The Identification of Kalinganagara

By Bhavaraj V. Krishnarao, B.A., B.L. Journal of the Bihar and Orissa Research Society Vol.15, pp. 105-115


p. 105 There is a considerable difference of opinion today among the scholars over the identification of Kalinganagara, the reputed capital of Kalingadesa. Almost all the copper-plate grants of the Ganga kings of Kalinga were issued from their capital, Kalinganagara. Those who have identified the city with the modern town of Kalingapatam have mainly based their argument on three grounds. They are (1) the reference to the Kalinga rajadhani in Kalidasa's Raghuvamsa as being situated very near to the sea, (2) the similarity of the two names and, lastly (3) Kalingapatam's ancient glory as a seaport and its commercial prosperity from the earliest times. A close examination of these reasons will doubtless show that their identification is utterly untenable. The date of Kalidasa is still a matter of doubt and uncertainty and Kalinga-rajadhani of his day must therefore remain still a matter of conjecture. Except its nearness to the sea, Kalingapatam has no traces of antiquity, of a nature which could suggest the fact of its having been once the capital of Kalinga. It might be after all that Kalidasa by a stretch of his poetic imagination brought the sea nearer the city than it really was. Further the similarity of the names alone is not a sufficient reason to enable us to identify one city with the other; Kalingapatam could never have been the ancient Kalinganagara. It is a matter of common knowledge with the students of South Indian History that the appellation pattana was always associated with the seaport towns, while nagara was with the capital cities or rajadhanis of the kings. Thus we have for instance, in South India several seaport towns the names of which end with the appellation Pattana like Kayalapattana, Kaveripattana, Nagapattana, Kottapattana, Desyuyukkondapattana. (another name for Motupalli,) p. 106 Machilipattana, (Masulipatam) Visakhapattana, (Vizagapatam) and lastly Kalingapattana, while we have not even a single town, the name of which ends with the appellation nagara on the sea coast. The fact that Kalingapatam was once a flourishing port does not necessarily mean that it must have been also the ancient Kalinganagara. All the extant Telugu Verses quoted in support of the Kalingapatam theory are of recent production and could never have been composed by the celebrated poet Vemulavada Bhimakavi, who lived in the eleventh or twelfth century of the Christian era. The verses, the authorship of which has been gratuitously attributed to Bhimakavi contain references to the English, Dutch and French factories in Kalingapatam and incidentally mention that the town was built upon an island celled Srngala-dvipa. The reference to the European trading companies puts beyond doubt the composition of the verses at sometime in the latter part of the seventeenth century. The island of Srngala with the beautiful town on it, is not to be seen today; it is said to have been swallowed up by the sea sometime ago during the nineteenth century. It is certain, therefore, that Kalingapatam was known only as Kalingapattana even as far back as the sixteenth century and not as Kalinganagara. The former was probably the seaport and the latter, the capital of ancient Kalinga; and both could never have been one and the same. We have however, references to 'Kalinganagara' the capital of the earlier Ganga dynasty in the inscriptions. But as we are not sure of the relations between the early Ganga dynasty and the later Gangas and consequently whether their two Kalinganagaras are one and the same. Until the riddle of the Ganga Chronology is solved the identity of the Kalinganagra of the early Gangas must remain a matter of doubt. In the Srikakulam inscription of king Indravarman(1) of the early Ganga dynasty, Kalinganagara is described thus :- "Svasti jaladhitaranga -kara -pallav-alingitu sakala-Kalingavanitala-tilakaya- mana- dvij=aya= Kalinganagarat." This passage suggests no 1. Ind. Ant, Vol. XII, p. 123. p. 107 doubt that Kalinganagara was on the sea coast but as has been remarked it is not possible to identify it with any known place. But we may ask, is this the city that was described by Kalidasa? Let us see then whether we have any evidence to identify Kalinganagara of the later Gangas with any known place in Kalingadesa, i.e., the modern districts of Ganjam and Vizagapatam. There has been a tradition current in Kalinga that the villages of Mukhalingam and Nagarakatakam on the Vamsadhara river, in the Parlakimedi taluk, Ganjam district once formed the ancient city of Kalinganagara. It was Rao Sahib G.V. Ramamurti Pantulu who first identified the two villages with Kalinganagara on very substantial grounds.(1) But his identification has not unfortunately been accepted as conclusive. Nevertheless new evidence that has since come to light has placed his identification beyond all doubt. All examination of the inscriptions found in the temples reveals to us certain facts that give us the clue to identify Kalinganagara with certainty. There are three temples dedicated to S'iva in Mukhalingam, under the names of Madhukesvara, Aniyanka-Bhimesvara and Somesvara. The linga which is called Mukhalingesvara appears, however, to have been never known as such; it was always called Madhukesvara. Equally surprising is the fact that though at the present day the village is called Mukhalingam, the name too, does not appear in the inscriptions found in the temples. The locality in which the temples of Madhukesvara and Aniyanka- Bhimesvara stand is called Nagaramu,(2) Nakaramu,(3) Nagara,(4) or Nagaranavidu(5) in the inscriptions that range over a period of five to six centuries beginning from the ninth century A.D. Nagara is a Sanskrit word borrowed into Telugu, and sometimes pronounced 1. Ep Ind. Vol. IV: pp. 181-189. 2. S.I. I. Vol. V. nos. 1007 and 1025. 3. Ibid, nos. 1025, 1034, 1040 and 1046.1046. 4. Ibid. nos. 1042 and 1057. 5. Ibid nos. 1142 and 1046. p. 108 as nakara also and means the capital or the residence of the king (rajadhani). Vidu is a Pure Telugu word meaning a house, abode, dwelling place, citadel or the city itself, usually where the king resides. Nagarana- Vidu, which is a compound words means vidu of the city or vidu in the city. Evidently vidu is here referred to as a proper word signifying the name by which that part of the city where the temples stand, was called in those days. This would then lead us to locate the Nagara itself, which in all certainty must have surrounded the Vidu. Again, at the present day there is a small village called Nagarakatakam within a mile or two to the south from Mukhalingam which further suggests to us the identity of Kalinganagara. Ruins of temples and other buildings all over Mukhalingam and beyond to the south, as far as Nagarakatakam and large inscribed slabs and stones found here and there, confirm also the suggestion of identity. The name Nagarakatakam is apparently a compound of two words, viz., nagara and katakam, each of them having distinctly different meanings. Kataka which appears to be the prakrit form of Sanskrit Khetaka conveys the idea of the city proper where the populace lived. It was associated with several capital cities of the Deccan and we have for instance, Kataka or kalyana-Kataka, Dhanya-Kataka, ManyaKhetaka (Malkhed) and so on. But the origin of the name Nagarakatakam might be twofold. The fact that the capital of the neighbouring kingdom of Orissa was popularly called mere Kataka like the capital of the Western Chalukyas(7) might probably have induced the people of Kalinga to call their rajadhani with an appellation "Naqara", or it might be that the name "Nagarakatakam" meant the Kataka or the city proper (where the populace lived) of NAGARA, the capital of the Ganga kings of Kalinga, just as it was said of the Vidu of Nagara as Nagarana=Vidu. Again, Nagara might be an abbreviation of Kalinganagara, for we have innumerable instances of the city having been ----------------------------- 1. The capital of the Western Chalukyas was known as Kalyanskataka but popularly called mere Kataka. p. 109 called as such. God Madhukesvara is referred to in a number of inscriptions found in the temple itself in the following manner:-- "Kalingavani- Nagare Sriman Madhukesvaraya Sarvaya,(1) Kalinga-desa-Nagare Sriman Madhukesvaraya devaya(2) Trikalingavani- Nagare Sriman Madhukesvaraya,(3) Nagare- Kalingadese Svayambhuve Madhukesvaraya"(4) and I stly "Nagare- Madhukesvarayam,"(5) which are suggestive of the meaning that the city was called Nagara of Kalinga or Kalinganagara or Nagara itself. Thus, curiously however, that while Katakam of Nagara is still called Nagarakatakam the Vidu of Nagara ceased to be known as such and a new name Mukhalingam has usurped its place. This is indeed interesting and I think it may not be out of place here to enquire into the origin of this new name. The name of the linga Madhukesvara becomes Mohakesvara in prakrit, and Moha and Madhuka mean the same mauha tree. The name Mohalingam has in course of time become corrupted into Mukhalingam on account of the Telugu Brahmanas who ignorant of the original meaning explained the word in the Kshetramahatmya as a compound of two words, Mukha and Linga, i.e., linga with face.(6) Thus in course of time Mukhalingam, the name of the deity lent itself to the village also and people gradually forgot the names of Nagara and Vidu. There is yet another piece of evidence in support of view, viz. that Mukhalingam and Nagarakatakam represent the ancient city of Kalinganagara. The Vizagapatam copper-plate inscription of Anantavarman dated S.S. 1040 records three facts which bear on this question.(7) They are as follows:-- (1) Kamarnava I one of the ancestors of the king had for his capital the ----------------------------- 1. S.I.I., Vol. V., no, 1035. 2. Ibid., no. 1036. 3. Ibid., no. 1101. 4. Ibid., no. 1098. 5. Ibid., nos. 1042 and 1057. 6. Ep. Ind., Vol. IV, pp. 188-189, Sanskrit Mukhha becomes Moha in Telugu or Andhraprakrit. 7. Ind. Ant., Vol. XVIII, pp. 167-168, lines 49-50 and 60-63. p. 110 town named Dantavura which excelled all the cities of all the kings and even the city of Surendra. (2) Kamarnava II, nephew of Kamarnava I, had for his capital the city named Nagara that surpassed Trivistapa, the city of gods, in beauty; and (3) in that city Nagara, Kamarnava II had built a lofty temple for the emblem of God 1sa (Siva) in the form of Linga to which he gave the name of Madhukesa because it came out of a madhuka tree. Now let us examine these facts carefully. The first of these is that Kamaranava I, the reputed founder of the Ganga dynasty originally had for his rajadhani a town called Jantavuram which seems to be mistake for Dantavuram; Dr. Fleet clearly had misread the letter ja for da. Mr. Ramamurti Pantulu accepting the word as Jantavaram mistook Jantavurum for Jayantipuram which is mentioned in the Khsetramanatmya.(1) The name Jantavunram could not he a mistake for Jayantipuram. It is impossible for the engraver to commit such a grave error in respect of a city which was well known to him as the residence of the former kings of Kalinga and which was certainly in existence at that time.(2) Besides the fact that Kamarnava II, nephew of Kamarnava I had for his capital another town named Nagara where he is said to have built a temple for Madhukesvara shows that Jantavuram and Jayantipuram could not be identical with one another as suggested by Mr. Ramamurti Pantulu, Further the identification seems to be unsound and even untenable on both philological and phonetical grounds. In the Korni Copper-plate inscription of Anantavariman dated S.S. 1034 edited by Mr. G.V. Sitapati, these facts are repeated.(3) But the editor did not, like Dr. Fleet, misread the name of the city as ----------------------------- 1. Ep. Ind., Vol. IV, pp. 188-ff. 2. S.I.I., Vol.V, nos. 1076 and 1084. The inscriptions in which Dantavuram is mentioned belong to the reign of Anantavarman, 1078-1148, A.D., as they are dated in S.S. 1027 (A.D. 1105) and S.S. 1035 (A.D. 1113) respectively. 3. Q.J.A.H.R.S., Vol. I, pp. 107-123. p. 111 Jantavuram; it is correctly read as Dantavuram(1). That the name of the city is beyond all doubt Dantavuram is also borne out by other epigraphical evidence available.(2) In the inscrip- tions found in Mukhalingam, we come across the name Dantavuram, and in one of them a grant of land in Dantavur- am was also made to the shrine of Madhukesvara in Nagara. Then the second fact that Kamarnava II, had built a new city named Nagara and changed his residence to that place. Anantvarman, however, does not give us any reasons for this change of the capital by Kamarnava II. This 'Nagara' is said to have been built on the bank of the river Vamsadhara. There is a local tradition now extant in the neighbourhood of Mukhalingam which however assigns a reason for the change of the capital from Dantavuram to the newly built town Nagara on the bank of Vamsadhara, which appears to be probable, nay even true for it fully corroborates and explains the facts stated in the inscriptions, of Anantavarman. It is said that a king ruling in Dantavuram who was a devout worshipper of Siva had once developed bitter hatred towards the Baudhdhas who were living in a large monastery in his city. And acting on the evil advice of his wicked ministers he wanted to drive them out of his capital but having failed in that attempt he planned their destruction secretly. Accordingly one day he invited all the Bauddhas to a grand feast in his palace; and as each guest arrived in he caused him to be forcibly carried away by his men who hid themselves behind the doors, insulted, tortured and finally did away with them quietly. In a short time the news of this cruelty and torture spread in the city like wild fire and the panic stricken Bauddhas cursed the king and his city and fled from the monastery for their lives. When the news of the curse reached the king, he trembled, deserted his capital and fled into the forests, where ----------------------------- 1. Though the facsimile of the Vizagapatam Copper-plate inscription was not published in the Indian Antiquary. I have made myself sure of the reading of the name Dantavuram by looking at the original plates. In the Korni grant the letter da in Dantavuram is very clear. 2. S. I. I., Vol. V, nos. 1076 and 1084. p. 112 he built a new rajadhani on the northern bank or the river Vamsadhara. Since that/time Dantavuram ceased to be the capital and gradually the people, too, deserted it. The curse of the innocent Buddhist monks caused so much affliction to the city, its king and his people, that the city in course of time fell into ruins and was afterwards never again fully repopulated.(1) People of Amudalavalasa and the neighbourhood near Chicacole Road railway station point out to a site which is within two miles from the railway station and where stands to this day a huge earthen wall about a mile in length and a large opening into it in the middle which is said to be the place where stood once the main gateway or the simhadvara into the fort and call the place Dantavuram or Dantavaktrunikota. They however, ignorantly associate the place with the demon-king, Dantavaktra, brother of Sisupala, lord of Chedidesa and the rival of Sri Krsna for the hand of Rukmini. It may not be out of place to discuss here about the identification of Dantapura, the reputed capital of ancient Kalinga. The close similarity between Dantavuram and Dantapura of the Buddhist chronicles induces me to identify Dantavuram with Dantapura. This identification is also corroborated by the writings of the ancient Roman geographer, Pliny who mentions about the Calingoe in his Natural History.(2) According to him the territory of the Calingoe extended as far as the promontory of Calingon and the town of Dandaguda or Dandagula,(3) which is said to be the capital of ancient Kalinga is situated at a distance of 625 Roman Miles or 524 1. Watters:-- Travels of Yuwan Chwang., Vol. II, p. 198. Yuwan Chwang tells us of a similar story in connection with Kalinga when he visited the country in Circa 640 A.D. "This country (Kalinga)," the pilgrim relates, "had once been very densely inhabited; a holy rishi possessing supernatural powers had his hermitage in it; he was once offended by a native and cursed the country; as a consequence of this curse became, and remained utterly unpopulated. In the lapse of many years since that event it had become gradually inhabited again, but it still had only a scanty population ... ..... 2. Hist. Nat.,VI. 21.''Gentes; Calingoe proximo mari supra Mandei, quorum mons Mallus, finisque ejus tractus eat Ganges." 3. Ibid. VI. 23. Philemon Bolland's translation has Dandagula. p. 113 English miles from the mouth of the Ganges. Calingon is said to have been situated at the mouth of a great river which Cunningham takes to be the Godavari on account of the great similarity he finds between Calingon and the great seaport town of Coringa (Tel. Korangi,) which is situated on a projection of land at the mouth of the Godavari.(1) The town of Dandaguda or Dandagula is, according to Cunningham, the Dantapura of the Buddhist Chronicles.(2) And he identifies Dantapura with Rajamahendri (Rajahmahendravaram) on the eastern bank of Godavari which is within forty miles from Coringa to the south west. Pliny seems to suggest that Calingon and Dandaguda were situated very near to each other. And this fact led the late Sir A. Cunningham to assume that Calingon and Dandaguda of Pliny were the same as the well known towns of Coringa and Rajahmahendri, respectively.(3) But this identification seems to be incorrect. Calingon has certainly more similarity to Kalinga or Kalingapatam and likewise Dandaguda to Dantavura, than to any other names known to us. Besides these towns are said to have been situated in Calingoe, a territory which has been long ago identified with Kalinga. We may therefore assume with much probability that Calingon represents the modern town of Kalingapatam as it was said to be on the projection of land at the mouth of a 'large river' which might be taken to be the river Vamsadhara, and Dandaguda, the ancient capital of Kalinga, Dantavura or Dantapura.(4) Perhaps it was this city 1. Cunnningham's Ancient Geography of India, pp. 592-593, Edited by S.N. Mazumdar : 2. Ibid. 3. Ibid. 4. Even today the site on which Dantavuram once said to have stood is not very far from the river Vamsadhara. It might be that at one time the river flowed near the city, three miles in a southwardly direction; for is a well known fact that rivers gradually change their courses. The distance between Dantavuram or Dantapura and Calingon or Kalingapatam which is at the mouth of the river is about sixteen or twenty miles. Calingon and Dandaguda were therefore cities of Kalinga and if Pliny could not give the name of the river Vamsadhara it might be that his informant forgot or omitted its name because it was not probably considered as important a river as the Godavari or the Krishna. p. 114 on the coast that Kalidasa mentioned and king Indravarman described as being "tickled by the bands of waves of the ocean." And now coming back to the tradition, I do not propose to enter into a discussion of its details and also of the facts referred to in the inscriptions of Anantavarman. It is not necessary for our purpose to know which prince lived in Dantavuram and which king changed his capital to Nagara on the banks of the river Vamsadhara. Nor are we concerned about the reasons that prompted the king whoever he might be to shift his residence from Dantavuram to Nagara. There are the facts of the change of the capital and the building of a new rajadhani and the construction of the temple to Madhukesa recorded in the inscriptions of Anantavarman, who must be taken to have mentioned them as very important facts concerning his capital and his ancestors as they were current in his time. And now they are corroborated by the tradition. Further, there stands to this day the temple of Madhukesvara in Nagara which is no other than Mukhalingam itself. And nowhere else in Kalinga there is another temple for Isa under the name of Madhnkesvara. The name of Dantavuram, too, is mentioned in the inscriptions of Mukhalingam. In the light of these facts it is idle to contend any longer that Mukhalingam and Nagarakatakam do not represent the ancient Kalinganagara. There is yet one more piece of evidence that places the identification on unshakeable ground. There is an inscription in the temple of Mukhalingesvara which records a grant to the dancers and musicians of the god Madhukesvara (called Trikalingdeva here) issued from the 'Victorious Kalinganagara' itself, by Anantavarman.(1) The inscription which is not ----------------------------- 1. S.I.I., Vol. V, no.1010. The inscription runs thus:-- p. 115 however, dated, is in Sanskrit prose and engraved in the North Indian Nagari characters on a, pillar to the right of the entrance into the central shrine of Mukhalingesvara. It begins with the usual words, "Svasti! Srimat Kalinganagarat! etc." meaning, "Hail! From the victorious Kalinganagara." Thus when there is a record concerning the dancers and musicians of the temple of Madhukesvara in Kalinganagara, issued from and inscribed in a prominent place in the temple itself, in Kalinganagara, what stronger proof is required to identify Mukhalingam and Nagarakatakam with the ancient Kalinganagara? From an examination of all these facts and by the ruins that lie scattered between the two villages I am inclined to believe that the site covered by the two villages, Nagarakatakam and Mukhalingam represents the ancient Kalinganagara. Of the beautiful palaces of its former kings, buildings and other monumental works that once adorned the grand capital city of Kalinga on account of the munificience and devotion of its noble kings, three temples alone remain to-day recalling even faintly the former glory of the city.(1) Everywhere in the vicinity of these temples and the villages one comes actress within an inch or two of digging the upper layer of the earth massive structures in brick which remind us of the existence formerly of beautiful edifices. Surrounded by these ruins at the present day these three temples of Siva ruined and half-ruined as they are still serve to attest the former magnificience of the ancient city of Kalinganagara. ----------------------------- 1. A temple of Visnu is mentioned in the inscriptions of Mukhalingam. It is said to have stood in the Nagarapu-vadai probably at the other end of the street. See S. II., Vol. V, no. 1049.