Samarasimha

Samara-simha (IAST: Samarasiṃha, r. c. 1182–1204 CE) was an Indian king belonging to the Chahamana dynasty of Javalipura (present-day Jalore in Rajasthan). He ruled the area around Jalore as a Chaulukya feudatory.

Samarasimha
Maharaja
King of Javalipura
Reignc. 1182–1204 CE
PredecessorKirtipala
SuccessorUdayasimha
IssueUdayasimha
DynastyChahamanas of Jalor
FatherKirtipala

Reign

Samarasimha succeeded his father Kirtipala on the Chahamana throne of Javalipura.[1] He had two brothers named Lakhanapala and Abhayapala, and a sister named Rudala-devi.[2] In his inscriptions, he is styled as "Maharaja Samarasimha-deva".[1]

Samarasimha's 1182 CE Jalor stone inscription states that he "held in scorn" the nomadic tribes of Pilavahika (identified with modern Peelwa near Parbatsar).[1] According to historian Dasharatha Sharma, this is a reference to his successful expeditions against the bandits of Pilavahika.[3]

The 1182 CE inscription mentions that Samarasimha's maternal uncle Jojala was a Rajya-Chintaka during his reign. This suggests that Jojala looked after the administration of the kingdom.[1]

Public works

The 1185 Jalor inscription from Samarasimha's reign records the construction of a temple called Kuvara-Vihara. The temple was originally built by the Chaulukya monarch Kumarapala in the Kanchanagiri fort of Javalipura, in 1221 VS (1164-65 CE). It was rebuilt by Bhandari Yashovira in 1242 VS (1285-86 CE), on Samarasimha's orders.[4] The original temple structure had been burnt by the Shakambhari Chahamana invader Vigraharaja IV during his war against the Chaulukyas.[5]

According to the Sundha Hill inscription, Samarasimha built extensive ramparts on the Kanakachala fort. G. H. Ojha identified Kanakachala with the fort of Jalor, same as Kanchanagiri fort mentioned in the 1185 CE inscription. According to D. R. Bhandarkar, Kanchanagiri or Kanakachala was the original name of the hill on which the fort was situated. Kirtipiala started the construction of a fort on this hill, and the work was completed by Samarasimha.[4]

The Sundha Hill temple further states that the king established the town of Samarapura, after having weighed himself against gold. The identity of Samarapura is not known.[4] Samarasimha's sister Rudaladevi also commissioned two Shiva temples.[3]

Personal life

Samarasimha had at least two sons and a daughter. His daughter Lila-devi married the Chaulukya monarch Bhima II. This is attested by the 1206 Kadi inscription of Bhima II.[6]

His two sons were Manavasimha and Udayasimha. The elder son Manavasimha was an ancestor of the founders of the Chauhan principalities of Chandravati and Abu.[3] Udayasimha succeeded Samarasimha on the throne of Jalore.[7]

gollark: Most of my greek typing is just one character in the middle of other stuff, so it would not be very useful to me to learn other layouts and set them up.
gollark: If only people (including me...) actually knew IPA so we could avoid messing with "thee-tah" and other ambiguous ways to say how to pronounce things.
gollark: It's not that hard, I just hold LWIN and type gqx.
gollark: I still struggle with ξ (yes I do have Greek character macros set up for these extremely rare situations).
gollark: They're mostly not *too* horrible and you can at least copy the simple ones fairly easily.

References

Bibliography

  • Dasharatha Sharma (1959). Early Chauhān Dynasties. S. Chand / Motilal Banarsidass. ISBN 9780842606189. OCLC 3624414.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Ashok Kumar Srivastava (1979). The Chahamanas of Jalor. Sahitya Sansar Prakashan. OCLC 12737199.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
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