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Kamarupa kingdom : ウィキペディア英語版 | Kamarupa
Kāmarūpa (; also called Pragjyotisha), was one of the historical kingdoms of Assam alongside Davaka,〔Suresh Kant Sharma, Usha Sharma - 2005,"Discovery of North-East India: Geography, History, Cutlure, ... - Volume 3", Page 248, Davaka (Nowgong) and Kamarupa as separate and submissive friendly kingdoms.〕 that existed from 350 to 1140 CE. Ruled by three dynasties from their capitals in present-day Guwahati, North Guwahati and Tezpur, it at its height covered the entire Brahmaputra Valley, North Bengal, Bhutan and parts of Bangladesh, and at times portions of West Bengal and Bihar. Though the historical kingdom disappeared by 12th century to be replaced by smaller political entities, the notion of Kamarupa persisted and ancient and medieval chroniclers continued to call this region by this name.〔In the medieval times the region between the Sankosh river and the Barnadi river on the northern bank of the Brahmaputra river was defined as Kamrup (or Koch Hajo in Persian chronicles) .〕 Coins of Alauddin Hussain Shah, who invaded the Kamata Kingdom in the late 15th century, called the region ''Kamru'' or ''Kamrud''. In the 16th century the Ahom kingdom came into prominence and assumed for itself the political and territorial legacy of the Kamarupa kingdom.〔, and notes. Guha writes that from the 1530s when Tonkham, an Ahom general, pursued the defeated Turko-Afghan adventurers of Turbak to the Karatoya river, the traditional western boundary of the Kamarupa kingdom, '"the washing of the sword in the Karatoya" became a symbol of the Assamese aspiration, repeatedly evoked in the ''Bar-mels'' and mentioned in the chronicles."〕 The name of this kingdom survives in Kamrup, a present-day district in Assam. ==Sources==
Kamarupa and the northeast Indian region find no mention in the Ashokan records (3rd century BCE). The first dated mention comes from the ''Periplus of the Erythraean Sea'' (1st century) where it describes a people called Sêsatai. The second mention comes from Ptolemy's Geographia (2nd century) calls the region ''Kirrhadia'' after the Kirata population.〔Sircar, D. C., (1990) Chapter 5: Epico-Puranic Myths and Legends, pp 81〕 The first mention of the kingdom comes from the 4th-century Allahabad inscription of Samudragupta that calls the kings of Kamarupa (Western Assam) and Davaka (now in Nagaon district) frontier rulers (''pratyanta nripati''). The Chinese traveler Xuanzang visited the kingdom in the 7th century, then ruled by Bhaskar Varman. The corpus of Kamarupa inscriptions left by the rulers of Kamarupa, including Bhaskar Varman, at various places in Assam and present-day Bangladesh are important sources of information. Nevertheless, local grants completely eschew the name Kamarupa; instead they use the name Pragjyotisha, with the kings called ''Pragjyotishadhipati''.〔"The name Kamarupa does not appear in local grants where Pragjyotisha alone figures with the local rulers called Pragjyotishadhipati." 〕
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