a very different idea from a debauched king meeting with his end while drinking wine. Again, while Pararaton represents the king as a worthless debauchee, the
Nag. Kr. gives him the highest praise, and expressly states that "none of the predecessors of the king was so famous as he."
While both are obvious exaggerations, it is difficult to strike a The imperial just balance between the two extreme views. of the king, as we have seen above, was eminently policy successful and brought credit and distinction upon the kingdom of Java. The learning and scholarship of the king and his
be regarded as worthy of the highest Nag. Kr. the king was "well-versed in According praise. the six-fold royal policy, expert in all branches of knowledge, quite at home in (Buddhist) scriptures, and eminently righteous This may appear to be an obvious in life and conduct".
zeal for
Buddhism may
to
also
and spiritual exaggeration, but similar praise for scholarship excellence of the king, the lord of the four continents (dvlpa),
is
Jaka-Dolok
ff.
Inscription
cf.
The book
j.
Kern
Verses 10-12,
SUVARNADVlPA
Rajapatigundala
is
303
and
this
view
is
and
alterations at
a later date.
members
of
Mandala
(religious circle)
need
not be afraid of any trouble from the royal officials. Indeed, the king's passionate love for Buddhism has become proverbial.
He
life
all
and injunctions of the religion. He was deeply versed in Buddhist writings, particularly the Tarka and Vyakarana-Sastra (logic and grammar) and that which concerns the inner self of
man.
tised
He
thoroughly
a work
prac-
The king
yoga and samadhi, and made many pious foundations. But his crowning achievement was the setting up of an image of
Dhyani Buddha Aksobhya, which depicted his own features and thereby established his identity with Buddha.* After his consecration as Buddha the king assumed the epithet 8 The image of the king representing him as JfiftnaSivabajra. was originally set up in 1289 A.D. at Wurare and Aksobhya then removed to Majapahit. It now stands at Surabaya and
is
who
strongly believe
Krom
work
is
the
same as 'Sanghyang
tantra
bajradhatu Subhuti' composed in the time of Sincjuk. See ante, Chap II. 2. This is described in the Jaka-Dolok inscription engraved The inscription, written in Sanskrit, on the pedestal of the image.
has been edited by Kern ( V. G., Vol. VII, pp. 189. ff.). This is the name given in Jaka-Dolok Inscription (verse la). 3. The Nag. Kr. gives the variant Jftanabajresvara and the Singhasari (Brandes* Inscription of 1351 A. D. Monograph 1909 p. 38 ), has
Jftanesvarabajra.
On
name
the bronze
is
replica
of
Amoghapas'a
of
in
Can^i
given as
''Maharajadhiraja Sri
Krtanagara
Vikrama-Jftana-Vajrottunggadeva," names.
to
combination
secular
and
is
believed by
its
Bosch
resem-
304
The
the
if
we accept the theory about the character of the king's religious faith so elaborately propounded by Moens in a very
Moens has shown that the particular form which the king was devoted may be taken as the Tantrayana or Vajrayana. This degraded form of Buddhism was accompanied by objectionable and even revolting practices such as the pancawakara (or five enjoyments) and the sadhanaof
learned article. 1
Buddhism
to
cab'a or secret sittings of devotees of both sexes. To a true devotee of this mysterious cult the practices would no doubt
highest commendation, but to an would appear obnoxious and horrid. The pancamakara, for example, includes the free use of wine, and when Pararaton refers to the drinking debout of Krtanagara he was
evidently telling the truth, though he viewed it in a different light from Prapanca who remarked in an approving manner that the king scrupulously followed the prescriptions of religion.
there is perhaps no contradiction between Pararaton and Nag. Kr. regarding the salient facts in the king's career, but there was a world of difference in the two view-points.
Thus
to the
Tantrik form of
to divine the
Buddhism.
cause
While, therefore,
not
difficult
of, or even to justify to some extent, the high praises that the Nag. Kr. bestows upon the king, they should not blind us to the fact that the king showed but little skill in administration
of his kingdom.
to accept the
picture of the king, as given in Pararaton, drinking wine even while the enemy was within the palace, we may take, as
historical,
Engrossed by
i.
and
religious practices
T. B. G. Vol.
LXIV
1924
),
pp. 521-558.
SUVAENADVlPA
at
305
threatened him and did not evidently take sufficient precautions against them. According to Pararaton, the Kadirian rebellion
took place at a time when most of the Javanese troops were absent on an expedition against Malayu. Krom disbelieves this
on the ground that the date of the Malayu expedition 1 whereas the rebellion took place only in 1292 A.D.
not
of
difficult to believe,
is
1275
It is
first,
however, that although the expedition it was by no means the last. To keep
the sea might necessitate several expeditions, and the Pararaton may after all be right in its assertion that Jayakatvang
we
Even apart from this must recognise the fact that the imperial policy of Kftanagara was sure to weaken the resources of Java in men and money, and the troops stationed in the various newly
conquered
territories
authority of the king, the best part of its troops when very likely denuded Java of the serious rebellion broke out. Another trait of the royal
to
maintain the
viz. the
even
e.g.
Jayakatwang and
least,
Vlraraja,
it
may not be
which almost
absolutely
unfounded.
of
A
is
religious
enthusiasm
bordered
on fanaticism
men
hardly compatible with a true discernment and things. can well believe that the king,
We
and keenly busy with his religious had hardly any time or capacity to look around and keep a vigilant eye on the possible disturbing factors His implicit trust in others gave him a false of the kingdom.
engrossed in his books
practices,
idea of security.
Heedless of the impending dangers that threatened him on all sides, he wildly pursued his imperial
religious activities
it
and
Thus
was
and rushed headlong towards destruction. was brought about by precisely and career which rendered him so high
It
was
this
paradox
Krom
39
Geschiedenis, p. 340.
306
mainly responsible
such radically different pictures of king Kytanagara as have been preserved to us by our two chief authorities,
in a
According to Nag. Kr. king Krtanagara was cremated temple of Siva-Buddha and was represented by a beautiful
of
it
Siva-Buddha (or images of Siva and Buddha). is due to this fact that the king himself is often Perhaps referred to as Siva-Buddha. According to the same authority his ashes were also buried at Sagala, where he and his chief queen Bajradcvl were represented by Buddhist figures of Vairocana and Locana 1 According to Pararaton the king's
image
.
Purvapatapan at Singhasari. Moens thinks that the king was represented by a Bhairava image which was originally at Singhasari and now
called
at Leyden.
The Nag. Kr. does not tell us where the temple of Siva-Buddha was situated. But we know that the Candi Javi
(modern Jajava) near Prigen, was a Siva-Buddha founded by Krtanagara. The identification of this
is
temple temple
rendered possible by the detailed account of the journey of Hayam Wuruk. PrapaSca gives an account of it in Nag. Kr.
It
j.
The
also
verses of
to
different
2
,
interpretations.
Krom-Geschiedenis
123
ff.
;
pp.
T. B. G. 1933, PP
Stutterheim
Stutterheim,
pp.
715-26.
Krtanagara- Vairocana
former identifies
it
the image to represent and the Bajradevi- Locana, with an Ardhanari image in the Berlin Museum.
and
Krom
take
as
united
with
referred to in Nag. Kr., must be an Amoghapasa-Ardhanari with an Akobhya image in the head-dress.
Moens
According
viz.,
(i)
to
in
;
Moens
Linga
Amoghapasa-Ardhanari
Moens
SUVARNADVlPA
307
an image of Aksobhya. It was struck by lightning in 1331, and at present only the foundations of the temple remain.
however, by no means certain that the Siva-Buddha temple mentioned in Nag. Kr. is the same as Candi Javi. Krom thinks that it was situated at Singhasari where the
It
is,
is
the
same
referred to in Pararaton.
temple now existing at Singhasari. But Krom rejects this view* and holds that no trace remains either of this temple or of the temple of Sagala, the second burial place of the king's remains according to Nag. Kr.
main
In concluding the account of king Krtanagara we may refer to the very brief but interesting account of his kingdom
contained in the writings of Marco Polo (1292 A.D.)*. The Venetian traveller describes Java as a prosperous kingdom, under a great king. It was very rich and noted for its trade
and commerce.
1.
Brandes
2.
Moens
3.
Krom
Yule
4.
c, pp. 547 ff. Inleidung, Vol. II, pp, 84-6. Marqo Polo, Vol. II, pp. 272-5.
Chapter V.
of Krtanagara, the
To
as
he,
no doubt,
possible to restored the supremacy of Kadiri, having regard which had been lost nearly seventy years ago, after a glorious
traitor.
it is
appeared as a usurper
and
But
also
him
be,
was too
considerations to be
weighed seriously. The danger which overwhelmed him and his kingdom at no distant date arose from two sources, vix.
prince
the northern forces of Vijaya, who commanded Singhasari at the time of the catastrophe ; and secondly, the
dreaded
Mongol
measure
chief
Kublai
cruel
Khan,
offence
by
the
has been already mentioned that when the forces of Kadiri invaded the kingdom of Singhasari from the north,
king Krtanagara sent all his available troops against them under his two sons-in-law, princes Vijaya and Arddharaja. The
army and the ultimate fate of Vijaya are known from a record of Vijaya himself, composed 1 As it gives us the most two years after the incident.
details
curcumstantial account of
the
northern campaign,
we may
story at
some
length,
on the basis of
contemporary record.
of Kadiri
The army
had reached Jasun Wungkal (probably Penanggungan hill) when Vijaya and
ft.
Singhasari
Ins.,
SUVARNADVlPA
Arddhar&ja started from SinghasSri.
Pluk.
309
first
The
lies
encounter took
considerably to the place at Kedung east of the direct route from Singhasari to Jasun Wungkal, it is probable that the Kadirian army was taking a circuitous route in order to decoy the troops of Vijaya as far as possible
this place
As
from the
capital city.
defeated
at
Kedung Pluk, and fled leaving a large number of dead on the field. Vijaya pursued the enemy and again defeated it, with
great loss, near Kapulungan at the foot of the Penanggungan. Proceeding further north, he inflicted a third defeat on the
lay to the
north-east
After these three brilliant victories Vijaya naturally thought that the enemy was totally routed. Then followed a strange
Suddenly a new Kadirian army appeared to the east of Haniru, and Arddharaja, the colleague of Vijaya, deserted The army of the royal cause and retired to Kapulungan. suffered a serious reverse and he fell back on Rabut Vijaya
reverse.
Although the record of Singhasari does not mention that this crisis was the result of the it, there is no doubt of king Krtanagara. The fall of Singhasari and death southern Kadirian army which accomplished this task must have now been released to assist the northern troops, and
Carat.
naturally
deserted the
The
position of Vijaya
about six proceeded northwards across the river Brantas to Pamvatan There the enemy pursued him. apajeg (modern Pamotan). he was successful in driving away the hostile attack, Although
his small
hundred
men
army was dwindled still further, partly by loss in Then Vijaya took counsel battle, but still more by desertion. with his followers and decided to fall back upon Trung to the north-west as the ruler of this place was attached to (he late king. But on his way he fell iu with the enemy.
310
large in number,
Sri (Bangsri).
and
his followers
Many
across the river (the Surabaya river). perished in the river, some were killed by the enemy,
swam
and with
only
twelve
men
of
Vijaya
the
till
reached
village
the
village
Kudadu 1
The
received
shelter-
he
found
to
him means
he
then
cross
over
Madhura
king,
Madura ).
Two
years later,
his life,
king
narrated
at
length
mentioned
above, which
forced
him
to
This narrative, as described in the official record, presumably on the authority of Vijaya himself, does not tally with the account given in Pararaton which appears to be an
abridged but slightly different version of the detailed and 2 romantic story preserved in PaSji Vijayakrama According to the latter, after Vijaya had defeated the northern Kadirian
.
army, he heard of the death of Krtanagara, and came back to He was, however, defeated SinghasSri to recover the capital. Kebo Mundarang, the leader of the southern Kadirian army. by
Being pursued, he fled towards the north, but as soon as the pursuit was given up, he returned to Singhas&ri and rescued, during night, one of the two daughters of Krtanagara who had
fled
On
the approach
of Kadirian
of his flight, and leaving one army Vijaya again took of the village Panwounded companions in charge of the head dakan, sailed with the rest from Datar to Madura. The story feats of Vijaya and his particularly dwells upon the heroic
companions,
Viraraja).
I.
It
Sora,
(the
son
of
Kudadu
I,
cf.
p.
375.
was most
1.
Berg
Rangga Lawe,
SUVARNADVIPA
It
is
311
evident that while only the general outline of the viz. the flight of Vijaya towards the north and
return to SinghasSri)
is
the
of
history
entirely
Unfortunately, for the wrong. after he reached Madura, we are almost Vijaya
details
are all
dependent on the story preserved in Pararaton, which agrees with that of Paiiji Vijayakrama. We shall, therefore, summarise this story for what it is worth, and may accept the
general outline as historical, at least as a working hypothesis. Vijaya went to Madura, as he hoped to find an ally in
its
governor
Viraraja,
Kftanagara.
He
who owed everything to the late king was, of course, ignorant of the treasonable
correspondence between Viraraja and Jayakatvang. Viraraja, astounded at first by the sight of Vijaya, soon collected himself and received Vijaya with all outward signs of honour.
Vijaya
father", If
made a
said he,
passionate
appeal
to
him
"Viraraja,
my
"my
obligations to
my
into
two parts
mine."
one part will be yours and one part will be This archThis bait was too much for Viraraja.
;
Jayakatvang
Vijaya should submit to Jayakatvang and ingratiate himself into the favour of the latter. As soon as he had sufficient influence with the
follows
:
near Trik where the people from Madura would establish a settlement.
As soon as Vijaya could gather sufficient information about the men and things in Kadiri, he would ask leave to settle in the new region and gather there his own trusty followers from
Singhasari and
all
The plan was admirably carried out. A new settlement sprang up, and as one of the settlers tasted a Maja (Vilva) fruit and threw it away as bitter (pahit) it came to be called
Sanskrit equivalent 'Vilva-tikta, Tikta-vilva, Srlphala-tikta, Tikta-Sriphala, Tikta-matura etc., (bitter Maja or
its
Majapahit or
312
Vilva
From
riot
his
new home
But that cunning an enterprise without securing fellow would further help. So he intrigued again, this time with the great He allured him with the Tatar king (i.e. Kublai Khan).
word
was ready.
risk such
false
hope of giving in marriage to him both the daughters of Krtanagara, and for this reward Kublai promised him
Being
thus
assured, Viraraja
military support.
proceeded
with his
men
to Majapahit,
Tatar king arrived, marched against Kadiri. The story of the This is the narrative of Pararaton. second treason of Viraraja may be accepted as true, particularly
in
later
occupied
in
the
Vijaya's pretended submission to Jayakatvang and settlement at Majapahit may also be regarded as true,
court of Vijaya.
and we may thus discount the popular notion about the 1 But a much earlier period. existence of that town from
i.
The
upon
ago
11
rests
general belief that Majapahit was founded many centuries the words (i) an inscription dated 840 A. D. ending with
written
in
an Arabic
at Majapahit" and (2) reference to a town Mazafawid in Zabag, D. But Brandes has conclusively text of tenth century
proved (Par. pp.H2-i 16) that the inscription really belongs to a period later than the I3th century A. D., while Ferrand has shown that the name of
the town in the Arabic text
is
to
II
Marakawand (FerrandThere
is
Textes,
II.
pp. 585!!.
J.
A.
p. 303).
thus no
evidence of the existence of Majapahit earlier than 1292, when (or at the
beginning of 1293) the town was founded by Vijaya according to Brandes has further shown that this story of Pararaton Pararaton.
is
supported by the later traditions preserved The town of Majapahit was founded
its
in
Javanese Babads.
in
locality
which was a
actual site might have been a waste ground. populous centre, though It must have come into existence during the interval between the death
of
of 1293.
its
Krtanagara, early in 1292, and the Chinese invasion at the beginning The tQ wn must have been considerably extended in later times,
centre lying in modern Travulan south-west of modern Majakerta. its topography, ruins, and extent ascertained by modern archaeologicf.
I.
For
cal research
S5)
J
>99)
1926(100-129)
1929 (MS-
B. K.
Vol. 89 (1932,
pp. 105-110).
SUVAENADVlPA
the story of the inducement offered
in the extreme,
to
313
Kublai
Khan
is
silly
more
to
reliable
and fortunately the Chinese sources give us a account of the motive and details of the
kingdom of Kadiri
an end. It is, therefore, unnecessary to reproduce the brief account preserved in Nag. Kr. (44 1-4), and the more detailed but romantic and unreliable accounts of the expedition that
:
we
find in
Pararaton
pp. 90rf
The History
biography
of
of the
Yuan Dynasty
and
this
account
supplemented by the
that
expedition.*
the
three
leaders
of
By
combining these four accounts it is possible to get a idea of the nature and result of that expedition.
definite
It has already been mentioned how Kftanagara had provoked the wrath of the great Kublai Khan by mutilating In order to avenge this insult the the face of his envoy. an expedition against Java. "In the second emperor organised month of the year 1292 the emperor issued an order to the
governor of Fukien,
directing
him
to
send
Che-pi,
Yi-k'o-
mu-su 8 and Kau Hsing in command of an army to subdue Java; to collect soldiers... to the number of 20,000 ;... to send out a thousand ships and to equip them with provisions for a year and with forty thousand bars of silver.
"When
clearly
the
three
last
audience,
the
emperor said to
that the
them
proclaim to the
'When you arrive at Java you must army and the people of that country
imperial government has formerly had intercourse with Java by envoys from both sides and has been in good
VII,
1.
7-17
Djawa, Vol.
10,
pp,
146
&
2.
comma
Vol.
40
314
harmony with
you
have come to
The emperor further gave them the following instructions 'When you have arrived in Java, you must send a messenger
:
to inform
me
of
it.
you occupy that country, the other submit of themselves, you will have only
If
envoys
are
to
receive
to
their
allegiance.
When
those
countries
finished."
reduced
submission
be
Ch'iian-chou and reached the port of coast of E. Java. There the Chinese
In the 12th month of 1292 A.D. the expedition sailed from Tuban on the northern
into
Half the army marched overland. With the other half, Che-pi went by sea to the mouth of the river l Sugalu (Solo river) and from there to the river Pa-tsieh-kan.
two
parts.
(Surabaya
river).
Some Chinese officers who were sent interior now came back and reported the
that country which are described as follows
:
in
advance to the
of
internal affairs
"At that time Java carried on an old feud with the neighbouring country Kalang (Kadiri) and the king of Java Hadji Ka-ta-na-ka-la- (Krtanagara) had already been killed by the
The Hadji Katang (Jayakatvang). Tuhan Pidjaya (Vijaya) had attacked he had, therefore, Hadji Katang but could not overcome him retired to Madjopait (Majapahit) and when he heard that
prince
of Kalang, called
The name
is
the syllable
But word meaning 'small Krom takes Pa-tsieh-kan as the Chinese equivalent of Pacekan, and identifies this and the Sugalu river (Ferrand transcribes it as Su-ya-lu) But on the basis of the respectively with the Surabaya and Solo rivers.
'kan' being taken as a separate
interpretation
rivers
'small
river
Pa-tsieh',
it
is
possible to
identify the
rivers,
two
respectively
with
the
Prom
and Surabaya
Krom
SUVARNADVlPA
Che-pi-with his army had arrived, he submission and asking for assistance."
sent
315
envoys
offering
political situation
in
Java enables us
one important respect. It shows that at the beginning of 1293 A. D. Vijaya had established himself at Majapahit, not under a pretence already
to correct the account of Pararaton in
of submission to Jayakatvang, but as his avowed enemy. The probability is that shortly after his flight to Madura (1292 A.D.) he
make a bold
stand against Jayakatvang. He had as yet failed to secure a victory against his foe, and so he thought of utilising the
Chinese expedition to his advantage. He immediately offered his submission and sent his Prime-minister with fourteen other
officials
meet the Chinese army. Jayakatvang, on the other hand, made preparations
to
to
He
Hi-ning-kuan
Surabaya and himself advanced against Majapahit. The Chinese army reached the Surabaya river (Pa-tsiehkan) on the first day of the third month. Here, for the first time, they came across the hostile fleet, guarding the mouth of
river,
mouth
of the
The Chinese
is
annals continue
"It (the
mouth
of
were
the entrance to Java and a place for which they determined to fight. Accordingly the first minister of
how
the
chances of the
fight
went
The commander
army
made
river
camp
;
in the
and left the ferry in charge of a commander of Ten Thousand the fleet in the river and the cavalry and infantry on shore then advanced together and Hi-ning-kuan, seeing this, left his boat and fled overnight, whereupon more than a hundred large ships, with devil-heads on the stem, were captured." This took place on the first day of the third month.
After this naval victory the Chinese leaders advanced to
Majapahit to
assist
316
(Kadiri)
(Vijaya).
the morning of the eighth day, Kau Hsing fought with the enemy on the south-east and killed several hundreds of
On
the
them, whilst the remainder fled to the mountains. Towards middle of the day the enemy arrived also from the
south-west.
again,
were defeated/ We hear of no encounter with the third Division of Kadirian troops. Probably they retreated on hearing the fate of the other two.
they
Majapahit was saved, but the main army of the king of Kadiri was still at large. So, 'on the 15th, the army was
divided into three bodies, in order to attack Kalang (Kadiri).
part
1
.
of the
troops
ascended the
proceeded by
river
Brantas) under
Che-pi
Yi-k'o-mu-su
took the
the
eastern
road and
(Vijaya)
Kau Hsing
western, whilst
Tuhan Pidjaya
with his army brought up the rear. 'On the 19th they (i.e. the different divisions of the army) arrived at Taha (Daha, the capital of Kadiri) where the
prince of Kalang defended himself with
thousand
soldiers.
The
battle
lasted
and three times the attack was renewed, when the (Kadirian) army was defeated and fled several thousand thronged into the river and perished there, whilst more than 5,000 were slain.
;
The king
which was immediately and the king summoned surrounded by Chinese army, In the evening the king whose name was to surrender. Haji Katang (Jayakatvang) came out of the fortress and
retired into the inner city
offered his
His wife, his children and were taken by the victors who then went back V
submission.
1.
officers
It is
It is
group.
said,
not expressly stated that Che-pi was the leader of this however, in the account of Che-pi that he divided the
parts,
army
into
three
himself,
Kau
is
;
The
"On
of the
emperor were
SUVARNADVlPA
Jayakatvang's
317
the
son
had
fled
to
mountains,
but
a thousand
men and
this expedition,
new
act In
drama began.
Emperor and to take the precious articles in his possession for sending them to court. Che-pi and Yi-kVmu-su consented to this. On the 2nd day of the 4th month Vijaya
the
left
The Chinese
with 200
men
to
accompany him.
As soon
he disapproved of the
and
his
more need
He
killed
force, attacked the imperial army on its way back from Kadiri. 'Kau Hsing and others fought bravely with him and threw him
back.
Che-pi was behind and was cut off from the rest of the He was obliged to fight Ms way for 300 li before
Of
his
soldiers
more than
3,000
had
died'.
'The
generals
now thought
of
carrying
on
the
war
(evidently against Vijaya), but Yi-k'o-mu-su wished to do as the emperor had ordered them and first send a messenger
to court.
The two
the
troops
prisoners
him and he was told to go back.' The account of the fall of Kadiri, given in Pararaton and Paftji Vijayakrama, differs consideraas historical. bly from the Chinese accounts, and cannot be regarded
i.
The name
is
written
in
puh-hah.
318
Haji Katang (Jayakatvang) and his son were killed by 1 Chinese before they left Java .
It is interesting to note that
'by an imperial decree Che-pi had allowed the prince of Java to go away and Yi-kVmu-su who 8 were punished but as Kau Hsing had taken no part in this
,
decision,
distinguished
himself,
the
taels of gold'.
Thus ended the strange episode of the Chinese invasion of Java. They came to punish Kftanagara, but really helped the restoration of his family by killing his enemy Jayakatvang, The net result of the expedition was to make Vijaya the
He
undisputed master of Java with Majapahit as its capital. soon re-established the friendly relations with the Chinese
emperor. For we find embassies from Java at the imperial 8 court in 1297, 1298, 1300 and 1308 A.D.
.
With the death of Jayakatvang the short-lived kingdom of the world Ka<Jiri came to an end, and, as Nag. Kr. puts it, once more (45 1). breathed freely
:
1.
Groeneveldt
Notes, p. 28.
Jayakatvang lived long enough after this to compose a poem called Wukir Polaman. Probably he died after a short term of imprisonment.
Cf. B. K.
2.
I.,
One-third of the property of each was confiscated! and Chein addition, seventeen lashes. Some time later, both were pi got, Their property was restored and they were raised to high forgiven.
ranks.
3.
Toung
Pao, Ser.
II,
Vol.
XV.
(1914), p. 446.
Chapter VI
an important
of the
Jayavarddhana which played such Majapahit, in the recent happenings, became the capital
Kytarajasa
rightly proclaimed himself, in the record
new
king,
who
of 1294 A.D., as the master of the whole of Java (SamastayavadvfpeSvara). Although the capital was changed, the new
kingdom may justly be regarded as the continuation of the kingdom of Singhasari, with a short break of two years, due For to the assumption of royal authority by Jayakatvang. Kjtarajasa combined in himself various claims to be regarded
as the rightful heir to the throne Singhasari record of 1294 A.D. he
of Singhasari.
In the
makes a
only
pointed refer-
He
was
not
descended
from
Wong
NarasinghanagaradharmmaviSesa (probably the same as Mahla Ateleng, son of Rajasa) and grandson of Narasingha(the
mflrtti
coronation
name
),
of
Mahia Wong
daughters
of
Ateleng
the
late latter
:
but
king
he
Mahlsa had
Campaka,
also
son of
the
married
Kftanagara
is
male
issue.
This
aspect
indeed too
It refers Nag. Kr. (45 2-47). of Kptanagara as the four queens of Kjlarajasa and daughters
sised in
expressly adds
It expatiates
how
between the
king and the four queens, so much so, that the command of one, thanks to this complete harmony among them, was really
the
command
own
of
all.
The
on the position of
the daughters
his
may
indicate
by some
father.
why
320
death,
who
queen or queen-mother, but on her own right as daughter of Kytanagara. The name of this queen was Gayatrl, though she
is
usually referred to as Rajapatm, the queen par excellence. By her the king had two daughters, but the three other queens
issue.
had no
Kytarajasa had a
in
This fifth queen, a princess of Malay u. Sumatra had been already conquered by Krtanagara,
recalled that the despatch
of a military
expedi-
put forward in Pararaton as the cause of the downfall of that king. As soon as the Javanese army of occupation at Malayu heard of the catastrophic end of their
We
king they must have naturally made preparations to return. learn from Paiiji Vijayakrama that they brought rich
by the vanquished princes and their leader got 1 the title Mahlsa Anabrang. According to Pararaton, they reached Java ten days after Vijaya had finally triumphed over the Chinese army and brought with them two princesses of
tributes paid
Malayu. The younger, Dara-Petak, also known as IndreSvarl was married by Krtarajasa. The elder princess, Dara Jingga,
was married to a 'Deva' and became the mother of the king of Malayu, Tuhan Janaka, called also Sri Marmadeva and Haji In view of the growing importance of Malayu, Mantrolot. which evidently became an independent state after the withdrawal of Javanese troops, the marriage relation between the royal houses of Java and Malayu was undoubtedly a fact of great political importance. It was specially so, because Dara
to Krtarajasa,
and the boy was heir-presumpIn 1295 Krtarajasa anointed the son, named
the reign of Krtarajasa. highest dignitary in the
Java, but this was a poor compensation for half the kingdom of
I.
p. 6l.
SUVARNADVIPA
321
Java which the king had promised him in his dark days of exile and penury. On the whole Krtarajasa ruled in peace and and died in 1309. * He had two memorial temples, prosperity a Buddhist sanctuary within his palace at Majapahit, and the Saiva temple of Simping, the present Candi Sumberjati 8 to the south of Blitar Nothing remains of the latter
.
except
the
foundations,
but
it
has
furnished
beautiful
portrait of the king, as Harihara, which is now preserved in the Museum at Batavia. figure of Parvati, in the temple
of
Rimbi,
south-west
in
style
similarity
regarded
as
striking a the Harihara image, that it has been portraying the figure of one of the queens,
of
Majakerta,
offers
so
to
named Tribhuvana.
two
His K^tarajasa was succeeded by Ids son Jayanagara. half-sisters received the titles of the princess of Kahuripan
(or in
Sanskrit Jlvana) and princess of Daha or Kadiri. These two titles were evidently derived from the two kingdoms
into
The
to
was
full
of troubles.
If
to
we
the
are
dis-
believe in Pararaton,
the
troubles arc
due
satisfaction
by him
in
sufficiently
companions of Krtarajasa who stood and woe but did not think themselves weal rewarded by the king. So long as the strong hands
the
of Krtarajasa were there, they remained quiet, but as soon as a young inexperienced king came to the throne they rose against him. In this connection prominence is given to one
Mahapati, who stood by king Jayanagara in all his troubles. It has been suggested that the discontent was mainly directed
against Mahapati rather than the king, but it is not quite clear whether the former's haughty conduct was responsible for the
furious at
him
they
whom
wanted
1.
2.
to bring to grief.
O. V.,
41
322
Pararaton, are
hopelessly wrong, but relying upon the sequence of events and interval between them, Poerbatjaraka has suggested a scheme
of chronology which
is
1
generally accepted.
It
appears that
of
the
this,
first
rebellion broke
The leader
Prime-minister,
but
having failed in his object, organised a rebellion at Tuban. He was joined by a number of persons. It is suggested in Par. that Mahapati roused the suspicion of the king against him by
quoting some of his utterances, and hence he was not selected
as the
minister.
different,
is
to Mahapati,
given in Kidung Rangga Lawc. Here no reference is made but Rangga Lawe is goaded to rebellion as
Nambi, and not he, was appointed Prime-minister. Further, Rangga Lawe, and not Nambi, was the son of VirarSja who had fortified himself at Tuban instead of going back to Madura.
On
the
8
whole
it is
equally
untrust-
worthy.
All that
we can
Rangga Lawe
organised a rebellion in 1309 with Tuban as centre, but the rebellion was soon subdued, and Rangga Lawc perished with
most
of his followers.
Next came the turn of Sora. He, too, rebelled, and perished Some details of this episode are given in the 3 discovered book Sorandaka, but they can hardly recently
in 1311 A. D.
be regarded as authentic.
The old Vlraraja also thought the moment ripe for striking a blow for himself. He followed the policy which he had
suggested to Vijaya. He ingratiated himself into the favour of the king and then asked leave to set up in Lamayang. There
1.
T. B.C., Vol.
rebellion,
p. 372.
(cf.
1309 A.
It
56 (1914), pp. M7ff. The date of the first 8 given on the authority of Krom-Geschiedenis might have taken place even during the reign of Krtarajasa
is
I.
SUVARNADVlPA
323
he firmly established himself and never came back to Majapahit, not even at the time of the official Durbar of the eighth month. The king put up with it and there was no open rebellion. Next came the turn of Nambi, the son of Vlraraja, and one of the
flight.
He was
in
a high
rousing
succeeded
the suspicion of the king against him. too clever and moved very cautiously.
his father
Nambi
He took
who was
ill.
He
Vlraraja, the old arch-conspirator, before he could complete his treachery. Nambi, however, proceeded to carry out his
In 1316 the royal army proceeded against him. According to Nag. Kr., which mentions only this incident in Jayanagara's reign, it was the king who first took the field
father's plan.
against Nambi.
This is, perhaps, true, for although Nambi had not openly rebelled, he was silently preparing for the coming
and the king naturally thought it prudent to attack him before his preparations were completed. After a short campaign, the strongholds of Nambi were captured and he
conflict,
Nambi.
Kuti, in 1319.
Passing by them, we come to the rebellion of Kuti was one of the seven Dharmaputras who
occupied a high position in the kingdom. Pararaton has given us a long and romantic account of this rebellion. It is said that
in
left his
capital
city
and
Badander with only a body-guard of fifteen of Gajah Mada who was destined to become famous at no distant date. Gajah Mada returned to the capital and reported that the king was killed by Kuti's men.
fled
during night to
the
men under
command
This caused
concluded from
Thereupon he
divulged
the
restored
to
the
who killed Kuti, and the king was throne. The account of this episode, as
324
given
in
the
extreme.
It
represents
Kuti in a favourable
and accuses Mahapati of bringing a false charge against him in consequence of which the great minister was arrested and put to death by the king. It
Badander But there can be hardly any doubt that of his own accord. Kuti actually rebelled and that the king had to take to flight as Kuti had become master of the city and the palace.
further says that the king undertook the journey to
lost
his
life
in
Gajah Mada was suitably rewarded for his services. According to Par. he first became governor (patih) of Kahuripan, and, after two years, that of Daha, and he remained in this post from 1321 onward till he became Prime-minister in 1331. The specific dates are proved to be wrong by an 1 which shows that in 1323 somebody else was inscription of Daha. But there is no doubt that Gajah Mada governor served for some time as governor of Daha and was occupying that post in 1330 A. D.
The
to
rebellion of
last organised
attempt
referred
The
inscription of 1323,
above, no doubt raises some suspicion about the continued In this inscription the peace or stability of the kingdom.
name
a
of the king
is
written
as
"Srl-Sundara
PandyadevS-
dhiSvara-nama-rajabhiseka Vikramottunggadcva" preceded by number of Sanskrit epithets. This peculiarly south-Indian PSndya name is apt to give rise to a suspicion whether the
is
name appears
in 1314,
and
under the successors of Jayanagara, lead to the conclusion that we have to take Sundara Pandya Vikramottunggadeva as
the consecration or
official
name
of Jayanagara.
The seal-mark
again a Pandya
'two
fishes',
SUVABNADVlPA
custom.
325
There was evidently a close association between Java and South-India during this period. 1 We have a short reference to Java about this time in the 3 writings of Odoric Van Pordenon who visited the archipelago in 1321. He says that the king of Java exercises suzerainty over seven other kings, the land is very populous and produces spices, and that the palace is decorated with gold, silver and
precious stones.
The
political
greatness of Java
is
also
referred to in the
as comprising
inscription of 1323
A.D.
It refers to the
kingdom
its
among
foreign possessions
Madura, TaSjungpura, i. e. Borneo etc. Thus although Java might have lost its influence in the west, its political supremacy
in the
east
relations with
was yet unimpaired. Java also maintained good China and sent regular embassies in 1322, 1325,
In 1328, when the last-named mission returned, they brought from the Chinese emperor official robes and bows and arrows for the Javanese king Cha-ya-na-ko-nai,
1326, and 1327.
3 which corresponds well to Jayanagara.
According to the story of Par. the closing years of Jayanagara were again full of troubles. First, the king fell out with the nobles of his court. He wanted to marry one of
his
or,
step-sisters,
was suspected by the king to make attempts in In was not perhaps a mere romantic sentiment that direction. which influenced the king's decision. His half-sister was a descendant of the legitimate king Krtanagara, arid her husband
at
least,
could establish a claim to the throne, superior to his own. A powerful noble wedded to his sister would thus prove a
1.
Cf.
Acta
orientalia
for
further
Yule-Cordier
Way
Thither,
Vol.
2.
(1913),
PP. 146-155.
3.
T'oung Pao,
p. 380.
Vol.
XV
(1914)*
P-
446.
find no
by Krom-
Goschiedenis 2 ,
326
formidable
cation
this compli-
by marrying the sister himself. But before this question could be finally decided the king met with a tragic end in a quite unexpected way. The king had outraged the modesty of the wife of TaSca, another Dharmaputra of the type of Kuti, and the latter naturally bore a grudge against the king. Now the king was suffering from
a boil, and Tanca, who was evidently also the court-physician, was asked to treat the king. While operating upon the king, TaSca killed him by the surgical instruments and was himself 1 killed by Gajah Mada. Thus died Jayanagara in 1328 A.D. According to Par. the king was cremated at Kapopongan, also called Srngapura. The site has not yet been identified. According to Nag. Kr. two figures of the king as Visnu were set up at SilS Petak and Bubat and one as Amoghasiddhi
at Sukallla. All these places were probably in the neighbourhood of Majapahit. It may be noted that some temples were erected near Panataran during the reign of Jayanagara, As Jayanagara left no male heir, the nearest female heiress
mentioned above, viz. the daughter of 'Kajapatni', Kftanagara, and the widow of Krtarajasa. As she had adopted the life of a Buddhist nun, her eldest daughter Tribhuvanottunggadevl Jayavisnuvardhanl* acted as regent for her mother. She was known to posterity as the princess of Jlvana or
was
Kahuripan (Bhre Kahuripan), a title which she bore probably before, and certainly after her period of regency. During the regentship she was called the queen of Majapahit while
her son, the heir-presumptive to
'prince of Jlvana/
1.
title,
Her
personal
name appears
be Gitarjja.*
king outraged
in Bali, the
Mada's
;
wife,
and the
V.
In
an
inscription
p. 76).
the
name
is
given
is
as
referred
V- I9 ! 7i
P- 48,
and
1918, p. 108.
SUVARNADVIPA
327
The regent had married, shortly after her brother's death, a 1 his After Ksatriya, named Cakradhara or Cakrefivara. he received the ceremonial name Kptavarddhana, and marriage, the title 'Prince of Singhasari'. The younger sister of the regent, princess Daha or Kadiri (Bhre Daha), took the ceremonial name Vijayadevl or Rajadevl Maharajasa. She married Kudamrta whose ceremonial name was Vijayarajasa, and the lie was also known as Parana eSvara title, Prince of Vengker'.
or ParameSvara Pamotan.
In 1331 Sadeng and Keta revolted against the regent. These places were in the neighbourhood of Bcsuki. The revolts were put down by the royal troops. During the same year Gajah Mada, the governor of Daha already mentioned above, became the chief minister (Pati of Majapahit). His appointment might have something to do with the revolts, though the
part he played in
it is
not quite
episode
is
clear.
story
From
this
time Gajah
Mada
the
government.
pura, Haru,
Par. credits
him with
such
number
Seran,
Sunda, Palembang,
TaSjungand
Tumasik. Among these Gurun (Gorong*, TaSjungpura (in Borneo), and Pahang (in Malay Peninsula) already belonged to the empire of Krtanagara as we have seen above. As to the
rest, whether they were all conquered during the period of regency cannot be ascertained. It is likely that some later conquests have been wrongly ascribed to this period. Malayu
The relations with China again figures as a vassal state. continued friendly and we hear of a very large mission (consisting of no less than 83 persons) from Java presenting a
2 golden letter to the emperor in 1332 A.D. The Nag. Kr. refers to an expedition against the island of Bali in 1343 A.D. It appears that the authority of Java was
.
1.
is
named
2.
No.
2, p,
326,
Vol.
XV,
(1914), p. 447.
328
established
over part of that island as early as 1338 A.D., as in sanctuary. that year the regent founded there a Buddhist of that of 1338 The expedition of 1343 may be a continuation
or a
new one
to
of the island.
In
any case the results of the expedition were quite and the island of Bali was thoroughly subdued.
satisfactory
In 1350 died queen Rajapatnl. She was buried at ViSesapura at Bhayalango in Kadiri and figured there as a Prajfia1 Prince Hayam Wuruk, the son of the regent parainita Tribhuvanottunggadevl, came to the throne in 1350, on the
.
He was then only grandmother Rajaputnl. name was Rajasanagara, His coronation sixteen years old. he is generally referred to by his old name Hayam though Wuruk. Henceforth his mother occupied the second place in
death
of his the kingdom, and
is
referred to as princess of
Jlvana
or
more derived from the king's participation in the Wajang. Of these the name Bhatara Prabhu may be traced in the forms Sri-Pah-ta-la-po and Pa-ta-na pa-na-wu preserved in Chinese
three
annals in connection with Javanese embassies sent in 1370, refers to the 1377, 1379 and 1380'. The name Sivaiet perhaps The fourth name also king's special leaning towards Saivism.
occurs in literature,
calls
e.g.
Arjunavijaya.
the king
sanagara.
The
his
first
notable incident in the reign of the king was with a Sunda princess in 1357 A. D. After the
settled
the
Krom-Inleidung
Vol. II.
in
Batavia
Museum
pi.
(No. 288)
pp. 219*221,
2.
54 a )-
Groeneveldt
Notes, p. 35
SUVARNADVlPA
329
king of Sunda, called Maharaja, came to Bubat near Majapahit The with his daughter. difference, however, soon arose. should be treated Sundanese king desired that her daughter on an equal footing, and the marriage ceremony should be as
between equals.
regarded
the
The Majapahit
court,
on
the
other hand,
king as subordinate, and wanted to celebrate the marriage as between a suzerain king and his feudatory. The Sundanese would not tolerate this indignity
Sundaiieso
Thereupon the Majapahit troops surrounded the whole party. The nobles of Sunda preferred death to dishonour, and after brave fight, perished Amidst this ghastly tragedy the princess was to a man. however, married to the king. According to Kidung Sunda
and refused
to give
up the
princess.
the bride also perished in the general massacre that followed the fight. But in any case, the Sundanese princess died
shortly.
After
her
death
the
king
married
Paramcsvarl
(Susumiiadevi, according to Nag. Kr.), the daughter of prince of Vengker. As already remarked above, the latter had married
the king's maternal aunt, but Paramesvarl
was
his daughter
by a previous marriage. King Riljasanagara had by this queen, some time before 1365 A. D.
a daughter
The aggressive policy towards Sunda in 1357 was merely an indication of the strong imperialism which was to distinguish
the period of Eajasanagara. During the same year a military expedition was sent against the island of Dornpo, which was crowned with complete success. Although details of further
is
during
the reign of this king the kingdom of Java rose to be the supreme political power in the Archipelago, and established
its
suzerainty in almost
all
the
portion of the
Malay
Peninsula.
not to be supposed,
directly however, that all these foreign possessions were administered by, and formed part and parcel of the Javanese
kingdom.
i.
of Majapahit
was regarded
as
the
Berg 42
330
all of them, and his mighty fleet maintained hold upon their rulers, excluding effectually the active exercise of any authority by other powers. The rulers of these
suzerain power by
his
A
we
of
detailed list
of such subordinate
in
states
is
given in the
and
names
give 1 as are generally agreed upon (with approximate Degrees Latitudes and Longitudes indicated by the figures within
identifications
of old
bracket.
it is
only the Latitudes and Longitudes are given, to be understood that the name is also in use in modern
Where
times.
The
letters
S and
Latitudes).
Group L
(I)
Malayu (Sumatra)
Palembang (3S.X103). (3) Kari(1S.X102). (4) Tcba (upper Jambi)
(2)
Jiimbi(*2S.Xl04).
(5) Dharmasraya (upper Batanghari) (2S.X102). Kandis (Kandi, to the north of Buo on the right bank of (6) Kahwas (Kawaj near river. (7) (IS. X 102). the Sinamar
X 102).
Kandi)
kabau.
(11)
(IS.
(9)
X 101).
Rekan
(8)
Manangkabwa
(10)
(2S.Xl01)MinangSiyak
at the
(IN. X 101).
(12)
(IN. X 102).
Kfimpar (0X103).
Pane
(Panai,
mouth of
Barumun river (ON. X 100). (13) Kampe (Kompai) X 98). (14) Hani (Krom places it at about 4N. X 98. But (4N Ferrand locates it at the mouth of the river Rokan.) (16) Tamihang (4N.X98). Mandahiling (IN. X 101). (15)
the Panai
(17)
Parllak (5N.X98).
I.
(18)
The
2
,
identifications
are .given
Krom
558),
(Geschiedenis
Ferrand
(J.
Brandcs (T. B. G., Vol. 58, 1919, A., 1918, 1919, 1922), and Blagden (J. R. A. S. 1928,
pp,
4*6-418),
p. 915).
SUVARNADVIPA
Atjeh) (5N.
331
Lavas (Padang Lavas or Gaju Luas) (4.5X98). (20) Samudra (The Islamic kingdom of this name was founded by Malik-al-saleh in the northern part of Sumatra sometime before 1286 A. D.) (5N.X97'5). (21) Lamuri (in Great Ajteh) (5N.X96). (22) Batan (Island to the south of
(19)
X 95).
(23)
Lampung
(5S.X105).
Group
(1)
II.
Tanjungnagara
Borneo
).
(3 8.x 114).
v2) Katingan ( Mendavi river ) Kuta Lingga (3S.xll3). (4) Sampit on the Batang Lupar ) (1-5. N.xlll) Kuta ( Linga (5) Sambas (3 S.xll2). (1-5 N.X109- 5*). (0) Varingin Lavai ( Muara Lavai on the Mendavak or Melavi ) (7)
Kapuhas
O x 112),
(3)
Kadangdangan Kendavangan ) (3S.X116). Landak (9) ( '(-5 N.xllO). (10) Samedang Semandang in Simpang ? ) (11) Tircm ( Pcniraman on the Kapuas Kechil or Tidung ) ( 4 N. x 116 ). (12) Sedu ( Sadong in Saravak, Sedua in Langgou or Siduh in Matan ) (l-5Nx 111). Kalka (Kaluka (14) (13) Buruneng (Brunei) (5 N.xll5).
(8)
(
(5
(
S.xim
Landa
near
(6
(?)
Saribas
(16)
(2
N.xlll).
(18)
(15)
Saludung (Maludu-bay)
N.xllT).
(17)
Bantu.
(:K>.
S.x
115).
(19)
(5N.xl20). Savaka
(Sevaku island)
(3-5S. x 116'5).
Scrawak,
city.)
(Tuiijungpura
110).
Group
HI
(Only Latitudes
(1)
suka
ten
Hujung-medinl, the capital city (Johor) (3*5). (2) Lengka(3) Sai (Saiburi near Patarii) (10). (4) Kalan-
(5-5).
Tringgano (Trengganau)
(5).
(6)
or Pat^ni).
(7)
Paka
332
(8)
(N. W. of Johor). (9) Dungun (South Trengganau) Tumasik (Singapore). (11) Sanghyang Hujung (Cape Rashado) (7). (12) Kelang (3-5). (13) Keda (6). (14) Jere (Jering near Patani, or Keda peak or Jclei river) (6). Niran (Karimun ?). (16) (15) KaSjap (Singkep ? )
(4).
Group
IV.
Eastern Island.
Bali with chief towns Bedahulu (Bedulu in Gianjar) (1) Gurun (Nusa and Lvagajah (Goa Gaja near Petanu). (2) with chief town Sukun. Penida)
(3)
Talivang.
]
I
(4)
Dompo.
Sapi.
(o)
(6)
Sumbawa
Bhima
Sanghyang Api (Sangeang, Gunung Api). (8) Seran Kadali Hutaii (N. E. of Sumbawa*. (Ceram). (10) (9) or 9 and 10 together may denote the group (Kanari island,
(7)
of islands the
Bum,
Sula
etc.)
(11)
name
Lombok
Lombok).
Mirah
(14)
(West
Lombok?)
(13)
Saksak
(East
name. that Bantayan (Bonthain) with capital of south Peleng or Luvu on the gulf of (15) Luvuk (Luvuk on Udamakatraya (Talaud islands). (17) Makasar. (16) Boni).
and
(19)
(18)
Butun.
(Two well-known
(20)
islands
of
these names).
(21)
Banggavl (Banggai).
(22)
Kimir (Kunjit).
Galiyao
(Kangean).
(24)
Salaya (Saleier). (23) Sumba (well-known). Solot (Solor). (25) Muar (Kei or Honimoa, Saparua).
(26)
Wandan
Maloko
(Banda).
(27)
.
Ambwan
Ternate).
(30)
(Amboyne
Island).
(28)
(Molukkas
e.
(29)
Wwanin
(Onin,
of
north-west of
New
(31)
Guinea).
New Guinea).
Pacific
Timur (well-known).
all
bounded by Borneo on the west, on the north, New Guinea in the east, and Australia Philippines on the south. They lie between Long. 115 arid 135, and Lat. 2N. and 10S,
is
situated
within
that part
of
the
SUVARNADVlPA
The
long
list
333
of given in Nag, Kr. shows the hegemony nearly the whole of Malay Peninsula and Malay Archipelago under the kingdom of Majapahit in Java, the only notable
comprised the present Dutch possessions in the Archipelago, with the addition of Malay Peninsula, but excluding, perhaps,
northern Celebes.
The
how
far
we can
one
of
place reliance
On
full
the
hand
the
it
is
details
external
which
is
On
we cannot
court
of
inducement
to
exaggerate
the state of things in favour of his patron and country. must, thereforo, try to supplement the account of Nag.
We
Kr. by such other data as we possess. In the first place we 1 which have a Malay book called Hikayat liajaraja Pasay
gives a long
list
supremacy
conquest by the
Muhammadans.
This
vassal states in Sumatra, Malay and the various islands in the Archipelago Peninsula, Borneo,
list
also
refers to
Biliton,
Tambelan, Anamba, Natuna, Tiyuma, Karimata, Banka, Riouw, Lingga, Bintan, Banda, Cera, Sumbawa, As the two Lombok, Bali, and southern part of Celebes.
emanate from two entirely different authorities living in and the periods contemplated are separated
such
as
lists
different countries,
by a century, we cannot expect a complete agreement of names in them. But the general resemblance between the
two
Further,
in
respect of some of
the conquered
in the above
lists
we
possess
An
extract from
p. 544.
this
list
book
is
given
is
IV-VII, 1846,
pp. 666-669).
The
of countries
given by
334
The inscription of Batur, dated 1348 A.D., and Bali. 1. a second record dated 1386 A.D. were issued by Sri Vijayarajasa, i.e. the Prince of Vengker, the maternal uncle of king
Rsjasanagara. Another record, dated 1398 A.D., refers to this 1 prince as Sri Paramesvara who died at Visnubhavana.
There can be no doubt that the Prince of Vengker who held an important position in the Javanese court ruled the island of
Bali as a representative of the Javanese king.
2.
1
West
(
Borneo.
The Chinese
history tells
)
us
that in
368 Pu-ni
was attacked by
They made a
large booty and only retired when Java came with soldiers 9 Now it can be easily presumed that to assist this country. Java sent assistance as the suzerain authority bound to protect
a vassal state.
it
The
Chinese
make
absolutely
clear.
We
:
Then the
hitherto
"Now
this
country
had
Java and the people of the latter country tried to him". In other words, it is clearly admitted that prevent Java exercised supremacy over western Borneo in the year 1370 A.D. Although it is related that the king of Pu-ni
belonged to
sent envoys with tribute to the imperial court, it does not mean that Juva ceased to be regarded as the supreme authority.
For the despatch of envoy with tribute to China, as described in Chinese history, is a mere conventional term which does For example, not always mean any real political relationship.
Java herself is represented to be in a similar position with regard to China during the same period.
3.
San-fo-tsi.
The
relation
of
Java
to
and
San-fo-tsi
has
According already been discussed. the king of San-fo-tsi, or rather one of the three kings who divided the kingdom among themselves, died in 1376 A.D.,
I.
O. V.
2.
1924, p. 29
O.
B., Vol.
I,
p.
191
Epigraphia
3.
Balica
I,
p. 13.
Groeneveldt
Notes,
p. 103.
Ibid., pp.
no-itj.
SDVARNADVIPA
and was
said
335
envoys with
that the
authority,
Next year the latter sent the imperial court. "The envoys
own
and therefore asked the permission of the imperial court. The emperor praised his sense of duty and ordered envoys to bring him a seal and a commission as king of At that time, however, San-fo-tsi had already San-fo-tsi.
that the
been conquered by Java, and the king of this country, hearing emperor had appointed a king over San-fo-tsi, became very angry and sent men who waylaid and killed
envoys*.
the imperial
it
right
to
became gradually poorer and no tribute was brought from 1 this country any more".
This very frank statement of the
Chinese historian
is
It not only singular proof of the political greatness of Java. admits the supremacy of Java over San-fo-tsi, but also proves
exclude other powers, including China, from political affairs of what she rightly considered as her own sphere of influence. Further Chinese
its will
and
ability to
interfering in the
Saii-fo-tsi
by Java has
that
the
history of
kingdom.
In addition to these positive testimonies furnished by the Chinese historians, we may refer to indirect evidences, furnished
by two
inscriptions.
Sumbawa
tion
at
island
is
in
its
language contains
all sorts
1
An
the
inscrip-
Singapore
also
exhibits
Javanese
made from
these factors, they may be presumed to political supremacy of Java over these two islands.
1.
Ibid., p. 69.
Ferrand
J. A,,
XX
2.
3.
Not. Hat. Gen., 1910, pp. 110-113. B. K. I Vol. 77 (1921), pp. 35-67 ; O. V. 1924,
,
p.
in.
336
From
these
indications
it
may be
safely laid
down
that
Nagara Krtagama was comof her political greatness and posed, Java reached the height established her unquestioned supremacy over Malay Peninsula and Malay Archipelago. She also occupied a position of international importance. The Nag. Kr. refers to the intimate and by the year 1365
AD., when
the
Singhanagari,
Champa
(Southern
1
It also refers to a number of countries, including some of those just mentioned, which had trade relations with Majapahit, and from which Brahmanas and Sramanas visited the Javanese
capital.
Thus we read
numbers, people from all lands such as Jambudvlpa, Kamboja, Clna, Yavana, Campa, Karnataka,...Gaudu, and Siam. They came in ships with merchandise. Monks and distinguished 9 Brahmanas also came from these lands and were entertained".
Gauda
intimacy with Bengal and Kanarcse districts. The Javanese had indeed a high regard for India, for in one vei'-se (83 2) Nag.
:
Kr. says that Jambudvlpa and Java are the good lands par The intimate relation between the two countries excellence.
is also indicated by the fact that laudatory poems in honour of the Javanese king were written by the monk Budhaditya of
KaScI (Conjeeveram)
and
the
Brahmana,
named
Mutali
8 The intercourse Sahrdaya, probably a Tamil Brahmana. with China, referred to by Nag. Kr., is also proved by Chinese
sources.
The
Nag.
Nag. Nag.
History
i.
of
the
Ming
Dynasty*
refers
to
1.
Kr., 15
The
identifications are
made by Kern
(V. G.,
VII. 279).
2. 3.
definitely located.
4i.
4.
Groeneveldt
Notes, pp.
SUVAKNADVIPA
1381,
337
embassies from Java in 1369, 1370, 1372, 1375, 1377, 1379, 1380, and 1382. We have already seen above, how Java gave
a serious provocation to the Chinese emperor in 1379 or 1380 by the murder of Chinese envoys. The event is thus referred
to in the history of the
Ming Dynasty
:
in
Javanese embassy of 1380 "Some time before, imperial envoys had been sent to carry a seal to the king of San-fo-tsi, and those of Java deluded and killed them the emperor was highly
;
incensed and detained their envoys more than a month, with the intention to punish them, but ultimately they were sent back
with a letter to their king in which he was reproved for what he had done." Evidently the matter was amicably settled, for we hear of envoys being sent from Java in the two following
years.
It thus appears from all accounts that the reign of Rajasanagara witnessed the high-water mark of the power and glory of Java. In view of the increase in power and responsibility
of the empire
trative
we
find a
machinery
is
to
thorough organisation of the adminiscope with the new and heavy task.
There
He had
risen
from an humble
position to bo the chief minister of the his task an unusual degree of devotion
we
king, both of
administration.
whom took an active and important part in the When Gajah Mada died in 1364 no other chief
minister was appointed as his successor. The king, his father, mother, uncle, aunt, and his two sisters (Bhatara Sapta Prabhu) with their husbands formed a sort of inner royal council which
affairs in
its
hands.
This was an
which-
indirect tribute to the great qualities of Gajah Mada in ever way we look at it, whether it was difficult to get a
worthy
it
to leave so large powers in the hands of one officer. Accordingly his work was entrusted to four (or six) different persons. Gajah Mada's name is also associated with a book on polity
43
338
(Kut&ramanava) which, in spite of later additions and may be rightly ascribed to that great minister.
In 1371, however, we find a new Prime Minister appointed. This was Gajah Enggon, who served for the remaining eighteen
years of Rajasanagara's reign, and continued in the post under the next king till his death in 1398.
Chapter
VII.
Vikramavarddhana was married to the crownprincess Kusumavarddhani, and was thus the next heir to the throne. But king Rajasanagara had also a son by a junior wife. In order to settle him well in life, the king had him married
to Nagaravarddhani. He thus became prince of VirabhOmi and was adopted by the princess of Daha. In order to strengthen his position still further the king made him governor of the eastern part of Java. Although nominally under the authority of Majapahit, the prince of Vlrabhumi really exercised
Mataram.
refer to
almost independent powers, so much so that the Chinese annals two kings in Java even during the lifetime of king
.
Rajasanagara, and both of them sent envoys to the imperial 1 court Thus were sown the seeds o a future civil war which
was destined
of the
to pave the
way
Hindu kingdom
also
Bang Rajasanagara died in 1389 A.D. and Vikramavarddhana, known as Hyang Viea, succeeded him at Majapahit.
I,
Groeneyeldt
Notes, p.
35.
340
The
had a son by the crown-princess who was Hyang Wekas ing Sukha.
called,
Being
a direct descendant of Rajasanagara the crown-prince held a He appointed a new Prime position of great importance. Minister Gajah Manguri in 1398. But next year the crownprince died at Indrabhavana and was cremated at the temple of 1 Due to this shock or for some Parama Sukhapura at Tajung.
life in
1400 A.D.
is
The
actual
record
that king
Vikramavarddhana became a "Bhagavan." Brandes translated this word as 'monk' and held that the 'king withdrew from worldly life and government/ But the example of Airlangga
shows that a king can continue to exercise temporal authority even though he adopts a religious life. There is no doubt,
however, that both
accounts,
according
to
Pararaton
royal
and
Chinese
at
exercised
to
powers
explain
away
life.
this
cir-
But of
Pararaton next
Prabhu"
(
i.e.,
)
Chap. XII ) refers to one "Bhatara istri A few lines before this a female sovereign.
(
Chap.
of king Vikramavarddhana, as 'Prabhu istri/ Then, a few lines later ( Chap. XII ), it refers to the death of king Vikrama-
varddhana.
that
This
istri
Prabhu
immediately followed by the statement died in 1429 ( Chap. XII ). Nothing is said
is
about the succession to the throne, but Bhre Daha is said to be Lastly it is noted ruler ( ratu ) in 1437 A.D. ( Chap. XIII ). in 1447 and was cremated at Singhajaya that 'Prabhu istri' died
(
among
I.
Krom
but of this
we have qo
SUVARNADVlPA
of the period.
341
Brandes held the view that after the abdication of Vikramavarddhana Suhita ruled from 1400 to 1429 A.D.,
probably jointly with his father for a part of this period. After the death of both in 1429 A.D., there was an interregnum from 1429 to 1437, and thereafter a queen, Bhre Daha, ruled
Krom
In the
first
to
any interregnum, and secondly, the title *prabhu' is applied whereas Bhre Daha is called only a
He has given a new interpretation. out that Singhajaya, the cremation place of begins by pointing 'Prabhu istri' in 1447, is also, according to Par., the cremation
Krom
himself
From
a year before ( Chap. XII ). place of SuhitiVs husband who died this fact he concludes that this 'Prabhu istri' who died
is
in 1447
a simple explanation. continued to rule till 1429, He assumes that Vikramavarddhana when, after his death, his daughter Suhita ascended the throne
Starting from this basis
offers
Krom
and ruled
till
by Krom
as merely a ruler of
1
Majapahit.
Krom's reconstruction is open to serious objection, as it ignores two clear statements in Chap. XII of the Pararaton, viz., (1) BhatSra istri became ruler in 1400 A.D., and (2) Prabhu
istri
Fortunately,
authorities
we have got two statements by the Chinese which enable us to check the accounts of Pararaton,
and, perhaps, to understand it aright. The History of the Ming Dynasty says that in 1415 A.D. the king of Java gave
up his old name and adopted the new name Yang Wi-si-sa, and from another Chinese source we come to know that this 9 There is no doubt that king was ruling in Java in 1436 A. D.
i.
For
full
cf.
Krom
Geschiedenis a ,
pp. 428ff.
3.
Groeneveldt.
342
the Chinese
Hyang
Vifiesa,
the second
name
of king Vikramavarddhana.
our mind the idea that Vikramavarddhana died in 1429 A.D. As a matter of fact king this is nowhere stated in Pararaton. The relevant passages of Pararaton are cited below (marked A, B, etc.) with a view to arrive at a definite idea of the whole situation.
Chap.
XL
A.
Chap. XII.
Chap. XIII.
Chap.
XIV.
Bhra Hyang ViSesa became bhagavan i.e. state-aifairs in Saka 1322. B. Bhafara istri became ruler (prabhu). C. Bhra Hyang ViSesa died... D. Prabhu istri died in 1351. E. Bhre Daha became ruler (ratu) in Saka 1359. F. Bhre Prabhu istri died in Saka 1369. G. Thereupon Bhre Tumapel became king in
withdrew from
her place.
from the statements A and B we are bound to conclude Bhre Hyang Viesa abdicated the throne in favour of Prabhu istri. Now this title was obviously applied to two persons who died respectively in 1351 (D) and 1369 (F), and probably they were the queen and daughter of king Hyang
Now
that
Viesa.
The
one of
king was
1415
AD.,
and
the
Pararaton
records his
war in 1404 A.D. An His Majesty Bhatara Hyang ViSesa, also by supports the same conclusion, as the record was obviously later 1 The assumption than 1415 A.D. when he assumed this name.
in connection with the civil
inscription, issued
of a
new name
in
that,
though actively
looking to the affairs of the state all along, he formally resumed but this is not certain. In his sovereignty only in that year ;
any case Hyang Visesa resumed the sovereignty in or before 1415 A.D., and ruled till 1436 A.D., as the Chinese authorities
l,
Q.
V. 1918,
p.
171.
SUVARNADVlPA
inform
us.
343
way corroborated by the statement in Daha became ruler in 1437 A.D. (E) Evidently that was the year when Hyang ViSesa died. Bhre Daha probably ruled from 1437 to 1447 when on her death
This
is
in a
The
sentence
G immediately
the accession of
Bhre Prabhu
the latter.
is
istri,
On the
to
referred
or, in other words, the former succeeded other hand, the only person whose accession and not after 1436 A. D. is Bhre Daha,
Thus the three sentences E. F. G., read together, might lead us to believe that Bhre Daha and Prabhu istri probably referred to the same person, viz.,
Bhre Prabhu
istri.
Hyang
Visesa, but of
to
this
we
are
not certain.
that
It is
equally
possible
hold
with
Krom,
local ruler,
after
though neither
in Pararaton.
this incident
mentioned
be a rebel or a rival to
it,
Suhita,
and there
Vikramavarddhana
as the reign of
Civil
War
which
to the
led to the disruption of the empire and downfall of the kingdom of Majapahit.
It has already
ultimately
ruling like
been mentioned that prince Vlrabhumi was an independent prince in Eastern Java even during
The
"In
this
is
country there
is
called Bogindo Bongkit, and the former Bu-la-po-bu (Bhatara 1 Prabhu). Both of them sent envoys with tribute"
This
account
refers
apparently
to It
about
1378
A. D.,
still living.
may be
easily
presumed
Groeneveldt
344
that the relation between the two states did not improve after
the death of that king. The Chinese history tells us that in 1403 both the kings sent tribute and obtained royal seals
from
the
Chinese
emperor
1
.
and
thenceforward
both the
from the
8
Chinese
emperor.
The
We get a more detailed defeated and his kingdom destroyed. account of the struggle in Pararaton (Chap. XII). It appears
that as early as 1401 A. D. king Vikramavarddhana was involved in a fight with prince Virabhumi, but the result was War broke out again in 1404 or shortly before that. indecisive.
At
first
and he decided to
of Java,
the fortune of war turned against Vikramavarddhana, But then the two powerful chiefs retire.
had
was defeated and fled caught and put to death, and in 1406 A. D.
came to his aid, though they proved decisive. Prince Virabhumi during night in a ship. He was, however,
his
The
3
incident
thus
Ming Dynasty.
"In the year 1405 the eunuch Cheng Ho was sent as a messenger to this country, and in the next year the two kings made war upon each other the eastern king was defeated and
;
his
kingdom
destroyed.
At
envoys
were king, and when the the market place, 170 of soldiers of the western king entered on this the western king their followers were killed by these
just in the country of the eastern
;
became afraid and sent envoys to ask pardon. The Emperor gave them an edict reproving him severely and ordered him to
pay sixty thousand taels of gold as a fine. In the year 1408 Cheng Ho was sent again to this country and the western
I.
Ibid,
p.
36,
2.
Ibid,
p. 36.
3.
SUVARNADVIPA
;
345
king presented ten thousand thails of gold the officers of the Board of Rites observed that the amount was not complete
and wanted
to imprison the
:
it,
but the
want from those people who live far is that they acknowledge their guilt, but I do not want away, to enrich myself with their gold," and on this he remitted the
Emperor
said
"What
fine. From this time they brought tribute continually, sometimes once in two years and sometimes more than once a year, and the eunuchs Wu-pin and Cheng Ho visited their
whole
country repeatedly."
The
more restored
for nearly
But the
internal
dissensions
a quarter of a century, ending in a disastrous civil war, must have taxed to the utmost the military and financial resources of the country and left her weak and
exhausted. Its first fruits were seen in the loss of that political supremacy which Java had secured in the Archipelago and
power now passed over to China, and gradually new kingdoms and commercial centres arose which were destined to overwhelm Java herself at no distant date.
Malay Peninsula.
Her
position as suzerain
we can
clearly perceive the decline of Java, as an international power. This can be best understood by reviewing the position of a
few kingdoms which had acknowledged the supremacy Java in the middle of the fourteenth century A.D.
1.
of
West Borneo
(Pu-ni).
have already described the relations of this country In 1370 the king of Pu-ni at first did not dare to send even an envoy to China for fear of Java. But we read
with Java.
in
We
that iu 1405 he not only from the hands of the Chinese emperor,
Ming Dynasty
346
but even went with his whole family to China to pay respects
the emperor that 'his country had to give Java forty caties camphor baros this every year and begged an imperial order to Java that
to the emperor.
it
might be sent
accordingly
the imperial
court'.
The
emperor
the "gave an order to Java telling them not to ask any more We further read that the annual tribute of this country". of Pu-ni represented to the emperor in 1405 A.D., late king
that his country
to the imperial
government.
Henceforth
of
Pu-ni
sent
regular
and some time even personally (See infra Bk. IV., family.
Chap. IV).
2.
San-fo-tsi
1
that although Java had all the completely conquered San-fo-tsi he could not keep lands. Two states were established there with two Chinese
history tells us
the suzerainty of Java, they sent regular tributes and envoys Then they ceased to care either for to the imperial court. Java or for China. It is interesting to note that in 1397 the
Chinese emperor dared not send envoys direct to Java for fear that they will be waylaid by San-fo-tsi, and hence he approached Siam as an intermediary to carry his message to Java so that she
Thus China recognised at least the might warn San-fo-tsi. In 1405 and of Java over San-fo-tsi. nominal suzerainty succeeding years, however, there were regular changes of
to Java.
embassies between China and San-fo-tsi, without any reference In 1424 a king of San-fo-tsi even asked permission
of the emperor to succeed his father. It is evident that from the beginning of the fifteenth century A.D. Java exercised
but
little
i.
Ibid, p. 71.
SUVARNADVlPA
3.
347
Sumatra
Samudra, one of the vassal states of Java, became a strong Islamic power, and a powerful centre of trade and commerce. Its Sultan sent envoys and tribute to the imperial court in
1 1405 and was named by the emperor 'king of Samudra/ In 1412 the Muhammadan king of Lambri, another vassal state of
Java, sent envoys with tribute to China. "The envoys were presented with court dresses, and the king got a seal, a commission and silks, whilst Cheng Ho was sent to carry the
instructions of the
Till
1424, they
4.
Malay Peninsula
Various states in Malay Peninsula such as Pahang and (infra, Bk. IV. Chap. II).
But the most important of them was the Muhammadan king doin of Malacca. This powerful state sought the protection
of China against Siam, and in 1405 its king received investiture
from the Chinese emperor. 8 Gradually this state grew to be a great rival of Java as would appear from the following
passage in the History of the Ming Dynasty. "At that time Palembang was under the domination of Java
he had an order
from the emperor to claim this possession. When the emperor heard this, he gave an edict saying "When lately the eunuch Wu-pin came back he reported that you (king of Java) had
:
now
I have heard lately that the king of Malacca has claimed the
country Palembang from you and that you have been very much but I treat people astonished, hearing that this was my will
:
most upright way and if I had allowed him to do so, I certainly would have sent an open order, therefore you have no reason to be afraid and if bad men make use of false pretences, you must not lightly believe them".*
in the
I.
Ibid, p. 89.
a.
ibid, p. 99.
3.
Ibid, p, 129.
4.
Ibid, p. 37.
348
enough to wrest Palembang from her. The Chinese emperor appears on the stage as patron and saviour of Java. The very fact that the king of Malacca pretended to have an order from
the Chinese emperor shows the position of China in the affairs
Everything indicates that China is now by common consent the recognised suzerain, and although the emperor wants to assert his authority over Java he does not like another power like Malacca to occupy the position which Java lately did.
of the Archipelago.
Java silently acquiesced in the new r&le of China and accommodated herself to the changed state of things. The
episode of 1406 has been related above. In 1415 king Vikramavarddhana sent envoys to thank the emperor for his kindness
(evidently
of Malacca)
this
and to
connection the
Chinese historian
adopted the name Yang Hyang Visesa which we meet with in Javanese records. The cordial relations between Java and the imperial court continued after 1415, as we can easily conclude from the 8 following passage of the History of the Ming Dynasty
.
us that the king (Vikramavarddhana) Wi-si-sa, the Chinese form of the name
"About that time (1415 A.D.) some followers of the Imperial envoys had been driven by a storm to the country Pantsur, and a Javanese, hearing this, paid a ransom for them and brought
them
In the year 1418 the to the place where the king lived. sent envoys with tribute to the court and sent these men king back at the same time the emperor praised the king in an
;
edict
and sent
also presents to
the Javanese
was
Ibid, p. 37.
2.
Ibid, p. 37.
SUVARNADVlPA
"In the
349
Yung-lang year 1436 the imperial envoy Ma a memorial to the emperor, saying that the former presented Javanese envoy Pa-ti, on coming to court, had got a silver
girdle,
A-liet,
his request
was granted.
"In the intercalary sixth month of the same year the envoys
of Calicut, Northern Sumatra,
Cochin,
Hormus, Dsahffar, Comari, and Cambodja were sent together with the envoys of Java and the emperor gave a
to the king of this country
9
back
letter
"You, oh king
that I have
;
performing
my
ancestors and
now
you have again sent envoys to I am fully convinced of your sincerity. court Now, in the of my predecessor (1426-35) Calicut and ten other reign countries have come to bring tribute, and as your envoys are going home, I have ordered those other envoys to go with
to the throne,
come
them.
my
benevolent
who
live far
away.
shipwrecked by a storm,
1440 envoys who were going home, were drowned and fifty-six men were saved. They came back to Canton and the emperor eighty-three
"In the year
gave orders to the authorities to provide for them, until there should be a ship in which they could go home.
i.
'Ya-lie'
and regards
the
it
as the shortened
form
of
in
'Ya-lie-ya-cho',
the
name
of
Javanese
ambassador
to
1436 (Toung Pao, 1934, p. 299). Pelliot further points out that two more embassies were sent from Java to China in 1436,
China
and that Ma Yung-lang was probably a Javanese ambassador, and not an imperial envoy, as Groeneveldt supposes (Ibid).
The name of this king is "Yang-wei-si-cha" i.e. Hyang Vis*ea, a. according to a Chinese authority quoted by Pelliot (T'oung Pao, 1934, Pelliot further points out that Groeneveldt has, through inadverp. 301).
tence, omitted the
name
of
Ceylon
350
memorial
"In the year 1443 the Governor of Canton presented a pointing out that the continual tribute of Java
caused great expenses and trouble, and that it was no good plan The to injure China in order to benefit those distant people.
Emperor adopted
his views
and when the envoys of that country letter different saying "The
:
countries over the sea shall all bring tribute once in three
; you, oh king, must also have compassion with your people and observe this arrangement."
"In the year 1446 they brought again tribute, but afterwards
it
rare".
Vikramavarddhana or Hyang ViSesa was thus inglorious both at home and abroad. In addition to the disastrous civil war, Java suffered terribly from a volcanic eruption in 1411 and a great famine in 1426. A new Prime
The
reign
of
Kanaka, carried on the government from 1413 to 1430. Like Gajah Mada, his name is associated with a law-book, the idigama. The king died in or shortly before 1429 A.D. and
Minister,
found his
last resting place at ParamaviSesapura at Lalangon, the same as Visesapura at Bhayalango, the cremation probably place of his great-grandmother Rajapatnl.
After the death of Vikramavarddhana probably his daughter She thus Suhita ascended the throne, as noted above.
superseded her two brothers, both called Bhre Tumapel. This was presumably due to her high rank on the mother's side, and
Vikramavarddhana married the daughter of Prince Vlrabhumi and Nagaravardhani, we may easily presume Her accession to the this lady to be the mother of Suhita.
as
we know
that
throne was probably the result, to a certain extent, of the significant triumph of the party of that unfortunate prince.
indication of that
is
to be
Pararaton
XIII ) that Raden Gajah was dismissed in ( Ch. A.D. because he had killed prince VlrabhQmi. 1433
We
know
important events during the reign of She died childless in 1447 A.D. $ud was cremated
of no
SUVAHNADVIPA
the year before.
of her
351
She was succeeded by Bhre Tumapel, probably the younger two brothers of that name. The king was called Sri
reign of four years
(1451 A.D.).
He was
cremated at Krtavijayapura.
his reign.
There were
We
The events immediately following the death of the king are not quite clearly intelligible from the account of Pararaton. Keling read that one Bhre Pamotan succeeded at
under
the
Kahuripan,
name
Sri Rajasavardhana.
This
is
followed by the statement that Sinagara died in 1453, and there was no ruler for the next three years. It would thus But appear that Rajasavardhana was the same as Sinagara.
then the mention of Keling, perhaps in north-western part of not rule Kediri, is obscure. Does it mean that the king did
in
Majapahit?
is
The
also
relationship
of
the
king
with
his
predecessor to court with History the "King Prabu (of Java) sent envoys l Prabu is to be 1452". tribute in Perhaps this king
identified with Rajasavardhana.
not known.
According
to the
Chinese
After the interregnum of three years, Bhre Vengker ascended 1456 A.D., under the name Bhra Hyang Parva-
During his reign the Chinese history refers to two embassies from Java to the imperial court, one in 1460, and
1465.
is
first
king of Java
of
in
The next king, according to Salas, who ruled for two years
and then
of
left
Pandan
the capital.
Pararaton
kings by referring
to four
sons of Sinagara
king
is
Ibid, p. 39.
Ibid, p, 39.
s.
for
352
said to be
in the
palace in 1478."
of
Pararaton about
closing
period of the history of Majapahit can hardly be accepted as accurate. Its unreliable character is easily demonstrated by
a copperplate found at Sendang Sedati, south of Bnjanegara.
1
whose
personal
We can easily name, Singhavikramavardhana. him with the person, bearing both these names, whom identify 8 not as the ruling we meet with in Trabulan inscription
coronation
,
king,
but as prince of
Majesty, and
husband
Rajasavardhanadevl,
to
Par.,
princess
of
Now,
throne
according
at
Blire
Tumapel in 1466, chronicle also refers (Chap. X) to a person of the same name as the husband of Bhre Singhapura. Dr. M. A. Muusses,
therefore, suggests
that king
'Singhavikramavardhana of the
inscription
is
Pandan
Salas
of Pararaton.
puts the end of Salas' reign at Tumapel in 1468, whereas the Sendang Sedati inscription is
We may
dates
explain this discrepancy by supposing given in Par. are wrong, or that the
Krom,
however,
offers
new
view.
He
takes
the
that
mean
Bhra Krtabhumi, the youngest of the four sons of Sinagara, was the king who ascended the throne in 1468, and died
in 1478.
then identifies Singhavikramavardhana, referred to in the Trabulan inscription as "the youngest son of His
1.
He
O. V.
1922,
pp.
p.
22-27170.
2.
O. V. 1918,
The
to
the
time of Vikramavarddhana,
likely belongs
3.
(Ibid,
but more
to the period
Feest.
PP 207-214,
SUVARNADVIPA
353
1 Whatever we may think of Majesty", with this Kj-tabhami these different views, it is interesting to note that in the copper-
is
referred to
mler of Yavabumi, comprising the two kingdoms of Janggala and Kadiri. How far this claim was justified,
as the sole
there
is
is
no means to determine.
the
The
had
probability,
lost
its
howevei',
that
kingdom
even
in
of Majapahit
position of
supremacy,
and already showed alarming which was not long in coming. symptoms The year 1478 A. D., the last year for which any political event is recorded in Pararaton, was an eventful one according
Java,
of final dissolution
the Javanese tradition, for it was in that year that the Muhammadaris conquered Majapahit and destroyed the Hindu 2 That this tradition is not quite correct kingdom in Java
to
.
appears from the fact that several inscriptions, dated I486 A. D., refer to a Hindu king, and Portuguese accounts of a later date
refer to Hindu kings in Java. themselves indicate clearly that the king
also
But
the inscriptions
who
against Majapahit.
The
tradition
may
fall
according to another version of the tradition), but then it was brought about, not by the Muhammadan conquerors, who came
much
ment
later,
but by a rival Hindu dynasty. Thus the overthrow by a Hindu king and the establishat a later date have
It
is,
Muslim authority
been confused
as early
(or 1481), but then it was not followed by any serious and a new Hindu dynasty soon took the place of the old. The stone inscriptions of 1486 all belong to the same group 8 and were found in Dukuhan Dukuh (in Surabaya) and Jiju near
,
1.
Krom
;
Geschiedenis 2
to
p.
449.
2.
According
cf.
some
the date
is
A. D. 1481
3.
B.K.I., 1899. P-
H7-
O.J.O., Nos.
tions cf.
45
354
Majasari.
Ranavijaya, but
One
of the inscriptions
made
to
the twelve-year Sraddha of His Majesty the prince of Dahanapura who died at Indrabhavana. This shows that the king
belonged to the dynasty of Daha and his father (at least predecessor) died twelve years ago i.e. in 1474 A.D. Now Pararaton tells us, as already stated above, that Bhre Daha
became king
(ratu) in
If
we
consider this last date a mistake for 1474 A. D., we can identify this ratu Daha with the predecessor of Ranavijaya. Dr. Muusses,
however, offers an altogether new solution. As already noted above, he identifies Singhavikramavardhana with Bhre Pandan Salas, and then provisionally reconstructs the following history
:
in
1451.
1453 anarchy for three years followed. After Hyang PtirvaviSesa's death Bhre Pandan Salas became Prabhu, but he was forced
to leave the
later (1468).
He
betook himself
One
there
year
after its
publication
lie
1478.
sacrifice
honour of his
father
who
vijaya, king of
referred to in the inscriptions as king of Sri Vilvatikta, Daha, Janggala and Kadiri. This wording is someis
king of Java.
He
what
curious, as Kadiri
The
explanation of the singular phrase perhaps lies in the fact that Janggala and Kadiri were the conventional official names of
the two parts of the
kingdom
(
Majapahit
component parts
I.
Feest. Bat.
pp. 207-214.
SUVARNADVlPA
The
family,
355
suma, and the royal name Singhavardhana. But as he is called, not Prabhu, but only Bhatara of Kling, he occupied probably only a lower position. The inscriptions mention that the priest
Brahmaraja Ganggadhara, who performed the twelve-year Sraddha, was well versed in the four Vedas. They also refer
Rama and Rsi Bharadvaja and also to worship of Rama, Visnu, Yama, and Durga, thus leaving no doubt that the royal dynasty was purely Hindu.
to the consecration of the images of
Girlndravardhana Ranavijaya
Eastern Java about
is
the
last
Hindu king
of
whom we
But the Hindu kingdom continued there for 30 or 40 years more before it was finally conquered by the Muhammadans, as we shall see in a later chapter. The last Javanese embassy 1 to China was sent in 1499 A. D.
.
j.
Groeneveldt
Notes,
p. 39.
Chapter VIII
SUNDA
Before we proceed to discuss the
of Java,
Muhammadan
Sunda.
conquest
we must go back
I.
Hindu kingdom
We
have seen
political
above (Bk
Chap. VI)
that the
Hindu
culture
and
authority in Java had its beginning in this region. But, since the days of PQrnavarman, our knowledge of the history of this
region
culture
is
very meagre.
The
existence,
however,
of
Hindu
.
and Hindu society in this region, in the tenth century 1 A is proved by an inscription found at Kebon Kopi A.D., dated 1030 more definite information is given by an inscription
A.D., engraved on four stones found near Cibadak, above 2 It refers to the pious foundation of some Leuvi Kalabang
.
holy footprints
by a king
of
Sunda
called
Sri Jayabhiipati
refers to
Hara
Haricandana
O.V.
1923, p. 18,
if
A.
this
it
inscription
refers
to the tenth
reading be not accepted, the palaeography of the century A. D. The contents of the
made
out.
T. B. G., Vol. 57
titles of
Pleyte's
inference,
from
the
name and
was
the king, that he fought with Eastern Java a predecessor of Airlangga, rests on too slender a basis (cf.
and
Geschiedenis, p. 259).
SUVARNADVlPA
doubt that
Java, but
it
it
357
formed a separate kingdom independent of Eastern is equally clear that its culture and civilisation
It
was
may be mentioned
the earliest
here
is
document
containing the name of Sunda. Pleyte had discovered a pair of footprints on a block of stone lying on the top of Perbakti,
north-west of Cicurug.
It
is
locally
known
in the
as
Batu Tapak.
for
As Sanghyang Tapak
is
the
name given
inscription
the pious foundation, the footprints referred to therein be those discovered by Pleyte.
It
may
r^n
1..* j,re
appears from the accounts of Chau Ju-kua that in the century A.D. Sunda was a dependency of San-fo-tsi.
was a good harbour in the land. The people were also given to agriculture and produced the best quality of pepper. But as there was no regular system of government, and the
people were given to brigandage, foreign traders rarely
there.
1
went
Sunda among the vassal states of no independent evidence corroborating this, and so we cannot be quite sure if Sunda really became a 8 Such a transfer dependency of the Eastern Javanese kingdom of allegiance on the part of Sunda could only be due to the
includes
is
Kytanagara.
There
decline of the
power of
San-fo-tsi
Similarly
of Gajah
Mada during the regency of Tribhuvanottungadevl. Here, again, the statement cannot be corroborated by any other source.
Next
in point of time
is
Sundanese
The
attitude of the
Sundanese king and nobles, as explained in the Pararaton, idea that the king of Sunda regarded himself as a vassal of Majapahit. The references in Nag. Kr. and
negatives the
i.
Chau Ju-kua,
?.
Krom
Geschiedenis, p. 335
Fruin-Mees
?
p.
u6,
358
SUNDA
by Kytanagara and Mada, also show that none of these conquests, even if it Gajah be regarded as true, really led to any decisive result. Taking all these things into consideration one is forced to the conclusion
Par. to the conquest of Sunda, respectively
Sunda remained a separate kingdom during the century 1260-1360 A.D., and although its relations with Majapahit were never friendly, it had not been a part of that empire, at least
that
for any length of time.
to
the south-east
of
Buitenzorg, gives us some interesting information regarding three generations of kings. The king, who issued the record, was ruler of Pakwan Pajajaran. He had several names, Rtu
Purana, Prabhu Guru Devatasrana, and Sri Baduga Maharaja. He is said to be Rata Devata who ruled in Pakwan. He was
the son of Rahyang Devaniskala, who died at Gunatiga, and grandson of Rahyang Niskalavastu KaScana, who died at
Nusa Larang.
The
inscription records
a number
of
is
pious
most
The inscription thus testifies to the existence of the kingdom Pakwan Pajajaran as early as fourteenth century A.D. This kingdom in West Java continued down to the time of the advent of the Europeans, and is referred to in their reports. The ruins of Pakwan in the neighbourhood of Batu-Tulis, have been
of
explored and described by Pleyte.* He has traced the ruins of the walls surrounding the Kraton (palace) on three sides.
To
its
Buitenzorg
to the north.
1.
it,
have
formed subject
Vol.
i
by various scholars
cf.
Friederich, in T.B.G.,
;
in Vol. 17 (1869), PP- 483 Pleyte, in (1853), pp. 442 ff. ; Holle, # Poerbatjaraka has discussed the whole 53 (1911), pp. 155 in Vol. 59 (1921), pp. 381 if,, and his views have been question at length Cf. also Husein Jayadiningrat Sajarah Banten, generally accepted.
Vol.
pp. 141
2.
ff.
Pleyte, op.
cit.,
pp. 166
ff.
SUVARNADVIPA
Three
copperplates
also to all
359
to
found at Kebantenan, 1
the
east
of Batavia,
refer to the
same
line
of kings.
One
of
them
refers
the
three kings,
Rahyang
Devata,
Niskalavastu
Pakwan
who
held his
court at Pajajaran. It will be seen that the first and the third names are identical, while the second is different from
the
list
given above.
The two
at
last king.
A
Galuh
in
(
stone
inscription
Kavali*
in
south
Chirebon,
in
district,
refers to a king
Prabhu
SdraviSesa
and adopted
It has
the
life
of a hermit.
called
Prabhu
raja
Vastu
was
Rahyang
we must
If this identification be
then transferred
Pakwan
The Batu-Tulis
dificr
scholars
1.
Pleyte,
op.
cit,
pp.
169-171
Poerbatjaraka, op.
cit.,
pp.
389-392.
2.
Pleyte, op.
cit,,
pp. 167
Ins.
if
ff.
The Batu-Tulis
over Pajajaran
the
Pakwan, but
we
are right in
the
may
new
capital city,
particularly as
crown
Fruinthe
prince of
Galuh
in
Carita Parahyangan, as
be shown below.
Mees
kingdom was founded at an earlier date by prince Kuda Lalean of Eastern Java, and Ratu Purana was called to the throne of Pajajaran by its king Sang Susuk Tunggal who had no legitimate heir.
360
StINl)A
date should be interpreted as 1333, and assuming this to be we can refer the reign of the family at Galuh to true,
beginning of the
14th
Some
traditions
contained in a book
as follows 1
:
Keding
Kikis reigned for 22 years. He who he begot Aji Kolot. reigned for 7 years
at
;
He reigned for 10 years and had a son Prebu Maharaja. When the latter had reigned for 7 years he fell victim to a
trap on the occasion of the marriage of his
daughter,
crown
princess Tohaan. Many people went to Java as the Javanese did not wish to celebrate the marriage in Sunda. There was a fight at Majapahit.
vastu KaScana
hill
"There was a son of Prebu Wangi named Prebu Niskalawho died on the island of Larang, on the
Vanakusuma.
*
*
Galuh who died at Gunungtiga he committed an offence by carrying on illegitimate amorous intrigues. He was succeeded by Nalendra Puja Premana, Ratu Jay a Devata, whose death
of
Tfien
He
Now,
life
who
lost
his
daughter's marriage
tragic
must be identified with the Sundanese king, who met with a end in 1357 A.D., as has been recorded above on the authority of Pararaton. There can also be hardly any doubt that Niskalavastu KaScana who died on the island of Larang, and the 'crown prince of Galuh who died at Gunungtiga^,
are
identical
died at
with Rahyang Niskalavastu KaScana, who Nusa Larang, and his son Rahyang Devaniskala
died at Gunatiga, according to the Batu-Tulis inscription. It would then follow that the last king mentioned in the
i.
who
Poerbatjaraka, op,
cit,
pp. 395
ft".
StJVARNADVIPA
361
above passage #u. Nalendra Puja Prcuiana Ratu Jaya Devata has to be identified with Ratu Purana of the Batu-Tulis
inscription.
Now
king,
if we accept the date A.D. 1333 for the last named we must hold that Prebu Maharaja, who lost his life
at Majapahit,
It
passage.
has been suggested that, through mistake, his story has been divided into two parts, one portion being narrated before
his
in its right
that
of his
in both
cases
reference being
to
this
Deva
made to by treachery. According view Niskalavastu Kaucana is the grandfather, and Niskala is the father of Prebu Maharaja, or Ratu
his death
Devata, or Sri Vadtiga Maharaja, who founded Pajajaran, some time before 1333, the date of his Batu-Tulis Ins., and
died at Bubat
(
Majapahit
1
in 1357 A.D.
on the occasion of
The inscriptions tell us that king Niskalavastu died at Nusa Larang and his son at Gunatiga. Both these places can
i.
The
difficulty
of accepting
this
interpretation
is
obvious.
to
same person
7
is
Para-
hyangan as it is, by interpreting the date of Batu-Tulis Ins. as 1433. In that case Prebu Maharaja, who died in 1357 A. D., would be the
predecessor of Niskalavastu.
If
we
35 years, his grandson would be reigning about 1433 A. D., the assumed date of the Batu-Tulis Ins., as will be seen from the following table. Prabhu Maharaja, 1350-1357 A D,
Niskalavastu Kancana, 1357-1392 A. D.
Crown
The
who
died at Kikis
would then
have reigned from 1311-1333 A. D. and his two successors respectively from 1333 to 1340 and 1340 to 1350 A, D. The royal family was
thus established at the beginning of the fourteenth century.
362
be easily located.
lies
still
8UNDA
In the lake Penjalu, not far from Kavali,
To
still
the north of
called
Gunung
also
Kem-
bangan which belonged to Galuh even at the beginning of the 1 19th century A.D.
The
history of
Sunda
obscure
in the extreme.
The
possibly extended the supremacy of Java over Sunda for some time. But the kingdom of Pajajaran must have regained full
the
15th
century
when
Majapahit was torn by internal dissensions. Since that time Hindu kingdoms of Java and Sunda, i.e. of Majapahit
side
till
Muhammadan
A.D.
I.
ff.
De Haan. Priangan
ff.
III,
p. 70,
p, 165.
Book IV
SUVARNADVlPA
BOOK
Chapter
IV
I.
IN
SUMATRA
Rise of Malayu
loosened
the
The
Malay Peninsula. Sumatra, which sought to rival the exploits of the decaying empire, and revive it on a new basis. This was Malayu, which is usually identified with Jambi in the eastern coast of Sumatra.
politically the petty states of Sumatra and But there shortly arose a new power in
The
and
existence of this
its
kingdom in the seventh century A.D., ultimate absorption by the neighbouring kingdom of
Since then Malayu
political unit until the eleventh century sends two embassies to China in 1079 and 1088
disappears as a separate
the thirteenth century it was conquered by the Javanese king Krtanagara. We have seen above how the tragic end of Krtanagara enabled Malayu to throw off' the yoke
of Java,
and
it
soon
felt
with Siam for the possession of the petty states in the southern
part of Malay Peninsula.
This rivalry
is
reflected in the
Chinese annals.
Malayu
in 1281
In
J.A., ii
XII,
p. 65, f.n.(i).
first
346.
Pelliot
for 1079.
B.E.F.E.O., Vol. IV, p. 326. Ferrand thinks that from the I3th century onward, refers to Malacca and not to 'Malayu', Malayu or Jambi in Sumatra. ( See chapter on Malacca )
2.
Pelliot,
364
against Java, sent envoys to king of Malayu, he sent his son (or 1 During the same younger brother) in token of his allegiance.
period Siam had also sent several envoys to China to pay 2 The Chinese annals say that Malayu and Siam allegiance.
had been
so in 1295
Siam
from
further
and
to
hold to
its
promise'.
dence confirms the view, held above, that there was a rivalry between the two states over the possessions of San-fo-tsi in
Malay Peninsula.
mission to China.
4
In 1297 we hear
It
of
may be noted
that in
Siam and Malayu met at the imperial embassy was sent from Malayu in 1301.
further
of the
thirteenth
rise
century A.D.
of the
saw
the
of
and the
new kingdom
to
As we have
its
existence to Java, and for a long time there was a attachment between the two states, When the Javanese
retired
close
army
two Malayu accompanied it to Java. One of them Dara Petak was married to the Javanese king. The elder daughter, Dara Jingga, married one 'Deva' and had by him a son named Tuhan Janaka who afterwards became king of Malayu. He was also known as Sri Marmadeva and Haji Mantrolot. Thus Marmadeva may be regarded as the successor
from Malayu
after the
death
of
Krtanagara,
princesses of
Groeneveldt Notes, p. 30., Pelliot, op. cit., p. 327. 1. another embassy was sent from Malayu in 1294. See below.
2.
3.
Perhaps
Ibid. This evidently shows that some time, anterior to 1295 Malayu had sought the protection of China, and the latter forced Siam to promise that it would abstain from further hostilities
A.D.,
against Malayu.
4.
5.
II,
Vol.
XV
IbuJ.
SUVARNADVlPA
of Maulivarmadeva
365
of Kj-tanagara.
who was ruling in 1286 A.D, as a vassal The account of Marco Polo shows that in
1292 A.D. Malayu (Malaiur) was a flourishing kingdom and a prosperous centre of trade and commerce.
Malayu known to us is Sdityavarmadeva. A beautiful image of ManjuSrI, which once stood in the temple 1 The one of Candi Jago, contains two Sanskrit inscriptions. on the front says that the image was set up in A.D. 1343 in a The inscription Buddhist temple by 5ryyavang,4adhirfija.
of
on the back informs us that in the kingdom of Rajapatnl, the minister Sdityavarman, belonging to her family, built a beautiful temple at Jinftlayapura in Java, in the year 1343 A.D., for
securing the highest religious merit to his parents and relations.
The
two
inscrip-
rise to
some
Kern held varman both refer to one and the same person, and identified him as the king of Malayu, known from other records. Kern
held that the king of Malayu calls himself Adhiraja (suzerain) of the 5rya clan in respect of Malayu, and assumes the lower
title
On
has shown that Aryyavang&idhiraja was the title of a high official in the court of Majapahit, and he holds that the two
inscriptions really belong to
two
jjourt.
Zrya Devaraja Sri Aditya and identifies him with in another record of the period Adityavarman of the inscription, who subsequently became a
He
traces the
name
of Vj-ddhamantri
king in Sumatra.
Whatever
that
may
be,
is
the same as the king of Malayu of generally recognised to be that name, and the identification of Bosch would prove that he
was holding some high offices in Java before he occupied the throne in Malayu. Krom holds that he successively filled the
i,
For a
full
discussion,
cf.
Rouflfeer,
B.K.I., Vol.
77
1921
pp. 194-201.
366
posts of XryavangSadhirSja and Vyddhamautri 1 and thus refers both the inscriptions to him
no doubt, arises from the fact that 5dityavarman claims to be descended from the family of Rajapatnl We have no evidence in support of this. It (tadbangSgijah). is true that one of the Malayu princesses was mother of the
difficulty,
Javanese king Jayanagara, and Adityavarman, for all we know, might have been the son of the other princess. But even this
does not give him any claim to be descended from the family of Rajapatni. We may, therefore, take the expression to mean
no more than that he was a member of the Javanese royal family, unless, of course, there was some relationship by
marriage which
Adityavarman in In 1347 A.D. he engraved an inscription on itself. the back of the image of AmoghapaSa, which was set up at DharmaSraya by the Javanese king Krtanagara in 1286 A.D.
We
now
Sumatra
The
pedestal of the image, which contained was left where it was, but the
image
in a
itself
new temple with a new inscription. The image now stands at Rambahan near Lubuk Bulan in the Batanghari
district,
also
erected there.
refers
The
)
inscription
',
to
the king as
var.
Adityavarmmodaya
Maulimali-
varmmadeva
Amoghapasa
Maharajadhiraja
who
set
up
the
4
.
image of
The title for the welfare of Malay apura Maharajadhiraja indicates the rank of the king to be higher than that of Maulivarman in 1286 A.D.
An
i.
inscribed
stone,
Geschiedenis, p. 389.
Cf. B.K.I.
(iQ30 PP 32-35.
4,
19
'Malayapura*
(
is
but
Krom
thinks
it
Malayu
Geschiedenis, p. 390
SUVABNADVlPA
Capellen, in upper Padang, gives the date 1347
inscriptions
l
.
367
Several
in
of
Adityavarman
All these
have
been
locality,
found
the
neighbourhood.
prove this
the heart of
the later kingdom of Menangkabau, to have been the centre of .Sdityavarman's kingdom. One of these inscriptions, the
large inscription of Pagarrujung (originally of Bukit Gambak) dated in the year 1356, refers to the erection of a
2
Vihara by Maharajadhiraja
3
Adityavarman Pratapaparakrama
In
another
inscription
at
Rajendramaulimanivarinmadeva.
is
Kubu Raja the king styled Kanakamedinlndra i.e. lord of Kanakamedinl ( Golden land ), a synonym of Suvarnabhumi. His father's name is given as Advayavarman and his family while is said to be descended from Indra ( KuliSadhara )
he
is
regarded
i.e.
as
an
incarnation of
said to
Loke^vara.
In the
Pagarrujung
tilaka
inscription he is
be
Dharmaraja-kula-
Another inscription found at Suroasa* is dated in the year 1375 A.D. Adityavarman is here styled SuravaSa-v&n i.e. lord of SuravaSa, and there is hardly any doubt that the name of the place has been preserved in modern Suroasa.
The
of
name
in
another
inscription*
Adityavarman
near
Bandar
Bapahat.
This
record
is
On
vix,.,
we
find
the usual
script
variations,
Kavi script with some local the same thing was repeated
This shows that South
in
South Indian
Grantha alphabet.
2.
3.
O.V., 1912, pp. 34. ff. O. V. 1912, pp. 51. ff Kern, V.G., Vol. VI (1917)* PP- 261-275 VII (191?), pp. 215-221. The name of the Kern, V.G., Vol.
;
;
place
is
P. 150).
4.
5.
O.V.,
in
But
368
Itf
SUMATRA
refers
fl
of 5dityavarman, one
,
to the
crown prince
high
official
( Yuvaraja ) Anangavarman, 8 and two others refer to his tumanggung Pamanan. Another inscription, with a date
,
one to a
is
We
all
these
inscriptions that
king
ruled
kingdom, which comprised the central portion of Sumatra, and extended from the eastern to the western coast. According
to the Javanese chronicle, NSgara-Krtagama, this
kingdom of
If
Malayu acknowledged the supremacy of the Javanese king. that were so, it would really mean a sort of nominal
It
is
allegiance.
interesting
to
Rise of Islam.
The downfall
many
other important
Malayu as a great power. a number of petty states which paid a nominal allegiance, some time to Java and some time to China, as suited their convenience, but all the while indulged in internecine wars and jealousies. This paved
consequences besides the rise of Sumatra was now divided into
the
way
power which was destined in the long run nearly the whole of Malayasia.
1.
overwhelm
Inventaris
Versl.
2.
3.
5.
2 (1917), P.
33.
Par., p. 122
A
I,
given by L.C.
Westenenk
in
Congres
pp. 1-39.
SUVARNADVIPA
The first
tion
is
369
definite
Polo 1
it
Marco
detailed
Polo
"Java the
less",
had eight
kingdoms
Of
he
gives
account of six kingdoms "that lie at this side of the land" These kingdoms were Ferlec, and were visited by him. Lambri and Fansur. Marco Polo Basma, Samara, Dagroian, "at the other side of says nothing of the two other kingdoms
the island" as he never visited them.
Perlak on the six kingdoms, Ferlec is undoubtedly and Lambri the same as Lamuri or Great Atjeh the north-east, named between (Acheh), on the north-west. The three kingdoms
Of
region.
with Pasc, and Samara with Samudra. Dagroitin cannot be identified with certainty. Fansur, the sixth kingdom, is undoubtedly Barus. Most of the details
identified
given by Marco Polo are concerned with peculiar manners and customs of the people, but he throws valuable hints on the
political
and
kingdoms he
all,
i.e.
describes.
own
kings, but
Khan
emperor Kublai Khan. The subjection, however, was more nominal than real, as would appear from the following statement of Marco Polo "They call themselves subjects of the Great Khan but they pay him no tribute indeed they are so far
:
away
that his
men could
not go thither.
Still all
these islanders
as presents."
Marco
Polo's
corro-
borated by the facts that an envoy of the kingdom of Samudra 2 and that embassies were sent visited China in 1286 A. D,
by the generals
1.
of
"The
pp. 284.
Book
ff.
of
Marco
Polo",
-Translated by
Yule,
Vol.
II.
2.
Rockhill,
T'oung Pao
Ser.
II,
Vol. 15 (1914),
PP 440-1.
47
370
Lambri and Sumatra, i.e. Lamuri and Samudra, 1 in 1292 A.D. The people of all the kingdoms except Ferlec were idolators, and evidently belonged to a very primitive state of civilisation. Many of them were cannibals and great believers in sorcery and magic. About Ferlec Marco Polo observes as follows "This king:
dom
the Saracen merchants that they have converted the natives to the Law of Mahomet I mean
is so
much frequented by
the townspeople only, for the hill-people live for all the world like beasts, and eat human flesh, as well as all other kinds of
clean or unclean. And they worship this, that and the other thing, for in fact the first thing that they see on rising in the morning, that they do worship for the rest of the day".
flesh,
This picture of the primitive people of Sumatra shows us what they were when they came into contact with the Hindu
which evidently had not made its influence felt in the northern parts of the country, even so late as the 13th
civilisation,
Evidently Islam was slowly spread among these people by the Muhammadan merchants, before any Muhaincentury
AJX
madan kingdom was established. Thus Perlak was the only Muhammadan in 1292 A.D. when Marco Polo visited the
places
its
state
island.
in
Sumatra
Tradition
foundation
at an
earlier date
Muhammadan state of Samudra. Now Sultan Malik al-Saleh, who founded this state, died in 1297 A.D. The foundation of the Muhammadan kingdom of Samudra must thus be placed
between 1292 and 1297 A.D.* Sumudra, Lamuri, Perlak and
some
other
less
known
kingdoms are
also referred to
1. Groeneveldt Notes, p. 30. Rockhill, op. cit, p. 442. Pelliot, B.E.F.E.O., Vol. IV (327). Pelliot amends Ki-mo-la-mao, name of
one of these
2.
states, into
Malayu.
Sultan's death
is
The date
For
of the
known from
his
tomb-stone
cf.
this, as well as the tradition concerning Perlak, inscription. Moquette in Rapp, Oudh, Dienst., IQI3 PP- 1-12.
SUVAENADVlPA
371
but he does not give any detailed account beyond stating that 1 Other Lamuri was a large state under an independent king. Arab writers also refer to some towns or states, in Sumatra, but do not in any way indicate that they possessed either political or commercial importance. About 1345-6 A. D. Ibn Batuta 4 visited the kingdom of
calls Sumutra, in the island of Java, which here undoubtedly means Sumatra. He was welcomed by the 3 Muhammadan ruler of the place, Sultan Malik az-Zahir
Samudra, which he
illustrious
and
all
kingdom.
But
Hindu kingdoms on
Sultan
lived
from
frequenin
who
the
living in peace.
One
of these
Hindu kingdoms
was
visited
After leaving Samudra, he sailed along the coast for 21 days, and reached the capital of this kingdom.
by Ibn Batuta.
Ibu Batuta here relates a story which throws some interesting runs as It of Sumatra. light on the political condition
follows
:
'The Sultan of Samudra had a nephew (brother's son) who married his daughter and was appointed governor of a province.
This nephew was desirous of marrying the daughter of an Amir, but the Sultan chose the girl for himself. The disappointed
lover waited for his opportunity.
1.
Once
Ferrand
Textes, Vol.
II,
p. 361.
For Ibn Baza's account, cf. Ferrand Textes, Vol. II, pp. 438 ff. Ferrand is inclined to reject the whole account of Ibn Ba{u{a as pure fabrication on the ground that his itinerary is an impossible
2.
one.
Malik az-Zahir was a title borne by nearly all the Sultans 3. Samudra. Sultan Muhammad Malik az-Zahir died in 1326. He was followed by Ahmad and Zain-al-Abidin, both of whom carried the same title. Ibn Ba{u{a must have met one of these, probably the
of
former,
372
journey.
and was accepted as such one section of the people. As soon as the Sultan heard of this by His nephew, however, revolt he marched towards the capital.
walls, declared himself the Sultan,
no
took as
on,
and the
other valuables as he could lay hands and then took shelter with the
infidel
built walls
round
The
location of
Mul Java
with
Ibn Batuta says that its length was two months' journey, and it produced excellent perfumes, named after Van der Lith Kakfila and Eam&ra, two of its districts.
certainty.
identified
Kakiila with
4
Angkola
Pelliot
1
,
it
on
philological
grounds
identifies
Ko-ku-lo, which is mentioned by the Chinese traveller Kian3 tan (c. 800 A. D.), and is to be located to the west of Kedah
.
Rouffaer places it in Sumatra itself, in Menangkabau*. In view of these wide differences of opinion it is difficult the rebels to suggest any identification, but the fact that
to Samudra took shelter in it seems to refer some place in Sumatra itself. Malayu-Jambi would perhaps not be an unacceptable theory, in view of the great power and prestige of that Hindu kingdom. If it were to be Sumatra I would suggest Java itself. outside located
from
in
Sanskrit, the
original
5
.
Java,
as
Wassafdistinguished from Java, the less, named after it 6 close of the 13th century A.D. , i-Hadrat, writing towards the
Merveilles (1883-86), p. 240. T'oung Pao, Ser. II. Vol.
this
2.
i.
Textes, p. 431.
455-
3.
13
1912
),
p.
Ferrand
opposes
4.
5.
view
in J.A., Vol. II
XX
(1922), p. 24.
though interpreting
Textes,
359.
it
in
the
same way,
I.
identifies
it
with Sumatra
$.
Pao, Ser.
Ferrand
SUVAKNADVlPA
refers
373
of
Mul Sava (=Mul Java) as one conquered by Kublai Khan in 1292 A.D.
to
the
also
islands
refers
He
to
aloe
of
the
locality,
as
does
Ibn Batuta in respect of Mdla-Java. Now Java was conquered so this by Kubiai Khan in the year 1292-1293 A.D., and
would be a point
in
But the
as given
details
in
On
spread
the whole, Ibn Ba^uta's account shows the gradual Sumatra. of Islam as a political factor in northern
is
There
base from which the stream of colonisation carried the influence 1 An examination of the of Islam towards the Far East
.
Samudra-Pasc reveals a close tombstones of the resemblance to those found in Gujarat, and there is hardly any doubt that they were imported from the latter place*. We may thus presume a brisk trade activity between Gujarat and Sumatra, and this indirectly led to the furtherance of Islam in the Far East. The Chinese book Tao-i-chc-lio, written by Wang Ta-yuen in 1349 A.D., refers to some of the states in northern Sumatra
Sultans of
such as PaScur, Tamiang, Batakland, Lambri, and Samudra, but says nothing of the political condition or of the spread of
Islam.
as
It also refers to San-f o-tsi
two separate states under two kings But the Nagara-Krtagama, composed in
list
A.D.
1365,
in
of the
petty
states
acknowledged the supremacy of Java. As Sumatra which we have seen above (see p. 330) the list includes Samudra,
1.
Snouck Hurgronje
Moquette
in
pp. 536. ff. The Sejarah evidence of the custom of Malayu (chap. VII) furnishes confirmatory to Malayan countries (J. Str, Br. bringing tomb-stones from India
2.
T.B.G., Vol. 54
II,
Vol.
XVI
374
The statement
all
of
perhaps
these states
Nagara-Kptagama may be true, and now recognised the king of Java as their
suzerain in
more or
in 1292
Kublai
Khan
less the same way that they acknowledged A.D. as noticed by Marco Polo.
empire
in
the
fifteenth century A.D. the states of Northern Sumatra again returned to their allegiance to China, and at the same time a further progress of Islam is noticeable in this
region.
We
According to Schlegel
*
name
of this great
village of the present day, called Samudra. 3 According to the History of the Ming Dynasty
the Chinese
emperor sent envoys to this country in 1403 and 1404. The latter also sent tributes to China before a third imperial envoy,
About this time the neighbouring and killed the king of Sumutra. The widowed queen, having no grown-up son to avenge the foul crime, offered to marry any one who could do so. Thus an old fisherman who defeated and killed the king of Na-ku-erh became king of Sumutra. The emperor issued an edict appoint-
in 1405.
1.
For
the
Chinese
account
that
follows,
cf.
Groeneveldt
Notes,
Pao,
pp. 85-92. Rockhill, op. cit., pp. Ser. II. Vol. II. pp. 399 ff. 2. T'oung Pao, Ser. II, Vol. II, p, 338. account that For the follows, 3.
146
ff.
Schlegel'i 'oung
cf.
Groeneveldt
cf. Pelliot,
Notes,
pp. 85-93.
T'oung
Pao, 1933 ( pp. 275, fn. 2, 290-294 ). The discovery of a new Chinese source makes the whole story of the fisherman extremely doubtful
P-
SUVARNADVIPA
l
375
named Tsai-nu-li-a-pi-ting-ki king of and a court-dress Sumutra, and gave him a seal, a commission, of coloured silk. In 1409 this fisherman king came and offered tribute at the imperial court. But before 1412 he was murdered
ing this fisherman,
by the son
and his son Su-kan-la (Sekander) But the Chinese supported the cause fled into the mountains. According to of the old king's son and defeated Su-kan-la.
of the late king,
Hsing Cha Sheng Lan, Su-kan-la usurped the throne in 1413, but was defeated by the Chinese troops. The new king of Sumutra was grateful for the imperial favour and came to the
imperial court in
tributes to
1415 to
till
offer
tribute.
He
regularly sent
China
1434,
when he
represented that the king was already old and could not manage the affairs any more, and now asked permission to cede the throne to his son, called
the court.
The brother
A-pu-sai,
From
accordingly appointed king of the country. time the envoys from Samudra became gradually more rare. The last embassy was sent in 1486. The Chinese
this
who was
it
was
most
important. Ma Huan says that the neighbouring state of Li-tai was a dependency of Sumutra. Schlegel identifies Li-tai with the state named Lide by Barros and situated between Pedir
Pelliot
name
i).
is
really
'Tsai-nu-li-a.pi-ting
in
which
corresponds
Zaynu-1-Abidin/
well-known
the history
of
died
in
According to the History of the Ming dynasty this brother China, and some time later the king of Sumutra sent another
to
younger brother. As Pelliot suggests, perhaps the reference brothers is due to some confusion (T'oung Pao, 1934, p. 294, fn. i)
3.
two
as
Pelliot
reads the
name
Vol.
as
A-pu-sai-yi-ti
and
restores
it
Abu
Said.
4.
(Ibid).
II,
II, p.
347.
376
were presented with court dresses and the king got a seal, a commission, and silks. It sent tribute every year till 1424.
Ma Huan writing
and
its
in 1416
all
people are
Muhammadans. 1
9
sent
To
Here
the east of
Muhammadans by
is
3 1416 A.D.
name
of the
state
preserved in the
consisted
families.
Another kingdom, Nakur, situated to the west of Samudra, of only one mountain village and about a thousand
The people tattooed their faces with three pointed green figures, and for this reason the king was called the king Their language, manners, and customs were of tattooed faces.
like those of Sumutra.*
northern states of
of the fifteenth century A.D. the Sumatra passed from the sphere of influence of Java to that of China, and gradually adopted the Islamic The importance of Sumatra as a centre of Islam was religion.
no doubt due to the fact that Pasai (Sumatra) had succeeded Kedah as the chief centre of trade. In the fifteenth century Malacca succeeded Pasai and played the role of the leading
Muslim
fall of
state, as
we
shall see
in
After the
Malacca at the beginning of the sixteenth century, Acheen in northern Sumatra became the chief centre of trade and of
Islam.
Ulakan
faith spread to Ulakan, from In the seventeenth century the people along the coast of the Lampong district began to be
Menangkabau.
1.
Groeneveldt
2.
Schlegel reads
II,
Vol.
II, p.
357
).
Pelliot
as
Muhammad Shah
T'oung Pao,
I933
P3.
296 Groeneveldt
Ibid,
p. 96.
4.
SUVARNADVIPA
converted, and in
377
the eighteenth Islam spread to the upIn the middle of the sixteenth century a missionary country. went from Palembang to Borneo and made converts at Sukadana
and Madan.
i.
refer
for
No 77, pp. 171 ff. to which the reader may a detailed account of the introduction of Muhammadan faith
1
in Malay Peninsula and Malay Archipelago. Cf. also 'Encyclopaedic van Nederlandsch Indie s.v. Mohammedanisme ; and BJ.O. Schrieke 'Het Boek van Bonang.'
48
Chapter
II
IN
MALAY
Malay Peninsula
Sailendra Empire.
The Mediaeval
history
of
really
an essential part of the history of the Sailendra empire which we have related above. The peculiar geographical position of the Malay Peninsula invested it with a special commercial
importance, as it controlled the trade-route to East Indies. By the conquest of Sumatra and the Peninsula, the Sailendras
bear eloquent testimony. Henceforth the greater part of the Peninsula formed an important part of the empire, referred to
by the Arabs
as
Zilbag,
and
its
fell
with
Zabag. The Arabs refer to Kalilh as the principal port, and 1 it has been identified with Keddah or Kraii.
as Java rose to political importance, her eyes were turned to the Malay Peninsula, as its possession was naturally the key to the commercial supremacy over eastern waters.
As soon
The
details
of
are somewhat vague and obscure. Rouffiier has advanced some arguments to show that king Sindok of Java sent a naval expedition against the
the second quarter of the tenth century. Although Rouffaer's arguments are far from convincing, yet the 9 hypothesis is not an improbable one.
Malay Peninsula
in
1.
J.A.,u-XlV(i9i9), PP.
B.
2.
K.
I.,
SUVAENADVlPA
There are references to some
379
states
Hindu
in
Malay
Peninsula during the period of Sailendra supremacy. In the first place, we may mention that Schlegel locates Ho-ling or
Kaling of the Chinese writers in Malay Peninsula, and not in Java. 1 If we accept his view we find an important state in the Peninsula, whose history we have included in that of Java.
Schlegel further identifies Ts'ien'-chi-fuh, also called Pean-
chi-poah (=PaSca-pur, pur meaning island), near Kaling, with the five islands w'%. P. Kupat, P. Baiicalis, P. Padang, P. 2 He also Pandjorc and P. Rantau, lying opposite Malacca. a passage from the New History of the T'ang Dynasty quotes
which "distinctly says that the "Five Islands" in the Straits of Malacca were originally tributary states (or colonies) of Southern
India".
all
On this Schlegel observes "There is no doubt that these islands, as also Kaling on the main, were founded by
:
Kalinga or Kling colonies who gave the name of their own 3 country to the new settlements. This, in a way, corroborates the view put forward above on p. 227, viz. that the Sailendras
came
from
Kalinga
coast
and
conquered
the
Malay
Peninsula.
We
do
not,
however,
know any
history
of these "Five Islands", and, as noted above, the identifications, proposed by Schlegel, are extremely doubtful.
Malay Peninsula.
definite reference to another kingdom The Chinese pilgrim Fah-yu, leaving for
India in or shortly after 983 A.D., received from the emperor letters of introduction to the kings whose territories he intended
to visit.
Among
and Sseu-ma-ki-mang, king of Ko-ku-la. Ko-ku-la has been unanimously located on the western coast of the Malay
king of San-fo-tsi and king of Ko-ku-la are mentioned separately in the same sentence does
Peninsula.
The
I.
I,
1.
Ibid, p. 287.
380
1 not necessarily prove that the latter was an independent king, though it is not unlikely.
Indeed, according to the theory of Rouffaer, there were about this time several powerful states in Malay Peninsula which figure so prominently in connection with the overthrow
kingdom of DharmavamSa in 1007 A. D., and against which Airlangga had to carry on a bitter and prolonged But we have already discussed this point (Bk. Ill, fight. II) and need not refer to it again. chap.
of the Javanese
It is in connection
with the invasion of Rajendra Cola, early we for the first time obtain
list
of states in the
of the thirteenth at the beginning A. D. The names and identification of these states century have already been discussed above (pp. 175 ff, pp. 193 ff.)
similar
Malay Peninsula which formed a part of the Sailendras. Chau Ju-kua also gives us a
By
lists
we may form
The kingdoms
of
Tamralinga, Mayirudingam, Pa-t'a, and Ts'ien-Mai formed the northern group. The northernmost state was Grahi, which of Sanseparated KambujadeSa from the Peninsular dominion
fo-tsi.
of Bcranang, Pahang,
two groups lay Trengganau and Kelantan, Between Kataha or Kadaram and Lengkasuka which probably occupied both the eastern and the western coasts of the Peninsula.
these
tance.
These principalities did not enjoy equal power or imporKataha or Kadara was no doubt the chief of these,
i.
The information is given in the History of the Second Han Dynasty. The relevant passage, translated by E. Chavannes ( Revue de
T histoire des religions,
Ferrand's atricle in
J.
t.
XXXIV,
been reproduced
in
A.,
n-XX
2 For p. 227). passage, gives the date as 963 A. D. ( Geschiedenis the name of the king, cf. discussions by Pelliot (B. E. F. E. O., Vol. IV,
SUVARNADVIPA
as testified to
381
by the Cola records which generally refer to the Sailendra emperor as king of Kataha or Kadara. Rsjendra Cola does not refer to any state of the southern group, and even omits the last two of the northern. Chan Ju-kua, too, gives a detailed notice only of Tamralinga, Kadaram, Lengkasuka, and
Although a vassal state of the Sailcndras, Tamralinga sent 1 an embassy to China in 1001 A. D.
.
Beranang.
The
of
latter
a great
Malay Peninsula. Java, change the successful rival, now regarded the empire of his enemy as her legitimate prey. Thus Krtanagara conquered Pahang, one
in the political condition of the
of the vassal
states of San-fo-tsi.
The
tragic
end of Krtanastate
to
many
of the
in
Malay
About the same time the king of Siam entered the stage and by 1292 A. D. had established his authority as far as Ligor. The lost Peninsular empire of San-fo-tsi thus proved a bone of contention between Siam and Malayu, as we have already
above (Bk. IV, ch. I). According to the 'Kot. Monthieraban (Kata Mandira-pala) or Palatine Law of Siam, enacted in A. D. 1360, Ujong Tanah (Johor), Malaka, Malayu, 8 and Worawarl were vassal states of Siam.
noticed
of the
empire of Majapahit
Java
pursued again the policy of re-conquering the Malay Peninsula. By 1365 A. D. nearly the whole of it was included within the
empire of Java, as would appear from the detailed given in the Nagara-Krtagama. (Bk. Ill, ch. VI).
list
of states
i.
II,
pp. 108-110.
3.
Gerini
382
With
Siam must have again tried to consolidate its authority Malay Peninsula. But now the Malay states tried to shake off the yoke of both Java and Siam.
of the fifteenth century A. D.,
in
We have
already seen above, in connection with the history of advantage of the downfall of the
Majapahit empire to pose as the protector of its vassal states, and thereby play an imperial role in the affairs of the Malay The Peninsular states Peninsula and Malay Archipelago.
thus naturally turned towards China, specially is the authority of China was more nominal than that of either Java or Siam.
This
is
clearly indicated
by the
states like
Pahang, Kelantan, and Malacca now send tributes to China. The History of the Ming Dynasty gives us the following information about Pahang, the old court-name for wliich was
Indrapura,
settlers.
1
evidently the
name
given by
the
old
Indian
'Pahang
is
situated to the
west of Siam.
In
the
year
Maharaja
a letter,
written on a golden
leaf, and bringing as tribute six foreign and products of the country. They were received
according to the established rules. 'In the year 1411 the king
(
Pa-la-mi-so-la-ta-lo-si-ni
In Paramefivara Darsana ? ) sent envoys carrying tribute. 1412 Cheng Ho went as an envoy to their country, and in the year 1414 they sent tribute again. (The name of the envoy
sent in 1411
rendered by Schlegel as Somaka Mantri). 'In the year 1416 they sent tribute and Cheng Ho was
is
8
Pahang
and
its
ruler
Maharaja Deva Sura was defeated and captured by Sultan Mansur Shah of Malacca, and thus ended the Hindu royal
line of
I.
Pahang.
J. Str. Br.
R. A.
S,,
No.
p.
81, p. 30.
137.
a.
Groeneveldt
Notes,
3.
Schlegel-Toung
Pao,
p. 47.
Ser.
F,
Winstedt-History of Malaya,
SUVARNADVIPA
As
regards Kelantan
383
:
we read
iu the
Maharaja K'u-ma-r sent envoys and in 1412 Cheng Ho got orders to bring him an imperial letter praising his conduct and to present 1 him with different kinds of silk."
2.
Rise and
fall
of Malacca.
Of
into
the independent states in Malay Peninsula that rise prominence about the beginning of the fifteenth century
A.D., the most important was undoubtedly that of Malacca, which rapidly grew to be the leading commercial centre in
that region.
in
8
The
as
either
kingdom
is
involved
obscurity,
we have
to
traditions,
recorded in native
writers.
handed
down by Portuguese
all
these traditions
kingdom
our present
purpose to
examine
all
these
in detail.
incredible accounts of
of the
in
century A.D.
As
to the
details,
those
'Commentaires
d' Albuquerque'
are
supported in
given a general
Groeneveldt
This
is,
Notes,
p. 139,
on the assumption that Malaiyur or Malayu is the same as the old state of that name in Sumatra, viz. Jambi. The XII, contrary view is maintained by Ferrand (J. A. n -XI, pp. 39 iff.
2.
of course,
pp.
5 iff)
who holds
that from
I3th century
Malacca, and who, therefore, ascribes to Malacca what has been said in the last chapter regarding Malayu from 1281 A. D. Ferrand's view
has been challenged by Rouffaer (B. K.
pp. I39ff., I93ff.).
3.
I
I.
iff,
is
359*?
Vol. 86,
have followed
J.
Rouflfaer's
view which
generally held.
Ferrand
R. A.
A.,
ii-XI (1918),
cf.
pp. 407-467.
For a
critical
Blagden
No.
384
begin
We
may, therefore,
regarding
the
history of the
kingdom of Malacca.
"There reigned a king Bataratamurel ( Bhatara Tumapcl ) in Java, and a king ParimiSura ( ParameSvara ) in Palembang.
As
an agreement.
decision,
and refused
to
The
and ParimiSura, being defeated, fled with the children and some escorts to Singapura ( Singapore ). wife, It was then a large and wealthy city under Siam and its
Palembang,
however,
city.
governor hospitably received the royal fugitive. ParimiSura, killed his host and made himself master of the
hearing this news his former subjects of Palembang, numbering 3000, came to Singapore. Parimisura welcomed them and lived there for five years, pillaging, with his fleet,
the ships that passed through the Strait of Singapore.
i. 3
On
J.
A.
n-XI
(1918),
pp.
2.
393-405.
Groeneveldt
Notes,
Ferrand, op. cit., p. 411. pp. 123-134. There has been much speculation about the early history 3. of Singapore. Scholars have sought to identify it with Mo-ho-sin of of Marco Polo, and I-tsing, Salahat of Ibn Khordadzbeh, Malayur
Ma-li-yu-eul of the
very problematical,
but these are all History of the Yuan Dynasty The account given in Malay Annals is a curious
;
jumble of myths and traditions. The identity of Tumasik and Singapore is universally accepted, and as such we find a reference to it in Tao-i Chih
lio of
Wang
of
Ta-yuan.
made above
to the
Tumasik by the Javanese about the middle of the fourteenth conquest Reference may be made in this connection to the A,D. century famous 'inscription at the mouth of the Singapore river* which was
destroyed by the Public Works Department about a century ago. For a brief account of the old history of Singapore, cf. Winstedt
SUVARNADVIPA
brother of the governor of Singapore
to
385
'Then ParimiSura was attacked by the chief of Patani, whom he had so foully murdered. Being defeated, Parimigura fled with his people
the
fishermen.
to
settle
mouth of About
in of
the
this
Muar
which was very fertile and yielded Parimiura, being satisfied by an examination of the locality, removed there with his family. The pirates in the sea touched at this port to take water, and being aided and encouraged by ParimiSura they came
their village,
life.
all
necessaries
there to
sell their stolen goods. Thus it grew to be a commercial centre, and in two years the population rose to 2000. ParimiSura named the settlement Malacca. Gradually
(in Sumatra) and Bengal came to trade importance rapidly increased. Purimisura died seven years after his settlement at Malacca, leaving a son
and
its
called Xaquondarxa (Sekandar Shah). Although the prince was a Hindu, he had married the daughter of the king of Pase who had adopted the Muhammadan religion a short while ago.
Either at the request of his wife, or at the instance of his it was not long before he himself became a father-in-law,
convert to Islam. After he had several children, the king, named Sekandar Shah, paid a visit to the Chinese emperor. He became the vassal of China, brought home a seal as a token of his vassalage, and obtained permission to coin tin money.
and was succeeded by conquered Kainpar ( in E. Sumatra ), Pam (Pahang), Dandargiri (Indragiri), and other countries, and converted their kings by force to Islam. He raised Malacca to a great power, and under his son Sultan Masrusa (Mansur Shah) and grandson Alaoadim (Alau d din) the kingdom became one of the richest and most
died
shortly
after
his
He
return
Modafaixa
(Muzafar Shah).
He
famous.
din's successor Sultan Mahamet (Muhammad) repudiated allegiance to Siam and Java, and declared himself a vassal to China. Thereupon, the king of Siam sent a fleet
'Alau
49
386
was
completely
defeated.
This took
by Albuquerque
in
1489 A.D.)
'A period of 90 years intervened between the time when Malacca became inhabited and its conquest by Albuquerque. At that time Malacca and its suburbs had about a hundred thousand inhabitants/
The account
of
De
Barros varies a
little
He
and
it
and not
of the
chief
this
that
forced him
to
leave Singhapnra.
With
the
agree, except that De Barros places city 253 years before the arrival of
He
Siam and Malacca, and the acceptance of Siamese suzerainty by Sekandar Shah. This evidently explains the passage in Commentaires d' Albuquerque that Sultan Muhammad repudiated allegiance to Siam.
the above
version,
at
in
in
1416,
outline.
Thus,
the
king
Ma
Muhammadans 1
reign of
and as we
refers to
the
Sekandar Shah.
of
The most comprehensive account is given in the History which we quote the following the Ming Dynasty from
9
extracts.
'In
1403
this
the
emperor sent
the eunuch
Yin Ch'ing
as
country with presents. There was no king in the country, and it was not called a kingdom, but it belonged to Siam, to which it paid an annual tribute of forty taels
envoy to
1.
Groeneveldt
Notes, p 123.
T'oung Pao
(igi5)> P- 115.
is
supplemented
footnotes.
SUVARNADViPA
of gold.
387
sent envoys to the
The
l
,
Yin
Ch'ing.
1405 these envoys arrived at the imperial court. The Emperor praised their master and appointed him king of
the country of Malacca.
The envoys
district of
king
his assent.
'The king of Malacca sent envoys with tribute in 1407 and 1408. In 1411 he came to the court with his wife, his son
and
his
ministers.
imperial court
in 1412.
'In
came
to court
and
said
that his
He was
appointed to
it
The name is transcribed as Pai-li-su-ra by Groeneveldt, but 1. has been corrected as Pai-li-mi su-la by Pelliot (T'oung Pao, Vol. XXX,
2.
I933 P- 389).
Rockhill has referred
to
slightly
differing
Chinese accounts
of this event.
He
is
notes that
1415,
but this
(T'oung Pao,
I933>P- 398).
"Tung
a feudatory.
sent in 1409.
called, the
hsi
in
1405,
the ruler of
Si-li-pa-erh-su-la,
It
Ming Court
to
was
in
The king, his successor, who went same work says, Pa-li-tieh-su-la p
.
China
In this connection
Ma Huan
Cheng- Ho notified the imperial rank of a (Feudatory) kingdom and presented, in the name of the Emperor, to its head chief a silver and official robes and declared him king seal, a cap on this it
"In A. D.
that
1409 the
eunuch
command
to the
The
king,
and son, proceeded to the capital (of China) to express his thanks being allowed to offer tribute. The emperor granted him a ship
(Rockhill-
II,
Vol.
XVI,
and
fn. i)
Cheng Ho
PP-
388
succeed him and presented with gold and silks. After this time they brought tribute every year or every two years. 'In 1419 the king came to court with his wife, his son
and
his
ministers.
his
He
seemed inclined to
attack
country
and the
order to Siam which that country obeyed. 'In 1424 Sri ma-ha-la succeeded after the death of his
father,
and came
to
and
his
ministers.
1431 three envoys arrived, who said that Siam an attack on their country. The emperor sent was planning a decree to the king of Siam, ordering him to live in good harmony with his neighbours, and not to act against the
'In the year
1433 the king came to court with his wife, his son and his ministers. In 1435 he sent his younger brother to court with tributes. 'In 1445 envoys arrived who asked that the king Sri
'In
the country.
'In
to be invested as king.
'In
to bring tribute.
'In
with
'Afterwards the Franks (Portuguese) came with soldiers and conquered the country. The king Sultan Mam at ran away
and sent envoys to inform the imperial government of this The Emperor issued a decree upbraiding the Franks, disaster. told them to go back to their own country and ordered the
kings of Siam and
other countries to assist their neighbour
SUVAENADVlPA
in this need
;
389
none of these obeyed, however, and so the kingdom of Malacca was destroyed/ If we now compare the Chinese account with the native
tradition
handed down by the Portuguese, a great deal of general agreement is easily perceived. First, as to the names of kings which we place below side by side.
Portuguese Account. ParimiSura (ParameSvara) Sekandar Shah.
Chinese Account.
1.
1. 2.
Pai-li-mi-su-ra
(1403-1414).
2.
Mu-kan-sa-u-tir-sha (14141424).
Sri Ma-ha-la
3.
(1424^.1445).
4.
Sri Pa-mi-si-wa-r-tiu-pasha.
(1445).
3.
Muzafar Shah.
5.
Sulthan Wu-ta-fu-na-sha
(1456).
4.
5. 6.
(d.
1477),
6.
Mahmud(1489)
the
7.
Ma-ha-mu-sa
Sultan
or
1
Mamat
(1508).
second king in the Chinese list has Now, been corrected by Blagden as Mou-Kan-sa-kan-ti-eul-cha or Muhammad Sekandar Shah 2 In the name of the first we
of the
.
name
As noticed above, the name of this king is written in Chinese 1. annals as Ma-ha-mu-sa and Sultan Mamat. Both are here taken as Chinese renderings of the name Sultan Muhammad Shah. Blagden,
however,
takes the
his
first
name
as
Sultan
Ahmad,
successor (Actes du
orientalistes
The
dates of the
sources.
from Chinese
grave-stone gives the date 1477 as the date of his death. The date 1489 is given in the Commentaries of Albuquerque as that of the defeat of Siamese army
The
of
Mansur Shah
is
to
Op.
cit.,
pp. 245
ff.
Cf.
Pelliot
T'oung Pao,
Vol.
XXX
2.
390
can easily discern ParameSvara. The third and fourth Chinese x x names are Sri Maharaja and Sri Paramesvaradeva Saha. The fifth and sixth names can be equated without difficulty to Muzafar Shah and Mansur Shah. The seventh king is
obviously
Mahmud
Shah.
Thus the Chinese account adds two Hindu names after the second king, and omits the name of Alau d din. The explanation is not far to seek. Now we have seen above, that Sekandar Shah was the first ruler of Malacca to be converted to Islam by marrying a Muhammadan wife. It is apparent that he was succeeded by two Hindu kings, either his brothers, or sons by a Hindu wife, before his Muhammadan son Muzafar Shah ascended the throne. Their names were obviously omitted in
the later
were Hindus. 1 The explanation of the omission of the name of Alau d din
tradition because they
Muhammadan
is
by the Chinese account. After the embassy by Su-tan Wang-su-sha ( Sultan Mansur Shah ) in 1459 A.D., there is a long gap before the next embassy was sent in 1481. The name of the king who sent this embassy is not mentioned, and there is no necessity to assume that he was Su-tan Wang-su-shah. The next king Ma-ha-mu-sa, is also
also furnished
sent
simply referred to as the son of the late king. This explains the absence of the name of king Alau d din in the Chinese annals. may thus draw up the following list of kings of
We
(1403-1414 A.D.)
(1414-1424 A.D.)
(1424-c. 1445)
3.
SriMa-ha-la
Blagden
(
I.
op.
cit.
;
thinks
1445 king Pa-mi-si-wa-r-tiu-pa*sha asked for a commission to rule the country, while eleven years later, Sulthan Wu-ta-fu-na-sha asked to be
Sri
invested as king.
It is,
therefore,
two kings.
The
kings
(
native chronicles,
Sekandar
Shah and
Muzafar
Hindu Shah
Ferrand, op.
462
),
SUVARNADVIPA
4.
5.
391
1445-c. 1456)
Sri Pa-mi-si-wa-r-tiu-pa-sha
(c.
(ace. c.
(c.
1456 A.D.)
6.
7.
8.
Sultan
Mahmud
till
Having thus established a general agreement between the Chinese and native sources (handed down by Albuquerque)
regarding the succession of kings, we may next proceed to discuss the date of the foundation of the kingdom of Malacca.
it quite clear that the beginning of the Pai-li-mi-su-ra founded the town towards
The History
fifteenth or
of the
end of the fourteenth century A.D. It is expressly Pai-li-mi-su-ra had not yet obtained the rank of king, and he was a mere tributary chief under Chinese accounts, Siam. This is confirmed by two other Ying Yai Sheng Lan of Ma Huan (1425-1432 A.D.) and
stated that in 1403 A.D.
Hsing Cha Sheng Lan (1436) which state that Malacca was 1 of a kingdom in 1409 A.D. by imperial command.
in 'Commentaires
d 'Albuquerque'
is in entire
that the country formerly It says agreement with this. belonged to Siam, and Malacca became a kingdom about 90 As d'Albuquerque. years before the arrival of Alfonso
this latter event
1511 A.D., the foundation of the kingdom goes back to about 1421 A.D. As 90 years are put as merely a round number with an express qualification 'more or less', the agreement between the two sources may
took place
in
be regarded as complete. Now both the sources also agree in stating that previous to this the region belonged to Siam. This is confirmed by the
fact,
noted above, that the Palatine Law of Siam, enacted Malacca among the dependencies of the
T'oung Pao,
Ser. II. Vol.
XVI
(1915), pp.
H4i n8.
392
country.
we
believe in this,
we have
legends concerning the origin of the name Malacca, as have been handed down by the Portuguese authorities. Thus we read in
the Commentaries of Albuquerque
:
"This Parimilura
when a man
;
of
him Malayo and since away, they he had come to that place fleeing from the kingdom of Palimbao, of which indeed he once was king, he gave the place the name of Malacca. Others say that it was called Malacca because of the numbers of people who came there from one part and the other in so short a space of time, for the word
Palimbao
flees
call
Malacca also
the
signifies
'to
meet',
it
name
meaning of
Of
one
the
name
of a city
so distinguished
We must also
psychology which seeks to ascribe the foundation of a city to the ruler under whom or whose family it came to achieve
greatness or distinction.
The
an exact analogy in both these respects. Here, again, the native Malay tradition, recorded in the Hikayat Maron
MahavamSa, ascribes
gives
to
city,
and
has
popular
etymology
name.
As
Ccedfcs
pointed out, the inscription of Rajendra Cola and the discovery back of the old ruins in the neighbourhood, reaching
to
the
8
.
fifth
century A.D.,
completely falsify
the
popular
legends
1.
Valentyn,
states that
Malacca was
).
who dereved his information from native named after a tree ( Mirobolan )
chronicles,
(
Ferrand,
op.
cit.,
p. 461
2.
6,
pp. 12-13.
SUVARNADVIPA
of
393
assign the growth
to
may
site
early
fifteenth
century A.D.,
that
we need
city
under
name
also
to the
same period.
version, there
at
the time
was only a village of twenty or thirty fishermen when ParameSvara laid on it the foundations of
the city of Malacca, and he survived it only for seven years. His death took place, according to the reliable Chinese version, some time between 1412 and 1414 A.D. Thus the future Malacca must have been, according to popular legends, merely
a fishing village at least as late as 1405 A.D. Yet, in 1403 A.D., the Chinese emperor regarded Malacca as a port or a capital of sufficient importance to send his envoy there with presents.
On
Ma Huan
name
.
Malacca came into use after 1409 A.D., though it was formerly called 'five islands' and was a tributary state under Siam 1
According to a Chinese map of the time of Cheng Ho, probably prepared by Ms companion Pei Hsin, one of these five islands,
called Yiu-men,
rise of
was a
.
flourishing
Malacca 2
The popular version about the origin of the city of Malacca cannot thus be accepted in minor details, and there is no reason
to discredit the
existed in
1360 A.D.
Siamese source according to which Malacca It may be noted that Jean De Barros
places the foundation of the city about 1250 A.D., and Valentyn, following Malay traditions, refers it to about the same period 8 .
While, therefore,
the city of Malacca
to
we
are unable
into
to state
when
exactly
came
existence, there is
no reason
reject the broad facts whose authenticity is proved by a general agreement of Chinese history and native traditions. may thus accept the view, that Malacca was raised to an
We
Groeneveldt
Journ,
p. 164.
Notes,
p. 123.
2.
China
Br. R.A.S.,
Vol. 21
1887
),
p. 38.
Rouffaer,
op.
cit.,
3.
Ferrand, op.
cit.,
50
394
belonging
either
to
Java
or
its
colony
Palembang,
may
The
story of emigration,
which followed the flight of king ParameSvara, to Singapore, and Singapore to Malacca, may or may not be true, but the rise and fall of the Majapahit
on a large
from Palembang
in
empire during 1360 to 1410 A.D., involving important changes and condition both of Palembang the political account for, and may even be Malay Peninsula, may easily
held as conducive to similar migrations of people. According to some native traditions Singapore was cruelly sacked by
the king of Majapahit, and that caused the flight of Paramesvara
to
Malacca 1
of
With Paramesvara began a glorious period in the history Malacca. For nearly a century it enjoyed three-fold
an important commercial
the
in
Far East.
the
We shall
of
separately
three
aspects
of
kingdom
Malacca.
of Albuquerque the According to the Commentaries kingdom of Malacca was bounded by the kingdom of Keddah
It
hills
central
chain of
which divided
it
from Siam.
the
off the
Though
state
almost as
seeking
a vassal
China,
paying
tribute
to
and
from the emperor, it does not denote anything more than a nominal allegiance or even ordinary diplomatic compliments paid by the ruler of Malacca to the Chinese
investiture
emperor.
Malacca Sultanate by R. also cf. No. 53, p. 62.
;
1.
J.
Wilkinson
in J. Stf. Br.
R.A.S.,
No.
61, p. 67
2.
Ferrand, op.
cit.,
pp. 411-12.
SUVABNADVlPA
The second
395
the greatness of Malacca. He first of all tried to divert the trade centre from Singapore to Malacca. With this object he
guarded the Straits of Malacca and neighbouring sea with a strong flotilla, and compelled the ships passing through it to take to Malacca instead of to Singapore. As it threatened
complete ruin to the trade of Singapore, the king of Siam made preparations to fight. Sekandar, however, entered into
of Siara,
an agreement with him. He acknowledged the suzerainty and agreed to pay as tribute a sum equivalent to
from
to
Singapore.
In
from Singapore
region
ponding coastal
By
this
master-stroke of policy Sekandar shah laid the foundations of the greatness of Malacca on the ruins of Singapore.
Jean
De
Barros, to
whom we owe
no doubt derived his facts from indigenous sources, and it is impossible not to trace in them the hand of Siamese officials who wanted to hide their discomfiture by an alleged acknow-
ledgment of the suzerainty of Siam on the part of Malacca. The History of the Ming Dynasty clearly refers to hostilities between Siam and Malacca in 1419 A.D. in the reign of Sekandar Shah, and also, after his death, in 1431 A.D.
also it would appear between the two countries, rather than that Malacca accepted the suzerainty of Siam. In any case the suzerainty of Siam must have been more nominal than real, and even that was repudiated, as Barros
From
the general
more
himself affirms,
An idea of the political importance of Malacca may be formed from a passage in the History of the Ming Dynasty concerning Java, which has been quoted above. It says that
shortly
1.
before
1415
;
A.D.
the
cit, p.
king
437.
of
Malacca claimed
De Barros
Ferrand, op.
2.
Ibid., p. 438.
396
possession of Palembang, which was then under Java, falsely pretending that he had an order to this effect from the
Chinese emperor.
that he
had issued no such orders. This shows that Malacca was now aspiring to occupy the position of supremacy which Java lately held in the Archipelago.
That the apprehensions of China and Java were not is clearly proved by the conquest of Pahang, in the Peninsula, and of Kampar and Indragiri in Eastern
unfounded
Sumatra
by
Muzafar Shah.
When
was doubled."
the
3 Muzafar defeated Sajara Malayu According to Siamese who attacked Malacca both by land and sea.
He
was the
first
ruler of
by the Chinese and the Portuguese. The next king Mansur extended the power of Malacca still further, both in the Peninsula and in Central Sumatra. In 1489 the fleet of Siam was again completely defeated by Sultan Mahmud. 4
thus gave promise of a vigorous and was destined to bring his kingdom to utter prosperous reign ruin. This was mainly due to his personal character, which was marked by vanity and cruelty. He killed his own son
Sultan
Mahmud who
less
than
seventeen nobles
who were
all
him.
He
then
and took
women
to his
own harem.
his
to
opium and left the cares of and maternal uncle Sri 'Bendahara'
to
Groeneveldt
Notes, p. 37.
2.
Albuquerque.
Ferrand, op.
cit.
pp. 421-2.
77. (1921), p. 588.
p. 423.
I
3.
4.
do not know on
(
Geschiedenis"
-p.
454*
SUVAENADVlPA
397
Maharaja Tun Mutahir. The term Bendahara, perhaps derived from Sanskrit Bhandagarika, was the designation of a minister who had by this time practically usurped the royal
power in Malacca.
of the
power of Malacca naturally brought In 1509 Malacca was expecting an But before that could materialise, Malacca
in
met with a
tragic
end
an unexpected manner.
first
In 1509 a few Portuguese ships arrived at Malacca. At they were well received, but subsequently the Bendahara
imprisoned twenty Portuguese and refused to set them at After the departure of the Portuguese ships, the king liberty. quarrelled with the Bendahara and killed him. When the
country was thus passing through a period of turmoil and confusion, Albuquerque reached Malacca with a strong fleet
(July 1511)
to
He
of the demands of Albuquerque. Portuguese prisoners at liberty and even granted permission to Albuquerque to build a fort. But the latter soon
set the
came to know of the internal condition of Malacca, and was joined by Timutaraja or UtimutarSja, the chief of the Javanese settlers in Malacca. Throwing aside all ideas of compromise
Albuquerque invaded the
city
fled,
at
A few
flourishing
kingdom
after
As we have
political
said above,
power, but
i.
account of
the
capture
of
Malacca by
A detailed account 61, p. 71. Albuquerque, of Malacca and other Malay states under the Muslim Sultans and of the commercial importance of Malacca is beyond the scope of the
cf. J.
No.
present work.
of
For
this,
readers
may
History
Malaya, chaps.
Ill
IV,
398
also a big
of trade
and commerce.
days of glory.
sixteenth
its
Its
commercial
importance
writers
who saw
in its
account of
trade and
commerce.
"Many Moorish (Muhammadan) merchants reside in it and also Gentiles (Hindu), particularly Chetis who are natives of Choiand they are all very rich and mendel (Coromandel coast) have many large ships, which they call jungos (junks). They deal in all sorts of goods in different parts, and many other
:
Moorish and
Gentile
;
merchants
in ships of
flock
countries to trade
some
of
from Java which have four rnasts...From this place many ships sail to the Molucca islands... They also navigate to Tanasery
(Tennasserim),
(Pulicat),
Peygu,
(Pegu),
Bengala
(Bengal),
Palecate
Cholmendel
all
(Coromandel),
Malabar,
Cambay and
of
Aden with
Malacca
is
and possesses the most valuable and most numerous shipping and extensive traffic, merchandise,
is
it has got such a quantity not estimate their property, of gold that the great merchants do nor reckon otherwise than by batons of gold, which are four
that
known
And
them who quintals each bahar. There are merchants among or four ships laden with very valuable goods, will take up three them with cargo from their own property The king of Malacca has got much treasure, and a large revenue from the duties which he collects." In the Commentaries of Albuquerque we find a similar of the commercial importance of Malacca as a
and
will supply
description and the west, where the ships, trading centre between the east as China, Java, coming from the Eastern countries such
Vol.
XXXV
Fenand,
op.
cit.,
pp. 407
SUVARNADVIPA
399
that coming from Northern Sumatra and different ports in India and Arabia on the west. This city contained 100,000 souls and
testify to
the commercial
untold wealth.
pause
to refer to them at length. may next pass on to describe the part played by this rich and powerful city as a
We
stronghold of Islam, and a centre of propaganda of that faith the Far East. An inscription from Trengganau, dated in 1326-7 (or 1386-7) A.D., proves that Islam had already obtained
in
it
did not
make any
of
until
the kings
in right earnest.
We have
already
seen how the second king married a Muhammadan lady and himself adopted the new faith. Although it is likely, as we have seen above, that he was followed by two Hindu kings,
under his son Muzafar Shah the new faith was rapidly extended, When he defeated partly by force, and partly by persuasion.
the kings of Pahang,
to Islam
brother.
number
Muhammadan
and Persia
king,
became powerful instruments of conversion. Duarte Barbosa says that 'the Moors of the town and foreign Moors established their trade in the city, in which they
these
increased so
much
and caused the neighbouring inhabitants to turn Moors and 8 they set up a Moorish king over them'. The last statement may refer to the setting up of Muzafar Shah, in preference
to other
Hindu
claimants, or
it
may be
1.
Ferrand, op.
J.
cit.,
pp. 425.
ff.
2.
3.
Ferrand, op.
407.
400
The following passage in the to the Muhammadan faith. account of Jean de Barros clearly indicates that Malacca was a strong proselytising centre of the new faith. "At the instigation of the
settled at
were converted to
Muhammad.
and
The conversion
rapidly spread
among
Islam began to be in the neighbourhood of Malacca, but propagated, not only also at Sumatra, Java, and in all the islands situated round
different nations,
this infernal pest
of
these countries."
same
In other passages also De Barros gives expression to the The merchants from Singapore and Malacca had idea.
arrival
spread Islam to Molucca islands about 80 years before the "The pest of the Portuguese i. e. about 1430 A, D. of Islam, following by way of commerce," had also reached
There
Islam in
is
importance of
commercial Malacca gave a great impetus to the cause of Malayasia, and must be regarded as the deciding
Malaya
Peninsula.
Malay ruler of Malacca became the first ruler of him and his descendants Islam was introduced into Johor. By Johor, Riau, and Lengga. It is to be noted that almost all the present Sultans of Malaya (outside Selangor) claim descent from ParameSvara, and they are all followers of Islam.
last
The
Even
still
as late
as
1537 A. D.
;
vestiges
of
Hindu
culture
remained at Malacca
As Wilkinson
landing steps to the Stadt-house, he can sec on the slopes of the hill a weird image of a Makara, the sole surviving relic of the time when
the ruler of Malacca was
i.
when
still
a Hindu."
Ferrand, op.
cit.,
p. 438.
2.
Ibid
p.
428.
3.
Chapter
III.
IN JAVA.
have seen above how Islam had obtained a footing in the northern coast of Sumatra and the kingdom of Malacca, and how from these centres it gradually spread all over Malayasia.
The new
traveller
faith
Ma
penetrated into Java, following mainly mid commerce. The accounts of the Chinese Huan (1416 A. D.) clearly indicate that while
also
the
Muhammadans formed an
composed of foreign traders, permanently settled there, they had not as yet acquired any political power in the country. 1
of Islam in Java is also indicated by a few on grave-stones. The earliest one at Leran, dated inscriptions A. D. 1102 or 1082% is that of a daughter of Meiniun. It has
The spread
been suggested that the inscribed stone was brought from outside to Java at a later date. Even if that were not the case, this
isolated
instance
it
does
not
enable us to form
any general
merely refers to a private individual, perhaps a relation of a Muhammadan merchant trading in Java. The
conclusion, as
is
regards him as a preacher of Islam, well be the case. The grave-stone of Majapahit, traditionally ascribed to Putri Champa, a Cham princess and a queen of Majapahit, is dated in 1448.* As we shall see later,
tradition
she plays
1.
Toung Pao,
Serie
II.,
Vol.
XVI
2.
ff.
P- 242.
in
Moquette
Schrieke
Congres
I,
pp. 391-399.
T.B.G. Vol. 65
(1925),
pp, 668
3. 4.
p. 28.
51
402
downfall of Majapahit, though her date is given therein as 1398. But there is no certainty that the grave is really that
of the queen.
It appears,
however,
close
that
the harbours of Java were in the hands of Muhammadans, most But they still recognised the probably Javanese converts.
towards
the
of
century
some
of
Hindu king, and there is no reason to suppose that the latter had suffered much in power or prestige. In 1509 the great Sultan of Malacca was afraid of an invasion
authority of the
by the king of Java, a fact which testifies to the latter's power 3 and command over the sea Apart from the political rivalry
.
referred to before, the immediate cause of the dispute between Malacca and Java is not known from the Portuguese accounts.
There was an intimate intercourse by way of trade between the two countries, and a large number of Javanese lived in
was the head of the Javanese colony in Malacca that treacherously helped Albuquerque in conquering that When Albuquerque was kingdom from Sultan Mahnmd. from Malacca (1512 A.D.), the king of Java sent an returning envoy with presents, and promised him assistance in his wars
Malacca.
It
against the
Javanese subjects in Malacca to heavy extortion. The Javanese king always acted in a friendly manner towards the Portuguese
and sought to establish an alliance with them. In this connection Castanheda has made the following remarks about the king of Java "The king of Java is a heathen (i.e. neither Christian
:
nor a Moor
in other words, a Hindu). Ho lives inland, is a great king, master of large territory and people. On the sea-coast arc Moorish (Muhammadan) kings, subject to the
;
The accounts of the Portuguese and other European writers 1. have been taken from the summary given by Krom ( Geschiedenis, pp.
449
ff.);
cf.
Rouffaer in B.K.I,,
1899, PP2.
U 9 ff
p. 130,
T.B.G., Vol. 58
(1919)* P- 426.
SUVARNADVIPA
authority of the king.
403
detailed accounts of
coast.
the
After
the
Portuguese d'Andrade had driven Pati Katir, a Javanese sea-lord, from the neighbourhood of Malacca, and forced him to proceed to
Java.
Admiral
Perez
Pati Unus, chief of Japara, in Java, was an ally of Pati Katir, and, unaware of the defeat of the latter, he proceeded
against Malacca with hundred ships mostly manned by Javanese from Palembang. Poroz d'Aiidrade defeated this Javanese
fleet
heavy fight, but Pati Unus broke through the and safely reached his own country. He placed Portuguese the sea-beach as a memorial to that fight. His his ships on brave deeds were talked about for long and he later became
after a
line
king of Demak.
A few months later, a Portuguese ship, returning from Moluccas islands, was stranded on the Javanese coast near Tuban. A ship was sent out from Malacca to bring the goods,
and its captain Joao Lopez Alvim was received in a friendly manner by Pati Unus at Sidayu. Probably Pati Unus dared not act in a hostile manner as the Javanese king was a friend After the return of this ship, Ruy de to the Portuguese Brito, the Portuguese governor of Malacca, wrote as follows to king Manuel in January, 1514 "Java is a great island. It has
.
king of
The
who
They
They
always carry on trade with Malacca. Some of them are our friends, others very hostile." This is the last definite mention
of a
of
Malacca planned a
punitive expedition against the Muhammadan chiefs of Javanese coast, vix. Pati Katir, Pati Unus, and Pati Rodien, but nothing
is
mentioned in
this connection
404
But Barbosa, who wrote between 1516 and 1518 A.D., refers to the great Hindu king of Java, named Pate Udra, who was the Muhammadaii chiefs on the yet recognised as suzerain by sea-coast. Barbosa expressly states that when any of these be chiefs revolts, the king forcibly subdues him. It must
have noted, however, that of late, great doubts
arisen
regarding
the authenticity of Barbosa's account, and it is doubted whether his account is not merely borrowed from older books. The next account of Java we get from the writings of
Pigafctta, an Italian
sailor,
who accompanied
in
his
the
Spanish
captain
Pcrnao
exploration in
of
of voyage Magalhoes before the port 1519 A.D. Pigafetta's ship lay
de
famous
Timor from the end of January to the beginning of February, "The in his journal 1522, and we find the following entry whose king, when these Majapahit, greatest cities in Java arc he lived, was the greatest of all these islands and was called
:
:
Eaja Pati Unus, Sunda, in this grows much pepper, Daha, Demak, Gajahmada, Mentaraman, Japara, Sidayu, Tuban, Gresik, Surabaya, and Bali." Kouffaer concludes from the above account that Majapahit was till the last the centre of Hindu power in Java, and
was conquered by the Muslim chief, Pati Unus, some time before 1522 A,D. There is, however, one difficulty. Barros Malacca by Pati in connection with the invasion of
says,
Unus, that this chief later became king of Sunda. in Henrique Leme found a Hindu chief in Surida It is, therefore, exceedingly improbable that Pati Unus, died in the beginning of 1522, should have brought
Now,
1522.
who
both
his death. Majapahit and Sunda under his control before Sunda instead Rouffaer thinks that Barros wrongly wrote account of Majapahit, and he therefore takes Pigafetta's
as true.
to
reason Krom, on the other hand, thinks that there is no on the part of conclude that the mistake was necessarily
He
whom
historical
documents
were
available,
is
SUVARNADVlPA
reliable than
405
diary in a sea-port All that we can
is
Pigafetta,
who wrote
oral
his
town, mainly
definitely infer
from
the
evidence.
that there
was
no longer a king in Majapahit, but the existence of a Hindu king at some other place is not incompatible with Pigafetta's
statement.
Hindu
A.D. 1528, as kingdom in that year one Hindu chief Panarukan sent an agent on account to Malacca to establish friendly relations his own
of Java has been fixed
at
by Krom
with that
Java.
state.
Krom
fall
is
incompatible
of a central of
Hindu
Thus the
Majapahit,
authority in Java, may be dated between 1513, or 1515 may believe in Barbosa's account), and 1528 A.D.
we
The Portuguese and other European accounts mentioned above thus give us a general outline of the course of
Islam at
events leading to the downfall of Majapahit. It appears that first made converts of the coastal chiefs, and these
ultimately
If
Rouffaer's
provisionally accepted,
as
it
appears to
us very reasonable, we may conclude that this overthrow took place before 1522 A.D., and was mainly the work of Pati Unus, chief of Japara, evidently a Javanese coastal to Islam, who had already distinguished chief converted himself in daring naval fights against the Portuguese.
From Java
the history
traditions
itself
we
for
of
this
period.
which profess to give a detailed account of the Muslim conquest of Majapahit. While there is no doubt that
they
are so
full
fancies of
supernatural
charac-
that
it
is
absolutely
impossible
to rely
upon them as
historical
general way.
We
give
406
Babad Tanah
Javi.
of
sister of the
Now
this
faith
and sent
his
Rahmat married
the daughter
of a chief (Tumenggung)
Vilvatikta, while his brother Santri married the daughter of The two brothers settled Arya Teja, the chief of Tuban.
respectively at
Ngampel
(Surabaya)
and
first
Gresik.
apostle
Rahmat
of Islam
became
in Java,
made
many
proselytes,
and constructed
the
first
mosque
'King Bravijaya had a second queen, a raksasl (monster), by whom he had a son Arya Damar. Arya Damar was sent
by
his father to
govern
Palembang
a
and was
there
Chinese.
Usen, to Arya Damar. Raden Patah and Raden Usen went to Java. Patah married the granddaughter of Rahmat and
Raden Usen went to the king who made him the chief of Terung, and Majapahit, appointed him as commander of his forces. The king also sent for his son Raden Patah and made him governor of
settled
at Bintara (Demak).
of
Bintara.
meanwhile came a certain Seh Walilanang to and a princess of Balambangan bore him a son, Surabaya, known later as Sunan Oiri. Suiian Giri became a pupil of
'In the
his daughter.
'By the patronage of these and other chiefs, related to them, the new faith spread rapidly. Now king Bravijaya sent his
minister (pati) Gajah
1.
Mada
against
Sunan
Giri.
The
latter
A summary
Crawfurd
2.
given by Brandes (Par., pp. 211 ff.) History of the Indian Archipelago,
is
Vol,
II,
p. 309.
SUVARNADVIPA
frightened
407
enemy by a show of miraculous power. After the death of Giri royal forces came again and dug up his tomb. But a swarm of bees arising therefrom drove back the royal force. Raden Patah, instead of joining his father, now formed a coalition with the other Muhammadan chiefs, and proceeded against Majapahit. King Bravijaya died, and the
away
his
Demak
after a rule of
first
the
Sultan
II.
Serat Kanda. 1
last
refers
king of Majapahit, and to family relations, as in Babad Taiiah Javi, with some modifications. Rahinat came to Java with a son, married
'It
a Javanese lady at Kudus, and had by her a son named Undung, later known as Sunan Kudus. Stories are told of a large
Arabs who settled and married in Java, and thus Muslim faith. Angkavijaya's queen, the propagated the of Cempa, named Daravati, died in 1398, and was princess buried in Citravulan according to Muslim rites. Raden Patah was installed as chief of Demak in 1405. Sunan Kudus organised
number
of
a Muslim coalition against Majapahit, and tried to make converts and secure allies all over the kingdom. G a jah Mada defeated the rebels at Tuban. A now expedition against Majapahit was
organised by Sunan Kudus, and he was joined by sons of other Sunans. The result was at first indecisive, but ultimately the
Muhammadan chief of Tcrung, i.c. Raden Usen, brother of Raden Patah, defeated Sunan Kudus. The king sent reinforcements under Kalungkung, his son by a
royal force led by the
Balinese princess, but his other sons, including the chief of Demak, who had become Muslims, now joined the enemy. The
coalition.
Kudus now became the head of the Muhammadan Aided by all sorts of supernatural means, the Muhammadan army captured and destroyed Majapahit, in 1476
son of Sunan
i.
Brandes
ff.
408
A. D. The king took shelter in Sengguruh in 1477 A. D. Kalungkung made a last stand there, but was defeated. The king fled to Bali, followed by Kalungkung and Gajah Mada,
and Sengguruh was destroyed in 1478 A.D. Patah, who took the title of Panembahan, returned to Demak and became the and the faith of Islam was established chief of Java,
everywhere/
While there
above
traditions,
is
no
specially
dates
1
,
are
untrustworthy,
so far as
we may
nevertheless trace
some
historical
basis,
the general picture is concerned. Properly analysed, and divested of all unnecessary details, the two stories lead to
the
presumption that
first
in the
coastland,
interior,
by
way
of
by
marriage
refuge
Thus we
find that
the dethroned
Muslim
king
ul-Abedin, took
related to him.
with
the
of
The
to the
fact.
royal family
some converts
and the story of the Cein these means Islam got a firm hold By
new
faith,
chiefs,
as well as
members
of royal family
and high
ful
officials at court. When they felt themselves powerenough, the members of the new faith naturally tried to oust the king as he steadily refused to give up his own It seems to be almost certain, that the Hindu religion.
kingdom
the
fell
clash of
Muslim invasion from outside. The traditions even connect new Muslim ruling dynasty with the old (for Raden Patah was the son of the king of Majapahit), but this may or may not be true. The episode of Girlndravardhana also makes
the
it
extremely doubtful
authority.
if
Hindu
i,
Even
if it
Majapahit was still the chief seat of were so, it is by no means certain
the downfall of
The dates
;
of Putri
Cam pa and
Majapahit are
palpably wrong
see ante.
SUVARNADVlPA
that the fall of Majapahit
409
authority in Java.
meant the downfall of the Hindu The Sengguruh episode seems to show that Hindu king had lost Majapahit, he held out
eastern part of Java, and only a
some time
in the
second
shelter in Bali.
also not
borne
out by facts. A copperplate, dated 1541 A. D., is expressly 1 There is no valid reason said to be written at Vilvatikta.
to suppose that it refers to
city of that name,
which, therefore,
at least the
middle of the sixteenth century A. D. Of course, there is no doubt that having lost its political and commercial supremacy
it
Muhammadan conquest of Majapahit was followed by that of Sunda. It is clear from the Portuguese accounts that by Sunda they meant the kingdom of Pajajaran. As would appear from the Portuguese accounts, quoted above, the cause and process of Islamic conquest were nearly the
The
shortly
same
Majapahit and Sunda (Pajajaran). In the case we can more definitely ascertain the date of the overthrow of the Hindu kingdom.
in both
of Sunda, however,
As noted
Hindu king
before, in A. D. 1522
of Sunda, called
As
a result of this
a
fort
building
at
The
Portuguese could not carry this project into execution for four years, and when at last in 1520 they came back to Sunda, they found it under a Muhammad an ruler, named Falatehan,
Pase in Sumatra, and conquered the with the help of the king of Japara. The Portuguese kingdom had to return without accomplishing anything. Thus Sunda must have passed into the hands of Muhammadan rulers some time between 1522 and 1526 A. D. Whether Pati Unus,
i.
ff.
52
410
chief of Japara,
But even according to the later Portuguese accounts, the chief of Japara L e. Pati Unus, who died in 1522, or his son, had some hand in the
as noted above,
doubted by Rouffaer.
conquest. There is nothing improbable in the assumption that Pati Unus, aided by other Muslim chiefs, overthrew Sunda
and Majapahit about the same time, and in that case Falatehan, one of the confederate chiefs, might have been ruling in
Sunda, while Pati Unus was ruling in Majapahit.
it
In any case
Sunda was overthrown the coastal Muhammadan chiefs between 1522 and 1526 A.D. by The overthrow of Majapahit and Sunda dealt a death-blow to the Hindu culture and civilisation which had flourished
is
Hindu kingdom
of
in
fifteen
Hindu
civilisation,
The
archaeological remains
clearly that
on mounts
Willis,
Lavu,
last
Hinduism found a
by the growing indigenous influence. the ruined structures and images of these
west
of
art
detailed
study
to
of
hilly
regions
the
Hindu
Majapahit unfolds the steadily declining stages of and religion, leading to the supreme but inevitable
rising forces of
In the
east,
the regions around and beyond mount Smeroe Hindus a safe retreating place. According
Portuguese account, the Muhammadan besiegers of Pasuruhan were forced to retreat in the middle of the
a
late
as 1600
State,
nearly two hundred years more. But although these petty states kept alive the traditions of Hindu rule in Java, the main currents of that culture now
i.
in
SUVARNADVlPA
shifted to the east,
411
and flowed freely only in the island of Bali, where the royal family and the aristocracy fled with a considerable element of the well-to-do people in Java. That
island
now
distinction
of
preserving
the old
Hindu culture and civilisation, while in Java the old monuments alone remain to tell the tale of its past glory and
grandeur.
The
Islamic
conquest
Siti
of
Java
was
followed
by
the
The king
of Arosbaya,
named Panembahan
nobility
voluntarily
Luhur, and other members of the accepted the new faith, and thus the
conversion of the whole people took place in a comparatively short time. This also explains the almost complete destruction
of
Hindu temples
in that island
1
.
Congres
I,
pp. 264-5.
Chapter IV
IN
BORNEO
one of
the
Hindu
civilisation.
Unfortunately
we do not
possess anything like a continuous history of the Hindu colonisation in Borneo. After the archaeological remains
Chapter VIII, there is a pretty long gap of many centuries for which we possess no internal evidence regarding the Hindu colonists. Only the Chinese
I,
described above in
Book
annals throw some light on the obscure period, and we can do no more than summarise these accounts and draw such scanty
conclusions from them as
we reasonably may.
1. Speaking of Po-lo, the History of the T'ang Dynasty (018-906 A.D.) says that in the year 069 the king of this country sent an envoy who came to court together with the
Groenc veldt, who has translated this passage, supplements 1 "There is of course the information by the following remarks
:
not the slightest internal evidence that this passage relates to Borneo, but all Chinese geographers agreo in assigning it
which is designated by it to the present day. have further no means of ascertaining which part of the island was meant, and here again the Chinese say it was the
to this island,
We
northern coast, from which they have derived their name for the whole island, just as we have taken Bruni or Brunei for
the same purpose".
Ilsi
2 Yang K'au
(1618 A.D.)
embassy of 669 A.D., but adds that the intercourse with the land then ceased for a long time. As a matter of fact
the next embassy
I.
it
mentions
Notes,
is
that of
1406 A.D.
?.
The king
Groeneveldt
p. 101.
SUVARNADVlPA
at that period
413
was
originally
The History
of the
Ming Dynasty
(13684643 A.D.)
of gives a short account of Bandjermasin, on the south coast Borneo. It chiefly describes some of the peculiar manners
place.
The
is
contained in Man-Shu, composed in the second half annals of the ninth century A.D., which refers to Po-ni having trade
intercourse
of the The History a a more detailed account of Pu-ni which Sung Dynasty gives undoubtedly refers to the west coast of Borneo. The fact
with
Indo-China 1
that
origin
their king
bore the
title
of their civilisation.
e.g.
Some
first
they
wine,
and
silver.
This kingdom came into contact with China for the first its king Hiang-ta sent three envoys
The
is
thus
explained by the king himself in a letter which he sent with the envoys to the emperor.
"I
knew
of
means
communication.
whose ship arrived at the mouth of my I sent a man to invite him to my place and then he river. told me that he came from China. The people of my country were much delighted at this, and preparing a ship, asked
called P'u Lu-hsieh,
this stranger to guide
them
to the court".
letter
in the
that he
intended to send
every year.
Pelliot,
1.
2.
414
across
is
king
Sri
Ma-dja
Sri Mah&rfija
sent again an
envoy
to
however, that the first embassy of 977 A.D. led to the opening up of a regular trade between Pu-ni and
It is evident,
China.
of the
among
list
of countries
of China.
We
accounts of
Chau Ju-kua*.
He
manners and customs of the people, which show an undoubted Hindu element. Chau Ju-kua expressly states that the people worshipped Buddha. According to Chau Ju-kua it was an
independent kingdom. 8 More than hundred years later, Wang Ta-Yuen (1349 A.D.,) writes about Pu-ni, that its people worship Buddha images
This
and possess unusual skill in arithmetic and book-keeping. is an unmistakable evidence that at least a part of the some amount of culture and people of Borneo possessed
civilisation,
origin.
But Pu-ni could not long maintain its independence, and was conquered by Java some time before 1370 A,D. We learn
from Chau Ju-kua, that Tafijungpura in south-west Borneo, was already a dependency of Java. The same place occurs in the list of territories conquered by Krtanagara and Gajah
Mada,
base
as we have seen above. It was evidently from this that Java extended her influence over the rest of the
till
island,
of
Borneo
was But
Bk.
official
king of Pu-ni, Ma-Mo-sha, sent a high to the court of the emperor with a memorial and
presents.*
1.
The
facts
the
Ming
T'oung Pao,
T'oung Pao,
XV
(1914), P- 420.
2.
Chau Ju-kua,
pp. I55-I57*
3.
XVI.
(1915), p. 265.
4.
Ibid.
SUVARttADVlPA
415
Dynasty regarding the allegiance of Pu-ni, at first to Java, and then, from the beginning of the fifteenth century, to China, have already been referred to above ( Bk. Ill, ch. VI ).
We
shall
now
further
details
quote from the History of the Ming Dynasty regarding the intimate intercourse between
"In the winter of the year 1405 the king Maradja (Maharaja) Ka-la sent envoys to bring tribute and the Emperor sent
him as king of the country and gave a commission, and silks of various colours. The seal, king was greatly delighted, and embarking with his wife, his sons, his younger brothers and sisters, daughters and
functionaries to invest
him a
functionaries
went
to court".
received with great honour, and feasted at every place through which he passed, till he reached the capital in the eighth month in A.D. 1408. During his audience with
the emperor he knelt down and pronounced a most flattering address to the suzerain. The king was received with usual
In the 10th month the king died in tho Chinese capital. The emperor was very much grieved, closed his court for three
days, and sent an officer to
silk
perform
sacrifices
and
to give tho
a goat. 'The emperor issued an edict to console his son Hia-wang who was ordered to succeed his father and appointed king of the country. Hia-wang and his uncle reported that their
country had to give Java a quantity of camphor every year and begged for an imperial order to Java that this annual tribute
might be sent instead to the imperial court. They further said that as they were going home now, they asked for the Emperor's orders and for permission to
should be stopped, in order that
it
Groeneveldt
416
people
;
might
He
ordered that
pleasure.
coming with it should depend upon the kin^s also gave an order to Java telling them not to ask any more the annual tribute of this country."
He
'At the time of taking leave the king and his party got very valuable presents from the emperor. The eunuch Chang Ch'ieu
In 1410
the king sent envoys to carry tribute and present thanks for the imperial favour. The next year Chang Ch'ien was sent
to court with his
again with rich presents for the king. In 1412 Hia-wang came mother. They were entertained with great honour and received valuable presents. From the year 1415
to the year 1425 they brought tribute four times, but after that time their tribute-bearers became more rare/
'During the period Wan-li (1573-1619) the king of Pu-ni died without any male issue. His relatives fought for the at last all throne, and there was a great war in the country
;
competitors were killed, and then a daughter of the late king was put on the throne. Since this time, though they did not bring any more tribute, the intercourse by traders was uninter-
rupted/ This extensive summary of the Chinese history gives us a very interesting account of the friendly intercourse between
its
Borneo and China, but it adds but little to our knowledge of history and civilisation. There is no doubt that the Chinese official writer has spared no pains to exaggerate the power and
prestige of the
light.
But
all
emperor, and to paint him in a too dazzling the same he has left the impression that Pu-ni
country, and enjoyed
prestige.
was a
fairly civilised
some amount
of
political
authority and
We may
general
remarks.
SUVARNADVIPA
different parts of the island during the
417
Christian era.
By 400
But the
and Hindu religion and culture made their history of the progress and development states and Hindu culture cannot be traced any of the Hindu further in the absence of positive information on the point. It is certain that Hindu culture survived to some extent for It seems to more than a thousand years. however, be,
established there,
felt.
influence
equally certain, that the stream of Hindu colonisation not fed here for a long time from the parent source,
was and
decayed and was ultimately almost dried up. In other words, Hinduism 111 Borneo did not possess sufficient vitality to subdue the native elements for a pretty long time, and so
hence
it
Hindu
in Borneo, as depicted in the Chinese history, was an uninterrupted continuation of the early Hindu culture which is
indicated
by the
archaeological remains.
But
this
seems to
be a more reasonable view than to suppose that there were fresh streams of Hindu migration at a later period.
would be to trace the later Hindu Borneo to Java. That Java exercised political authority in some parts of Borneo as early as the thirteenth century A.D. is definitely known, and it is easy to conjecture that Indo-Javanese culture and civilisation should find its way to Borneo, and influence it to a certain extent. This influence is quite apparent in the art of later Borneo, and nobody can possibly mistake it. But it is equally impossible to deny that some elements even of later civilisation in Borneo are not Indo-Javanese, and must be traced ultimately to India. Nor
alternative supposition
civilisation in
is
it
An
authority
Krom, that Javanese political extended to Borneo even earlier than the thirteenth
century A. D., in order to explain the traces of Hinduism noticed in Pu-ni in the tenth and eleventh centuries A. D. 1
I.
Krom
53
Geschiedenis, p, 229.
418
to another country
Before closing the account of Borneo we may briefly refer named Sulu which was situated in or near
Borneo.
Sulu Shortly after the year 1368 the people of attacked Pu-ni, where they made a large booty and only
retired
soldiers to
Pa-ha-la,
In the year 1417 the eastern king of this country Paduka the western king Ma-ha-la-ch'ih (Maharaja), and
the mountain of Ka-la-ba-ting, called Paduka Prabhu ), all went with their families to China to pay homage and tribute. They* presented a letter of gold, with the characters engraved upon it, and offered pearls, precious stones, tortoise-shell and other articles. the king of
Prabu
Embassies were again sent, in 1420 by the western king, and in 1421 and 1424, by the eastern king. 1
I.
cf.
is
Groeneveldt
mountain Klaiba-
tangan on the north-eastern coast of Borneo. In that case Sulu or a part of it must be located in the island of Borneo itself.
Chapter V.
This brings us down to the end of the seventh century A. D. For the next century we possess no definite historical informa-
According to a somewhat vague Parahyangan, the island was the Javanese king SaSjaya. 2 This may possibly conquered by be true. Recent investigations 8 in Bali have yielded quite a large number of inscriptions on stone and copperplates, and other antiquities, some of them reaching as far back as eighth
tradition preserved in
Carita
from the
point of view of political and cultural history, to which we shall refer below, the inscriptions clearly prove, both by their language and subject matter, that Bali was a Hindu colony with
distinct characteristics of its own, derived directly
and
it
was
in
Javanese colony or
these inscriptions
The
language of
is enough view that Bali derived its accepted Hindu culture through Java, and we must regard the Hindu colony in that island as developing independently, and side by side, with that of Java and other islands in the archipelago.
is
The
most
reasonable
regard the
reflected in
Hindu
these
I.
culture
would be to therefore, and society in Bali, which we find records from the eighth to the tenth
conclusion,
2.
i.
Book
(
Chap. IX.
Book
III.
Chap.
I.
(1929). Epigraphia Unless otherwise stated, the inscriptions mentioned below are to be looked for in these authorities.
3.
Stutterheim
).
Oudheden Van
1934,
Bali
Balica
Vol.
1926
O.V
pp. 28-35.
420
century A.D., as a direct development of the old Hindu colony and civilisation referred to in the Chinese annals.
The
inscriptions,
particularly
the
series
of copperplate
Grants, have
yielded very interesting information regarding The oldest of them, dated 896
A.D., and found at Bebetin, does not refer to the name of any But two inscriptions discovered at Babahan and king.
We
next
hear of
king Janasadhuvarmadeva,
ruling
in
A.D. 975, and queen 8ri-Vijayamahadevl ruling in 983. No An inscription particulars are known about any of these. 1 discovered near Sanoor refers to Sri Kelarivarms, recently
lord over
all
neighbouring princes,
other localities.
He
Not long
after
this,
Javanese king DharmavamSa, and was ruled on his behalf by Mahendradatta alias Gunapriyahis predecessor's daughter dharmapatnf, along with her husband Dharmodftyanavarmadeva
(or in its shorter form,
Airlangga.*
Stutterhcim
was a Balinese, who afterwards became a member of the royal of Makutafamily of Java by his marriage with the daughter and ruled over Bali as Prince-consort of vamgavardhana,
1.
The
inscription
in
Acta
IQ34
PP- 126-132.
The
pillar,
inscription,
incised
A. D., and of thirteen lines in alphabet of about the tenth century Kavi alphabet. According to Dr. Stutterheim the latter belongs probably
to ninth or tenth century A.D.
2.
Ill,
Ch,
II.
3.
SUVAKNADVlPA
Gunapriyadharmapatni.
421
that the last three (now four) Balinese kings, mentioned above, had all of them names ending in Varmadeva. It has been
argued on the other hand, that he was a Javanese chief, who, on being appointed to rule over Bali, assumed a name in
conformity with the Balinese royal custom.
1
Whatever that may be, there is no doubt that the Udayana and Mahendradatta introduces a new epoch
cultural history
rule of
in the
of Bali.
makes a deep impress upon that of Bali, so much so that the culture and civilisation of Bali after 1022 has been regarded
as old-Javanese in character.
The
both
Balinese records
DharmoGunapriyadharmapatni and her husband dayanavarman, but the name of the latter alone appears in two records, dated 1011 and 1022 A. D. The natural
presumption, therefore, is that the queen died some time between 1001 and 1011 A.D., and since then her husband alone
ruled in Bali.
refers to a
8
queen
that 5jSadevl
It has been suggested (ratu) Sang Ajfiadevl. was but another name of Gunapriyadharmapatni. *
But, then,
it is difficult
to explain
why
she alone
title
is
mentioned,
'ratu/
An
vassal chief,
island.
4
would be to regard Sang Ajnadevl as a or one ruling independently in some parts of the
In any case Udayana must have regained his authority before 1022 A.D. He evidently died in that year, some time
between the months of Caitra, when he issued the edict, and Paua, when a record was issued by Sri DharmavamSavardhana
1.
Krom*-Geschiedenis 2
Cf.
p.
232, fn. 4.
2.
Bk.
Ill,
Ch.
p.
II. p.
3.
O.V. 1920,
132.
the
name
as
Sang
Korn
422
till
Marakatapangkaja-SthSnottunggadeva. This king ruled at least 1025 A.D. His name indicates that he belonged to the
family of
thus a
member
of the Javanese
royal family.
of course, equally
Dharmavaiha was
MakutavamSavardhana.
The
relationship
Udayana
is
and
his successor
is
it
Marakatapangkaja-Sthanottunggadeva
possible to decide
if
not
known, nor
independent king, or acknowledged the suzerainty of Airlangga, The absence of any royal title lends the Javanese king. 1
support to the latter view, and in that case
in spite
we may hold
that
In any case, Airlangga ultimately asserted his so much so, that once he even planned full suzerainty over Bali to divide his kingdom among his two sons by giving Java to
;
itself
was divided
seen above.
its
and Kadiri,
Bali,
as
we have
had
as
usual,
own
ruler,
how
far
it
acknow-
ledged the authority of Janggala, it is difficult to say. Ten copperplate records, bearing dates between 1049 and 1077 A.D.,
refer to a king
is
who was
who
cremated at
BaSuveka".
alludes to
Udayana
and
his wife
If this
view
be correct,
A. D. was a younger
He evidently ruled over the whole brother of Airlangga. as his records are found both in north and south Bali, island,
from Sangsit to Klungkung.
i.
In a recent article
ri
Bali,
is
no other
by
his
SUVARNADVlPA
423
The next ruler of Bali, known from a record of 1098 A.D., is named Sri Sakalendaki ring Esana Gunadharma-laksmidhara Vijayottunggadevi. In this name we have a reminiscence of
that of Gunapriyadharmapatni, the mother of Airlangga,
and of
Kana, the
reputed
founder
If it
of
Airlangga belonged.
these factors, this
that royal house.
were safe to presume anything from ruler of Bali may be regarded as belonging to
said of the
two rulers who followed, vix., Sri Suradhipa, with dates 1115 and 1119 A.D., and Sri Jayalakti, with dates 1133 and 1150 A.D. It
is
A king Paduka
Sri
known
One
of these is dated in
A.D., while the remaining were issued on one and the same day In these he appears as the suzerain king, in the year 1181. ruling over a circle of seven states in Bali (Balidvipamandala).
of these records has been justly doubted, and so no sure conclusion can be based upon them. Next we hear of two other kings, Sakalendu with a date 1201 A. D.,
and Bhatara ParameSvara and Bhatara Guru Sri Adhikunti Shortly after this Bali must have (ja)ketana of 1204 A.D.
been conquered by Java.
of things in the
first
the state
Bali
the fifteen vassal states of Java, though he expressly adds that Bali and Tanjungpura (South-West Borneo) were the
among
The
of Kadiri in 1222,
this
Paramesvara Sri A.D. But during Hyang ning hyang the reign of Kftanagara Java again found means to subdue the
is
known
to
us,
neighbouring island.
i.
military expedition
was sent
to Bali
424
in 1284 A.D.,
Krtanagara.
Kptanagara's success was, however, a short-lived one. In 1292 he met with a tragic end, and his kingdom was overthrown
by the chief of Kadiri. Bali must have profited by this respite, and an indication of this is furnished by the fact that when the Chinese army returned from its expedition against Java in
1293 A.D., they brought to the emperor, among other things, a letter in golden characters from the kingdom of Bali, with 1 As we have seen above, it was a deliberate rich presents.
policy of the Chinese emperor on that occasion to detach the smaller states from Java and make them transfer their allegiance
view envoys were sent to these smaller of it to states, and there is no doubt that Bali took advantage substitute a nominal allegiance to China in place of a real
to China.
With
this
control exercised
by Java,
For nearly
state.
The
is
earliest
document for
this period,
A.D.,
child
1324.
The
Guru
was issued by
Sri
Valajayakjtaningrat
in 1328
with his
as Sri
Mahaguru
A.D.
the
This lady
who
is
referred to simply
Mahaguru
Lastly,
we
find
begun
the supremacy of Java over Bali. Accordhad ing to a tradition preserved in PamaScangah, the struggle this struggle are in Jayanagara's reign. The first fruits of
to be seen in 1338 A.D.,
of the empire
of Majapahit
attempt
was
when the Regent Tribhuvanottunggadevl founded a Buddhist sanctuary in that island. But the battle was indecisive for a long time. The king of Bali strove hard
to maintain his independence.
At
in
last
Groeneveldt
Notes, p. 27.
SUVAENADVIPA
Nfigara-Kptagama, Gajah
expedition.
425
Mada
1
Several
historical traditions
of the
was
totally routed,
and
his
growing
empire of Majapahit.
Two
Henceforth Bali formed an integral part of the empire. records of Bali, dated 1384 and 1386 A.D., are issued by
Sri Vijayarajasa, prince of Vengker, and the maternal uncle of the Javanese king. third, dated 1398 A.D., refers to him as
Sri ParamesVara
who died
at
Visnubhavana.
It
is
likely,
therefore, that Vijayarajasa represented the Javanese authority in Bali as a governor or viceroy. The residence of the viceroy
was
fixed
first
at
at Gelgel.
The
Javanisation of that island which had already begun in the llth century A.D. Henceforth the two islands are very closely
is
associated both in politics and culture. This state of things clearly reflected in Nag. Kr. Berg has shown how Bali
formed a centre
of
Javanese literary
life,
which grew in
importance in the same proportion in which it declined in Java itself. Bali carried on and developed the traditions of Java, first as a dependency of Majapahit, and then as an
independent Javanese kingdom.
For, as
to
we have seen above, the king of Majapahit, unable withstand the onrush of Islam, took refuge in Bali with
I.
In addition to Pamaftcangah
expedition are referred to
Cf.
in
the details
of the
Usana Jawa
and Kidung
Sunda.
Berg
to
According
and
installed
there a
strength to
Jawa
latter
refers
conquered Bedahulu, Kapakisan. But it taxed all his the island under his control. The Usana
in
the Javanese
first
Bali,
the
under
Kidung
auxiliary
Sunda
personal supervision of Gajah Mada. According to the fall of Bali became inevitable only when the
forces from Sun^a and Madura conquered respectively the western and eastern forts.
54
426
his followers.
His example was followed by a large number of Javanese who found in migration to Bali the only means to save their religion and culture. Bali thus received a strong influx of Javanese element, and became the last stronghold of Indo-Javanese culture and civilisation, a position which it
still
happily maintains. It has not only contributed to the further development of Indo-Javanese culture, but has also
preserved from oblivion much of it which Java herself lost as a result of the Muhammadan domination.
The subsequent
history
of Bali
may
thus be regarded as
Indeed, the popular merely a continuation of Majapahit. notion in this respect is so strong, that most of the inhabitants
of Bali
style
themselves,
or
men
of Majapahit.
in hilly regions,
are called
1
by way of contrast
'Bali aga'
or
The
later history of
the island
may be
briefly
told.
himself overlord prince of the royal family of Majapahit made He assumed the title Dcva-agung Ketut, and of the island.
restored peace and order in the country. his capital, and there his successors ruled
lie chose Gelgel as
till
when
removed
to
Klungkung.
1.
These
people
live
in
the
neighbourhood
of
of
Sangsit,
in
villages
of
character,
is
For the
later
history of
Bali,
cf.
Encycl.
Ned. Ind.
s.v.
Bali
eighteenth century. The literary traditions about the history of Bali, since the Javanese conquest of Mid. Jav. Trad., pp. 121-175. ) 1343, have been discussed by Berg (
How
far
doubtful.
Some
kings
like
Batu-Renggong
undoubtedly
very played a
is
prominent part.
SUVARNADVIPA
Among
427
the kings of Gelgel, Batu-Renggong occupies a prominent place. He ruled in the third quarter of the sixteenth
century A.D.
In addition to the whole of Bali, he ruled over Sasak and Sambawa, and a considerable part of Balambangan. He also proved a formidable enemy of the kings of Pasuruhan
and Mataram, and maintained peace in his kingdom. He was considered by later generations as the incarnation of Visnu. He was a patron of letters, and it was during his reign that the great Javanese scholar Nirartha was settled in Bali, and there was a great outburst of literary activity among
the Javanese settlers in that island.
The death of Batu-Renggong was followed by a period of unrest and revolutions in course of which Bali lost all her
Balambangan proved the bone of possessions. foreign contention between Bali and Mataram, and in 1639 the king
of
Mataram invaded
Bali.
unsuccessful,
hold upon Balambangan until it passed the Dutch towards the close of the eighteenth into the hands of
its
From the very beginning of this period the kingdom of Bali was divided into several districts, each being placed under a governor. These governors gradually assumed an independent
position, so that in the eighteenth
divided
into
nine
autonomous
Bangli,
the two following centuries is merely one of interminable wars among these states. Jembrana
The
state,
existence
The remaining eight states continued till the Dutch conquered them all
and established their supremacy over the whole island. This conquest of Bali did not, however, prove to be an easy task. The Dutch suzerainty was first acknowledged by the Balinese in 1839, but many expeditions were necessary before the Dutch
could
finally
spirit of the
ruling chiefs.
428
In 1908, the Deva-agung of Klungkung, the last heir of the Emperors of Majapahit, made a final effort to free himself
from the foreign yoke. Even when his palace was besieged by the Dutch, and there was no hope of success, he refused
with scorn the offer of his enemy to save his life and family by an unconditional surrender. Remembering the proud
examples of his Ksatriya forefathers, he seized the sacred sword, and boldly rushed out with his nobles, wives, and children to meet with an end worthy of his race. Klungkung
and the remaining warlike elements of the place were interned at Lombok. In 1911 Klungkung was formally incorporated in the Dutch empire, and with that the Hindu rule in Bali came to an end.
fell,
Chapter VI.
The Javanese Law-books do not contain anything about law such as we have in Chapter VII of
is
Manu-Samhita.
Java
texts
but
little
Consequently the system of administration in known. There are three old-Javanese prose
theory and public administration, but a practical guide to this subject is difficult to their value as determine. may begin with a brief reference to them.
on the
political
We
Kamandaka 1 An old-Javanese text, in which Bhagavan Kamandaka explains to his pupils the duties of the king. The book was also known as Rajanlti. The characters from
1.
.
the
H&mayana and
as an ideal.
2.
is
held
up
Indraloka*.
gives
lessons
3.
on
KumarayajSa.
describes
Nitipraya
This
book
the
duties
of a
Vy&sa.
king towards his enemy. It was communicated by Visnu to But there is an introductory episode which runs as
:
follows
'King Suparkadeva of Ayodhya was attacked by Aji Wangbang, whereupon Bhagavan Ratnabhumi gave him the Nitipraya. In consequence of this Wangbang was defeated, and his daughter YajSavati was taken prisoner. Ratnabhumi's
son Rfiveya went to heaven, where, through mistake, he threw a Nagasari flower at Indra, and was changed to a
1.
Cat
I.,
Vol.
II,
pp. 240-43.
3.
2.
Ibid.,
pp. 243-246.
430
parrot.
shape he gave
of the
many
lessons
to
Suparka-
deva/
The language
According to Raffles, and constantly referred to by the Javanese. Raffles has quoted a few passages from this work, some of which are given
book is now and then very modern. this book is held in very high esteem,
below
1
.
"A good
unjust
prince
must
and
against
all
persecutions
and
is
should be
the light
the
of the
world.
"It is
above
thing
all
of every
subjects.
duty of a prince to take notice going on in his country and among his
the
"It is
to
charge without
his knowledge.
"But a good prime-minister is he who is upright in his fear of the prince, faithfully obedient heart, moderate in his
to
all
his orders,
people,
and always exerting himself to the utmost for the happiness of the people and the welfare of the country.
"And a prime-minister is good beyond measure, who knows everything that is going on in the country and takes who always exerts himself to proper measures accordingly who heeds not his is likely to be injurious avert whatever who considers neither what is right own life in effecting
;
;
friends,
who
nor enemies, but does justice alike to all consults much with his brother officers with whom he
family,
;
affairs of business.
"A
such
prince,
court should
a prime-minister and the chief officers of the direct the administration of the country with
that the people
propriety
;
may
attach
themselves to
them
they must see that the guilty are punished, that the
Raffles
i.
Java, Vol.
I.
pp. 305-8-
SUVAENADVIPA
innocent
431
all
be
not
persecuted,
and that
persons
falsely
and
up a high and noble political ideal they do not throw much light on the actual system of administration. For this we have to rely upon
While these
texts
certainly hold
the data
furnished by the
the
result
inscriptions,
and the
of
following
available
sketch
records.
embodies
of a
study
the
The
state.
No
absolute power of the king formed the basis of a form of government other than an absolute monarchy
is ever referred to, and there was never any idea, far less an attempt, to put any check upon the unrestrained power of the king. Indeed the king was often conceived as the
incarnation
of God,
right,
which we find in a fully developed form in Manu-Samhita, 1 had a complete sway in Java. This is further exemplified by the deification of kings after death. This is accomplished
by making divine images on the model of the king's person, and always referring to the dead king as god (Bhatara) of such and such a place, meaning thereby the place of his cremation.
The framework
to
model
state,
a certain extent.
all
but
large
head of a
into
unit
under a governor appointed by the king, and the smallest was formed by a village which had some form of local
self-government under a headman.
The king was surrounded by a large group of officials whose names occur in inscriptions, specially land-grants, as
1.
incarnation of
divinity
and an
ff).
Vol.
II.
pp. 55
King Jayanagara
2.
referred
II,
to
p. 145).
According
to Carita
432
is
But
in
both cases
is
difficult
to
The
high
was played by
designation
certain
officials,
whose
number
and
varied
at
different periods.
Java refer to two classes of high with religious and secular matters. charged respectively In Kalasan inscription the former are called AdeSalastrins, also
inscriptions of Central
officials
The
known by
and
Tirip.
three Javanese
In other inscriptions
we hear
of Pitamahas,
who
raka
The
civil
officials
are
designated
with
i
the
title
(rakryan),
usually in
a local name.*
place so
in
all,
The
is
the form
raka
named
not clear
perhaps
it
denotes in most,
if
not
The dignity and honour of the the fact that even the king and a
royal family bore the
clearly appears
from
number
same
title
at
the
1. Readers, unacquainted with Javanese or Dutch, may consult English translation of the following inscriptions edited by Mr. H. B. Sarkar.
(i)
An
p. 38).
old-Javanese Inscription of the Saka year 841 (Dacca studies, Vol. I, No. i, pp. 102 ff. ). University An old-Javanese Prasasti from Surabaya of the Saka year (iii)
An
ff.)
of the
pp
of
131
ff.).
(
The
Inscription
will
Trawulan
in
1280)
(I.C.,
Vol.
II.
pp.
523
ff).
Reference
be made to these
2.
'rake'
162-6).
SDVARNADVlPA
In Java
it
433
has always been the practice to entrust members of the royal family, specially the heir-apparent, with high
and important
civil functions.
The
rake
relation
is
is
title
of the king to the place-name following his Certain it is that the same difficult to define.
place-name
life-time
part of the rake-title of an ordinary official. In the case of Airlangga we arc definitely told that as he was formally consecrated at Halu he got the title rake Halu, and this may
serve as
The
officials.
number
of
mostly Javanese, but we have, besides Mantri, also two other Indian designations, Scnapati and Senapati Sarva-Jala i.e. admiral. ( conimaiider-iii-chief )
The
names
are
These records also introduce a stereotyped form of government which continued, with slight changes and occasional
modifications, throughout the
Hindu
period.
Next
to the king
were three great Mantrls, called Mantri Hino, Mantri Sirikan, and after them three chief executive and Mantri Halu Mapatih, Rakryan Demung, and Rakryan officers, Eakryan
;
Kannruhan. Sometimes the titles of these two groups were combined in one person, as for example in Rakryan Mapatih Later on, however, the Hino, Mahamantrl Sri Ketudhara. and the former gradually became two groups became distinct,
ornamental
figures,
During the Majapahit period two more were Rakryaiis. Rangga and Rakryan Tumenggung, added, vix-. Rakryan thus increasing the total number of chief executive officers to
9
But five, known as 'Paficari Vilvatikta' (the five of Majapahit). the record of Krtarajasa, dated 1294 A.D., refers to seven chief executive officers with Rakryan Mantri as the highest among them. The successive titles of Gajah Mada as Patih
of
Kahuripan,
55
Daha,
and
Majapahit
indicate
a new class
Indeed the
434
position of Gajah
empire
almost overshadowed
A new
authority the abolition of the post after his experiment was then tried, ri,\., the formation
the
of the king.
But the
members
(see p. 337 above), which kept the chief direction of their own hands.
officials
r/*.,
Dharmadhikaranas
and Dharmadhyaksas.
The
officers.
Dharmadhikaranas,
as
in
India,
denoted
of the
judicial
The Sidoteka
copper-plate grant
Saka year
righteous
calls
1245 explains the term as "the distinguisher between and evil 'processes," and the Travulan inscription
'dharmapravakta' and Vyavaharavicchedaka/ law and judges. The inscriptions refer seven classes of them
:
them
i.e.
propounders of
the following
to
1.
Pamget
(or
Samget)
Tirvan
2. 3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
Do Do Do Do Do Do
Van
Kandamuhi
Mnnghuri
Pamvataii
Jambi
Dr. F. H.
of all
Nacrsscn 1 concluded, after a careful study relevant documents, that these seven officials formed the
Sapt-opapatti of Nagara-Krtagama, the first five being Saivitc, and the last two, Buddhist. As regards the hierarchy of these
officials,
so far as
the
list,
he observes as follows
list.
heads the
come under
the
'The Pamget i Tirvan always The two Pamgets, Pamvatan and Jambi, always other two, Kandamuhi and Manghuri, though
is
sometimes
i.
I.,
SUVARNADVIPA
interchanged. The two Buddhist Upapattis (Nos. stood apart from the others/
435
6 and 7)
According to the Travulan inscription, the holder of each of these posts had the. title acarya and was versed in a special branch of knowledge, such as logic, grammar, or Samkhya
philosophy
;
while
all
of
them were
'proficient
in
Katarama-
nava
the law-book) and other sacred writings with the aim of deepening their knowledge regarding the justice or other(i.e.
and the Superintendent of the Buddhist According to the Travulan inscription they were charged with the w ork of supervision for the protection of the great Brahmanas and the learned. In the Purvadhigama they are also said to have exercised judicial functions, very much in
institutions
institutions.
T
the same
them.
way as the seven Upapattis, and are named before Dr. Nacrsscn concludes from this that these two classes
had to perform judicial duties of a similar nature, though each had other additional functions. He also holds that Dharmadhyaksas were probably higher in rank than the Dharmadhikaranas
or seven Upapattis. On the whole, we must conclude that there was a highly organised and efficient system of bureaucratic administration
in
The
following extract
from the History of the Sung Dynasty (960-1279 A. D.) gives a general picture of the form of government, as it struck a "Three sons of the king are viceroys and foreign observer
:
Rakryan
),
who
affairs of the
state,
just
as
the ministers
these have
to time products
Next
in
there are
soil and other things of this kind. more than three hundred civil employees, who
of the
are considered equal to siu-tsai (graduates of the lowest degree) China they keep the books in which the revenue is
;
put
down.
yank,
They have
who
also about a thousand functionaries of lower attend to the walls and the moat of the the
town,
436
and to the soldiers. The general of the every half year ten taels (Chinese ounces) of gold army gets there are thirty (between six and seven hundred guilders)
treasury, the granaries
;
thousand soldiers who, every half year, arc paid according to 1 their rank /'
According to Nagara-Krtagama, the relations of the king took a prominent part in the administration. The country
titles
of
lands
correctly
Proper care was taken of the temples, roads, and waterways, and there was
proper arrangement for regular inspection.
Finally, a word may be said regarding the administration of the empire. It appears that nowhere except in Bali was there any idea of direct administration from the capital city of Java.
The dependent
internal
states
were
left
free
in respect of their
own
acknowledged the suzerainty of Majapahit and paid their taxes and other dues. The Bhujanggas and Mantrls from Majapahit visited these
so long as
administration
they
states
to
collect
these dues,
took
Groeneveldt
INDEX
Abhimanottunga Samanta 182 Abiasa (Vyasa) 95
Abulfida 209-212,
Argyre
49i 55
Arjunavijaya 328
55,
61
59
10,
Aru 374
118
Achinese
Aryabhatiya 119
Adesasastrins 432
Adhamapanuda 269
Adhimukti 150
Aditya 73
Aryan
18
Aryyavangsadhiraja 365
Adityavarmadeva 365-368
Airlangga 258-279, 433 Aiyangar Prof. S. K. 179, 186
Asvavarman (Asvatthama)
Atwal 212
Aurousseau 217
Austro-nesian 12
126, 127
Ajapatha
Aji
Aji
56, 59
Saka 94-97
Ayodhya 429
429
Wangbang
Badong 427
Bagchi, P. C. 16
4*
Balambangan 427
Balaputradeva 152-154, 232
Bali 1-3,
Allasanda 56
Anengah (Anusapti)
Anga-dvipa
52, 53
293.
u,
132-137,
261-265,298,
436
Anganeka 56
Angkavijaya 407
Baligami 189
Banak Wide
Amurvvabhumi)
301
Angrok
(Rajasa,
292-294
Barabudur
153, 154
Aragani 301
Barawa
53
Argapura 238
INDEX
Barus (Karpur Barus) 52
Basma
Batak
(Pase) 369
10,
118
Brhatkatha-Sloka-Sarhgraha
61
37, 58,
Hrhat-Samhita 41, 75
Brumbung
Bugis ii
281
48, 82, 83, 89,
Budhagupta
Buleleng 427
90
Burma
195-1 97,
Cakradhara
(or
Cakresvara) 327
Cambodia
159, 160,
1
225,336
Candi Kalasan
(Suraprabhava,
53
Prabhu
Singhavikramavardhana) 352
Bhimaprabhava 269
Bhra Krtabhumi 351-353 Bhre Daha 341-343 Bhre Pamotan (Sri Rajasavardhana
Sinagara) 351 Bhre Pandan Salas 351, 354
Cangal
Ins.
Canggu 297
Canton
165,
349
Celebes
2, 10,
u,
29,
333
QI
Ceylon
Champa
155*
!
IIO
12 7,
336
39O
Cham
135-131,
record 158
Bloch. J 16
2, 3, 10,
ChangCh*ien4i6
n,
22,
29,
Chattapatha
412-418
Chaudhury,
S, B.
50
INDEX
Chau Ju-Kua
71, 134, 176-178, 192-
Cordier 79
Culamanivarman (Cu^amanivarman)
168, 196, 207, 218,
Chavannes 205
220
168, 182
Che
eul
Culamanivarma-Vihara
Cullavarhsa 197, 216
121
Che-li-fo-che (or
Daba 157
King
Dagroian 369
Daha
Da
220
Napati, historian 77
287, 292
Wou-ye
165
80,
Dangdang Gendis
Dantapura 6, 7 Dara Jingga 320, 364 Dara-Petak (Indrcsvaii) 320, 364 Daripatha 56, 60
Das Gupta 18
81,
89,
114, 122,
Da Sura wan,
Dayaks 10
historian 77
China
184, 382,416,
418
101-102,
De Barros
400
Cho-p'o
(Cho-p'o-p'o-ta)
ChS-ye 121 Chryse 4-6, 39, 42-$o, 55 Chryse Ohersonesus 40, 42, 46-49, 69 Chryse Chora 40, 42, 46
Ch'uan-chou
192,
314
Devasmita 51
Chu-fan-chi 192
Ci-aruton 106, 107
Cibadak 356
Cina 38, 56
Clifford 5
Dharmadhyakas 435
120,
122,
Coedes7i,72,
392
155,
170.
Dharmapala
39, 144^
232
227,
Cola
5,
167
ff
362,
264-269,
INDEX
Dharmodaya Mahasambhu
241, 2 42
(Balitung)
Dharmodayanavarmadeva 420
Dimaski
Dinaya
53, 192,
209
Ins,
248
Gajayana 249
44
Galanai, Mahasenapati 195
II
Dompo
327, 329
173, 174
Douglas 19
Dravidian 14
51
Dusun
10
Dutch 427-8
Dva-pa-tan 137
Edrisi 53, 192, 196, 213
Gauda 336
Gavampati 39
Gayatri 320 10, 118
Gelgt-1 425,
Elavaddhana 56 Etienna 40
Eustathios 40 Evans 80
Gayo
426
Gemelan 33-36
Gentayu 273
Gerini
25,
42,
205, 220
Fah-yu 379
Fa-lang 143 Fan-Chan 62
Ghatotkacasraya 284
Gianj^r 427
Fancur 214
Fanur
(Pansur or Baros) 41, 369 Fei Hsin 393 Ferlec (Perlak) 3<>9-37i 374
Ferrand
14,
Gromeveldt
in,
113,
76,
78, 97,
101, 102,
192,
210,
114,
>33-'37,
M5-U7,
Fo-lo-an 194
192,219.313,412.436 Guhasena 51
Gujrat 94-96
Gumba
141
56
104,
Founan
t'ou
Guijavarman (K'ieou-na-pa-mo)
Fruin-Mees
INDEX
Gupta Inscriptions 107
Ha-ch'i-su-wu-ch'a-p'u-mi 182
Hultzsch 172 Hutton. J. H. 19-23 Hyang Visesa (Yang Wi-si-sa) 341343 348
Haji-SumatrabhQmi
183, 185
Han
Hangchu 165
Han-yti 221
Hayam Wuruk
Ibn Khordadzbeh 160, 208, 213 Ibn Majid 221 Ibn Rosteh 161, 213 Jbn Said 14, 47, 52, 53, 192, 210, 212 Ibn Serapion 161
Heu-Han-Shu 100
Hiang-ta 413 Hia-tche 165
Ibrahim bin
Idangai 189
Waif Sab
52, 163,
210
Hia-wang 416
Indrapura 157
Indravarman
158
Tsanabajra 269
Hirth 193
Isanadharma 282
21, 52, 71-73, 82, 112,
Hiuen Tsang
177
Isanatunggavijaya 261
Isana-Vikrama Dharmottungadeva
259
Ishak bin 'Imran 161
Isidore of Seville
Ho-ling 112
Ho-lo-tan,
III, 112
Kingdom
18-23
of
102,
103,
40
Hornell,
J.
Isvaravarma 38, 45
I-tsing 26, 41, 71, 120-123, 137, 142-
144, 175
Huang-tche 70
Huber
71
Jaka-Dolok
Ins.
302
Hui-ning 143
5
Jakun
10, 12
INDEX
Jambudvipa 336 Janasadhuvarmadeva 420
Janggala 276-280, 289, 293, 422 Jannupatha 56, 60
Jataka
37, 60, 61
Kalamukha
56
Kalasavarapura,
Jatakamala 37
Jajavarman Vira Pancjya 198, 216 Java 2,3, ii, 32-34, 91-H5, 138,
153-160, 200-206, 233-275,
150,
153,
205,
232,
298-
96,
112, 153,
179-
379
198, 199,
Kalungkung 407
Kalyani Inscriptions 46
95,
281,
Kama-lahka
177
(see Lang-ya-su),7i-75,
Jayakatvang 318
Jayakrta 284
301, 308,
311,
315-
155
Jayanagara 320-326
Jayanta 150
Jayantakatunggadeva 279
Jayasabha 293
Kancanapura 45
Kandari (Kadara) 79
Jayasimhavarman IV 300
K'ang T'ai
62, 101
Jembrana 427
Jiianabhadra 143
of
Kadambari
(of
Bana) 45
168, 173,
Katfaram (Kidaram)
(Kediri)
93,
178,
Kapulungan 309 Karangasem 426-7 Karangtengah Ins. 238 Kariyana Panamkarana 232
276-293* 3 OI >
7,
168,
380
INDEX
Kataha-dvipa
51, 52*
^9
Kin-tcheu 41
Kathakosa
37, 38
37, 45> 51* 52, 75>
Kirana 283
Kiratas45, 55
iu-t'an-sieou-pa-to-lo
(Gautama
Katyayana 60
Subhadra) 79
Ki-yen 236
Kau Hsing
Kaundinya
313, 316-318
126, 134
Kling
7,
95
Klungkung 426-8
Ko-ku-la 379
Kayuwangi,
238
Sri
Maharaja
rakai
Ko-lo-cho-fen (Kia-lo-cho-fou,
lo-cho-fo) 75. 76
Kia-
Kazwini 192
129
n8
170,
Krom
244
7, 18,
79>
8 2,
98,
Kedu
in,
112,
i*5
120,
122,
272
3H.
10
30, 82, 89,
Krsnayana 280
106, 114.
126,
127, 365
Kesarivarma 420
Ke{a 327 Ketudhara 433 Khasi 14
Krtavijaya 351
Kublai
Khan
300, 312
Ku-Kang
202, 216
Khmer
156
Kumara, book
of
(Skanda
or
Karttikeya) 282
Kusumavarddhani 339
Kutaraja 293
King
liu
yi Siang 121
Kutaramanava 435
7
INDEX
Kutei Ins. 126, 139
Kuti 323
Madagascar
2, 19, 22,
23
299,
310,
Lacote 37, 58
Laidlay 88-90
Madura
298,
299i 3*o,
Lajonquiere 83
3Ui325
)
Lambri
Mahabharata
429
369-371, 374
Mahajanaka 37
Lam pongs
10,
Mahakarma-Vibhanga 39
145, 146,
Langkawi 65
Lang-ya-su 70-75,
194
Mahapati 321-324
Maharaja
155, 160-163
Lara-Jongrang 235
168, 170,
182,208
Mahendradatta
(Gunapriyadharma-
Lembu Ampal
295
53, 5*
69,
73-75,
70, 72,
Mahisa
Ma-Huan
122, 149,
82,
90,
153,
Majapahit
308-318,
339-344,
Linggapati 297
Ling-wai-tai-ta 193
Li-si-lin-nan-mi-je-lai 165
Li-tai 374
Li-tche-ti 164
Malang
93, 297
Lombok
Low,
i, ii,
333428
333>33&,
Col. 89
Lvaram 266
10,
23-25
INDEX
Malayasia
i,
4-8,
19, 24,
26-36,
Mataram
229-257, 427
20,
138-145.149, i53-'55
Matsya-purana
29,
60
Malay Peninsula
65-90,
138,
i,
7,
41-43,
165,
Ma-Twan-Lin
149,
153-' 55,
Ma-wou
(Ma-li) ioi
333,
33 6 , 345. 347,
378-400
386-
Malayu
39^ 396
M'c. Crindle
6, 21,
33, 363-368
25
Maleou Kolon
Mali
25,
26
i74> *77
56, 60,
6 1, 177
of 78,
Malur
Ins. 173
97,
Malurpatna 171
Ma-Mo-Sha 414
Ma-na-ha-pau-lin-pang 202
Ming-ti 77
Manakkavaram
Mandikere
Ins.
174, 177
174
Moens 304-307
Mo-lo-yeu 120
Mankir 41
Mudra-Raks.asa 20
Mulavarman
Munda
14-16
Manu-Smrti
Mappappalam
Maraja 264
173, 176
60
Maranapara
Marcien 40
Nadikera, Island
177, 307, 365, 3 6 9,
74, 75
Marco Polo
374
INDEX
Nagaravarddhani 339
Nagarl Inscriptions 86
Nagipattana 168
Palembang
Palian 67
122,
154,
I95
205,
Nakhon
Sri
Dhammarat
(Ligor)
Paloura
6, 7,
226
81, 83-86
Pamaficangah 425
Na-Ku-erh 374
Pamget 434
Pa-mi-si-wa-r-tiu-pa-sha 388
Ins.
Nakur 376
Nalanda
Copper-plate
152, of 169,
Devapala
154,
160,
221-223, 232
Nambi
310, 322
Maharaja rakai
Nanadesi 188
Panataran 286
Pandangkrayan Ins 272 Pandu Deva Natha (Pantfu) 95 Panembahan Siti Luhur 411
Pangkur 432
Panini 20
Pafijalu 276-278
Pafiji Patipati
Narottama 273
Nasik
Ins.
20
Ngabean
Ins. 238,
432
69
295
61,
Pafiji
Tohjaya 294
Pafiji
Sir
Henry 68
32,
Panuluh 284
95
Parakramabahu
II
197
Nuwayri4i, 53
Paramagangana
56
Paramayona
56
Oman
162
Padang Rocho,
299
Paramesvari
dyah
167
Kebi, rakryan
Parantaka
Pararaton 287,
310-318,
292-295,
3i"37;
'
320-328,
340-344, 35 1
77,
193, 200,
327, 33*>
358
Para-Samudra
382
55,
56
Pakwan
Pajajaran 358-362
Pa-la-mi-so-la-ta-lo-si-ni 382
INDEX
Pataftjali
60
Pre-Aryan and
India 73
Pre-Dravidian
in
Prinsep 89
Prtuvijaya 287
Przyluski,
227
Unus
403, 409
100,
102,
Hi,
74
349, 363,
Pucangan 273
Pula Sara (Parasara) 95
372, 387
Pulaw Emas 47
P'u Lu-hsieh 413
Pu-ni 334, 345, 414
46, 48,
56,
History of 81
d'
Andrade 403
39,
44,
Periplus 4-6,
58,
Punyaraja 215
69
Ins. 181, 187
Purnavarman
106-114, 140
Perumber
Manku) 238
Raden Patah 406 Haden Usen 406
Vijaya
?)
Varman
or
Raffles, Sir
Stamford
Priyavarman
79
Raganatha 301
Rahma
214
Rahmat 406
Kajadhiraja 181
Kajanlti 429
268,
281,
Rajapatigundala 303
Rajaraja 167-171
Po-Nagar
157
Rajendra Cola
179-181
172-175,
Po-U-Daung
Prambanan
Ins.
47
82,
83
Prakrtivirya 287
235, 240, 243-245
II
Kama Garhheng
201
INDEX
Ramayaga
222, 429
20, 42, 53,
54,
98
"9,
Samarottunga
160, 223,
238
Sambawa 427
(of
Ramayaga-mafijari
54,55
Kemendra)
Sambharasuryavarana 260
Sarfikhya 435
Kami (Ramni)
Sampit 130
Ragavijaya 354
Samprangan 425
Samudra-dvipa 55
Rajasa 292
(San-fo-tsai)
78-9,
164-
166,
193-197)
200-205, 217-222,
Ratnabhumi 429
Raveya 429
Ray Chaudhury. H. C.
Rejangs 118
Ricci 221
Sanggau 130
229 239
60
Rudra 38 RupyakadvH>a 62
Sabadios 49, 120
ankha-dvipa 52
Sahkupatha
56,
Sannaha 229,234
Saddhammappajotika 58
Saddhai ma-Smrtyupasthana-Sutra 54
Santri 406 Sanudasa 37,
58, 59
Saptopapatti 434
Sadeng 327
Saila 226
Sari-Pala-Varma, King of
77
Sarkar. H. B. 96
Pahang
Sailodbhava 226
Sajara Malayu 396
Sajivan 235
Sajjanotsavatungga
Sakai 10, 12
(Svami
Kayu-
Sastri,
Mr. Krishna 367 Pandit H. 153, 222 Sastri, Sastri, Prof. K. A. N. 167, 187, 227
Satul 67
Sakunapatha
56,
59
Satyavarman 158
Schlegel 77, 102, I33"I3^ 176, 374
223, 232
160,
INDEX
Schnitger 106, 295
Ins.
Sorandaka 322
Srihuza 47, 120, 162-164, 210, 217 ii-Dharmaraja 201
385-
Selinsing 8l, 84
Semang (Semang
Sendang Kamal Sending Sedati
Negritos)
9, 12
Ins.
264
352, 354
Sengguruh 409
Seng-Ka-liet-yu-lan 202
Purnavarman 102
Sribuza)
8,
Sepauk 130
Serat
Kanda 407
M2-
Shau-Sheng 184
Shih-li-lo-cha-yin-to-lo-chu-lo
162-164,
168, 170,
204-211, 217-223
Sho-po 288-290
Siam
Subhuti-tantra 260
Silingkia (ringa)
Si-li-tieh-hwa
Sukhodaya 201
Su-ki-tan 288-290
(rl Deva)
of Java 113
Si-ma,
Queen
(Sri
Sindok
262
Sulayman 156-161, 213, 216 Sumanasantaka 281 Sumatra 2, 3, 10, 18, 22, 28,
116-124,
188-200,
149.
153,
43,
47,
Singapore
7, 65,
i?Si
178,
363-377
Sumbawa
332, 335
Siiahketing 280
Sirandib 163
Sirazl 41
93
94,
298,
299, 327-329.
Siva-sasana 264
356-362, 409
INDEX
Sung dynasty, History of
264, 288, 413, 435
77,
78,
Tanjore
179
Sung-Shih 184
Suparkadeva 429-30
Suppara 56
Supparaka-Jataka 37
Surabaya 93, 241, 242, 260, 269, 272,
303. 432
Tao-hong 143
Tapasi 300
106,
Ta-tsin 143
Suratjha 56
Tavan 432
Tazi 113, 114
SQryasiddhanta 119
Tcheng-Kou 143
Tchou-Lieou-to (Rudra,the Indian) 7
Suvannabhumi 56
Suvannakuta 56
Suvarnadvipa 37-64, 69, 138-147
Tchou-po
101, 119
Tchou Ying
101
Suvarnnapura 45
9 Tenasserim (Nankasi) 71
Temo
Theodulf4o
'J'hera Son^ 39 Thera Uttara 39
Tagalas
Takakusu 165
Takkasila 56
Thomson
16
52
Takkola 7, 38, 56, 70, 81 Takua Pa 67, 81, 82, 84-86, 90 Takuatung 67
Talaittakkolam 174, 177
Tidore 10
Ti-hwa-ka-la 183-186
Tiimitaraja (Utimutaraja) 397
Tamali 56
Tirip 432
Tirumalai
Ins.
179
Tanah Malayti 65
Taftca 326
Tang
76,
Tokoon
111-113,
I33-I37,
236,
INDEX
Tflng-ya-n&ng 194
7%
78,
Vanga 56
14
Trailokyaraja-mauli-bhusana-varmadeva 195
Trawulan
Ins. 432,
435
Tribhuvanaraja-mauli-varma-deva
196, 200,
299
Varmasetu (Dharmasetuj
Varsajaya 280
153, 232-3
Varusaka
74-5
(Haros,
Sumatra) Island,
Triguna 280
Iritresta 95
Truneng
Ins. 271
Vat Sema Murong Ins, 123 Vayu Purana 52, 53, 60,
Vengi
1
Tsai-nu-li-a-pi-ting-ki 375
86
Venkayya 176
Verapatha 56
Tuk Mas
Vesun^a 56 Vettadhara
Vijaya 270,
(or
Vettacara) 56, 59
Vijayabahu 198
Vijayade\ i (Rajadevf Manarajasa) 327 Vijayaditya VII 186
Vijayamahadevi 420
Udayana 262
Ugrasena 420
Vijayarajasa 425
U ndung (Sunan
Usana Jawa 425
Uttungadeva 273
Vailavarman 103
Vajadrava 283
Vajrabodhi 21, 144
Visnugupta, book
of,
270
Vi^nuvarman
205
8l,
150
126, 127,
150,
Vamana Purana
Vaihsapatha 56
INDEX
Vuravari 266, 270
Yang Tikuh
Yavabhumi
58
Vy5sa 429
Yalaljketu 3?
152, 154
152, 155
101
Yavabhumi-pala
Yavad\Ipa 32,
103, 109
^
373, 414
49*
54,
75,
98-100
Yen-mo-na 112
Ye-p'o-t'i 103,
1
19
Wates-Kulen 287
Yin-Ch'ing 386
of
313
Wawa
246-248, 258 Wellesley Province 80-82, 88, 89 Wilkinson, R. J. 155, 188, 224, 400
Yun-ki 143
Wong
Majapait 426
3 45, 347
Wu-pin
Zabag
or Zabaj
40, 44,
47,
155,
429
52, 53
Zain-ul-Abedin 408
Zaman
32
16