Kalinganagara and Excavation at its present site

By Prof. B.C. Bhattacharya, M.A.
Journal of the Bihar and Orissa Research Society
Vol. 14, part III & IV., 1929 pp. 623-634



p. 623 In the last issue of this journal, Mr. B. V, Krishnarao contributed an article entitled "The identification of Kalinganagara" and expressed his unqualified conviction in favour of his new identification, which is, in fact, an old one, attempted long ago by Mr. G.V. Ramamurty in the pages of Epigraphia Indica, Volume IV, 1896-1897. From the present article, reiterating the old views of Mr. Ramamurty, scholars can derive no fresh information of any importance. Before controverting the writer's arguments, let me first summarize the main points, upon which both the old scholar Mr. Ramamurty and the present scholar Mr. Krishnarao have based their identical conclusion. A. Kalinganagara, the old capital of the Kalinga country, is to be identified with the present site of Mukhalingam or the joint site of Mukhalingam and Nagarakatakam, situated on the bank of the Vamsadhara and at a distance of about 30 miles from the sea. This identification has been arrived at by both the writers from the evidence of some dedicatory inscriptions found in the temple of God Madhukesvara. The inscriptions differently refer to a 'Nagara' of Kalinga, which they ask their readers to understand as Kalinganagara. The passages occurring in the inscriptions are: Kalingavani Nagare, Kalinga-Desa- Nagare, Nagare Madhukesvarayam (the word 'Kalinga' omitted). B. The copper-plate inscription of Anantavarman, dated 1040 of an unspecified era, edited by Fleet (1) records the fact that Kamanava II, the nephew of Kamarnava I, had a town named "Nagara," in which he built a lofty temple for an emblem of God Isa in the linga form to which he had given 1. Ind, Ant,, Vol, XVIII, pp. 170, off, p. 624 the name of "Madhukesa" because it was produced by a Madhuka tree. The temple still exists at Mukhalingam. The inscription further informs us that Kamarnava I, the alleged founder of the Ganga dynasty, had for his capital the town named Jantavuram. Mr. Ramamurty gave the following equations on the authority of a Ksetramahatmya:- Jantavuram = Jayantapuram = Madhukesvaram = Mukhalingam. Mr. Krishnarao, however, proves at length the error of this identity and believes that the Jantavuram is a misreading for Dantavuram to be identified with Dantapuram. The word "Nagara" mentioned in the inscriptions of Kamaranava II is to be taken as "Madhu-Kesa" in the opinion of Mr. Ramamurty and as Nagarakatakam in Mr. Krishnarao's opinion. C. Both the scholars undoubtedly affirm that Nagarakatakam means a Royal residence in Nagara and therefore it is to be equated with Kalinganagara, the famous capital of Kalinga. D. The sea-port place Kalingapatam showed to both the scholars no ancient site nor any ruins worth consideration whereas the Mukhalingam site furnished them with old bricks, ruins of temples, carved pillars of some past age. Hence the latter is to be archaeologically judged to be the site of the ancient capital Kalinganagara. E. Mr. Krishnarao quotes from an inscription found in the temple of Mukhalingesvara, which records a grant to the dancers and musicians of the God Madhukesvara issued from Kalinganagara itself by Anantavarman and feels convinced that the form "From Kalinganagara" is to be interpreted as "in Kalinganagara." He writes, "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?" p. 625 Having outlined the principal contents of the papers in question, let us now examine how far the arguments advanced may be regarded as conclusive. Mr. Krishnarao has evidently fallen into an error in his supposition that the place, whence the royal grant had been issued and the place wherein it is found now are one and the same. In all such inscriptions referred to by him, it is definitely stated "Kalinganagarat (i.e. from Kalinganagara) and not Kalinganagare (in Kalinganagara). Therefore such conclusion is absolutely unwarranted and groundless. There can be no objection, however, to his identification of Mukhalingam with Madhukesvara or Madhukalingam. But the passages occurring in the Mukhalingam inscriptions, viz., Kalingavani Nagare, Kalingadesa Nagare can mean in Sanskrit no more than a town in the country of Kalinga or the town named Nagara in the Kalinga country (Desa). If the author of the inscriptions meant to denote Kalinganagara, he would have mentioned it simply as in all other cases and not interposed unmeaningly Avani or Desa in the expressions. Kalinganagara is a proper name and an early recorded name. May we modestly ask the writer if he can show any instance in which such a proper name has been found split up? Further, we meet with, in another instance, the expression Nagare Kalinga Dese, which it has been ridiculous for the writer to transpose and make somehow "Kalinganagara" for the mere sake of argument. We have multiple instances, as will be shown later, where Kalinganagara has been straightway mentioned. As regards the identity of Jantavuram with Jayantapuram of the Ksetramahatmya, I have reason to agree with Mr. Ramamurty. Here, Mr. Krishnarao attacks it and strongly believes that Jantavuram is a misreading. It may or may not be so as we have no means of examining the facsimile of the inscription. At the same time, I may point out that the name Jayantapuram for a town in Kalinga is not purely fanciful. I found the mention of this name in Pali form in the Vessantara Jataka, where it appears as Jayatura. I quote the passage, "In the Jambudvipa of a former age, the principal city of Sivi was P. 626 called Jayatura........... The country of Chetiya and the city of Jayatura became as one. At this time there was a famine in Kalinga, from want of rain.........." (1) This clearly proves the existence of the town Jayatura or Jayantapura in the Buddhist age. It also shows that the country of Chetiya and the city of Jayatura were in Kalinga and were under different rulers. This reference makes clear that the country of Chetiya was ruled by the Chetis, a tribe of the 16 Janapadas, whose identity has been so long a matter of conjecture. (2) There is hardly any doubt, that Kharavela, who calls himself "Cheta raja-vasa-vadhana", (3) was descended from this tribe of Kalinga. Thus, the existence of Jantavura or Jayantapura or Jayapura, another name of Mukhalingam or Madhukesvara can be historically proved. According to the copper-plate inscription of 1040, Kamarnava II had a town named simply Nagara, where he built a temple of Siva under the name Madhukesvara. Mr. Krishnarao is nearly right in holding this Nagara to be identified with Nagarakatakam, a village in the neighbourhood of Mukhalingam. He should have been more right in stating with Mr. Ramamurty that both Nagarakatakam and Mukhalingam were comprised in one area which as a whole bore the proper name Nagara. So far there is no disagreement. But I have every question to raise agains the assumption that this Nagara was ever meant to be Kalinganara, a special name borne by so many authentic records. At least this identity can hardly be authenticated by the same record, where unlike Nagara the famous name Kalinganagara is conspicuous by its omission. As to the proposition marked C, I quite agree that the word Kataka means either a capital or a royal camp. Thus 1. The Vessantara Jataka, quoted in Hardy's "A Mannual of Buddhism," p. 166 off 2. Buddhist India, p. 26. The late Prof. Rhys. Davids repeating the word, " probably " tried in vain to identify the Cetis with one or the other tribe of earlier origin but did not come to any conclusion. 3. J.B.O.R.S., Volume III, part IV, pages 453. The Hathigumpha Inscription, edited by Mr. K.P. Jayaswal. p. 627 Nagarakataka may mean the capital known by the name Nagara but it is not to be mistaken with the Kalinganagar, distinctly mentioned as such in all inscriptions. (1) Thus it can almost be concluded that neither Mukhalingam nor Nagarakatakam ever bore the epithet Kalinganagara to be gathered from any testimony of the Mukhalingam inscriptions. Where is then the present site of Kalinganagara? Let us now turn to some unquestionable documents, both literary and epigraphic, and see what light they throw upon this identification. I may unhesitatingly remark that they are unanimous in locating Kalinganagara on the sea coast, some times by clear mention, sometimes by unmistakable suggestions. The earliest reference to Kalinganagara is to be met with in the famous Hathigumpha Inscription of Emperor Kharavela. Both Mr. Ramamurty and Mr. Krishnarao seem to have lost sight of the valuable internal evidence, which this inscription renders to the identification of Kalinganagara. King Kharavela clearly mentions in his inscription that just after his coronation, in the first year of his reign, he repaired his capital Kalinganagara, of which the gates, city-walls and buildings had been destroyed by storm (Vata-vihata- Gopura-pakara-nivesanam pati-Samkharayati Kalinga-Nagaram).(2) The storm which felled down the strong royal gate, city-walls (i.e., fort-walls) and buildings, must have been a violent one. This undoubtedly proves the metropolitan city being situated on the sea-side as such furious hurricanes are only commonly experienced in seaport towns on the east-coast. I believe, the writers know very well a great hurricane, which blew over Kalingapatam in 1924 and levelled to the ground most of the houses of the locality. I am sure, the village of Mukhalingam situated far from the sea in the interior had never been damaged by any storm of 1. Mr. Krishnarao believes without ground that Kalinganagar has been shortened into Nagar. We have no proof that other capitals of Kalinga like Dantapura, Simhapura had ever been abbreviated into Pura only. 2. Vide Mr. Jayaswal's edition of the Hathigumpha Inscription, J.B.O.R.S Vol III, pt. IV, p.454, and his further readings in the same journal. p. 628 this description. Further the name 'Kharavela' suggests its intimate connection with the sea or ocean. Mr. Jayaswal has rightly interpreted the word "Kharavela" or Ksaravela meaning the 'Ocean,' lit. "one, whose waves are brackish.(1)" The word Vela means 'a coast' and kshara means 'saline.' Indeed the saline coast and the saline water in Kalingapatam are the first thing which strikes a visitor there. (2) It is very strange to notice that Mr. Krishnarao, evidently a Sanskrit scholar, has tried to brush away the evidence of the Raghuvamsa, bearing upon the sea-side capital of the Kalinga king. It is difficult to follow his argument that as the date of Kalidasa is yet uncertain, his references to geographical places should also be regarded as uncertain. What has Kalidasa's date to do with his descriptions? So far as I know that the accuracy of Kalidas's geographical knowledge of India has never been challanged by any other scholar. On the contrary, his references to peoples and places have been vastly utilized by scholars for determining many historical facts. The anterior limit and the posterior limit of his time have been established beyond all possible doubts. He either flourished in the first century B.C. or in the reign of Chandragupta II or his successor, i e., in the fourth or fifth century A.D. In either case, specially in the former, he was nearest in time to Bharavela and was expected to know much of the situation of Kalinganagara.(3) The descriptions of Kalidasa regarding the Kalinga capital cannot be easily misunderstood. In connection of 1. J.B.O.R.S., Vol III, part IV, p. 434. 2. The environment in most cases influences a man's life. I met a gentlemantlemen in Calingpatam, who eats cocoanuts so excessively that he goes so far as to call himself a Kobrikai or cocoanut itself. Curiously enough I find in Buddhist litt. the name of a king Narikera of Kalinga. Presumably, the name was derived from Nalikela (cccoanut) so common on the east coast. See "Manual of Buddhism," p.55. 3. In the time of Samudragupta, the king of Kaling was Damana, whose capital was at Erandpalla identified with Erandol near Chicacole. Thus, Kalidasa's descriptions of Kalinga capital applies more to Kharavela's Kalinganagar than to Erandapalla far from the sea. p. 629 Indumati's Svayamvara, Sunanda, her companion, took the royal princes to the king of Kalinga, named Hemangada and described him as the ruler of a kingdom of which the Mahendra Hill and the sea were the two natural boundaries. The place is described as being just on the sea-beach. "......The sea itself, the waves of which are seen from the windows of his palace, and the deep resounding roars of which surpass the sound of the watch-drum being close at hand, awakes him as it were, when slept in his palace-room. Sport, O Princess, with this king on the sea-shore, where the palm-trees grove make a rustling noise." (1) This is a clear proof of the sea-side capital of the king of Kalinga as Kalidasa knew of it. If If were a solitary instance in this respect, we would have ignored it. But all the references to the Kalinga capital as found in different Sanskrit books speak the same thing, i.e., the situation of the capital on the sea and therefore, emphatically confirm the correctness of Kalidasa's description. We read in the Dasakumara-Carita, (the Kalinga capital has been mentioned as Kalinganagara. Mention is made of the Kalinga-Raja named Karddana, as amusing himself with his friends and family in a sportive party on the sea-beach(2). The reference to Kalinga in the Mahabharata is equally illuminating. Arjuna entering the Kalinga-gate (Kalinga- Rastra-Dvara) came to the sea-side. Thence, returning, he went to the Mahendra Hill.(3) 1. Raghuva msa, Canto VI, verses 56, 57. p. 630 The proximity of Kalingon or Kalinganagara to the sea is also referred to by the description of Pliny and thus identity of Kalinganagara with the Kalingapatam can once more be established: We read in Pliny: "To the south, the territory of the Calinga extended as far as the promontory of Calingon and the town Dandagula which is said to be 625 Roman miles (or 524 British miles) from the mouth of the Ganges."(4) Measuring the distance in a map from the mouth of the Ganges to Kalingapatam, I found that Kalingapatam truly answers to the distance given by Pliny. Strangely enough, Mr. Krishnarao, who seeks the site of Kalinganagara elsewhere gives his doubtless conclusion on the same point. His words may be quoted here: "Calingon has certainly more similarity to Kalingon or Kalingapatam and likewise Dandaguta to Dandabura than to any other names known to us ........... 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. Thus it is easy to see that Kalidasa never, by a stretch of his poetic imagination, brought the sea nearer the city than it really was, Dasakumara, VII. 3. The Mahabhakata, Ad i Parvan, Ch. 215. 4. Cunningham's "Ancient Geography of India." Edited by Prof. S. Majumdar, p.592, older edition pp. 515, 549, p. 631 (Krishnarao) but very correctly located the capital, the existence of which has been so strikingly vouched for by the account of the classical writer Pliny. Let us now turn from literature to the description of the capital Kalinganagara as unanimously afforded by the copperplate inscriptions of the Gangeya Kings. We read in the Achyutapuram grant of Indravarman (Raja-Simha, 7th century A.D.) (1) the Chicacole plates of Devendravarman,(2) the Parlakemdi grant of Indravarman, (3) the Parlakemidi plates of the time of Vajrahasta (4) the Alamanda plates of Ananta-arman, (5) the Vizagapatam copper-plate grant of Devendra arman, (6) the victorious Kalinga-nagara (the issuing place of the charter) is regularly described as Sarvartu-ramaniya or Sarvarthu-Sukha-ramaniya, i.e., pleasant in all seasons. This passage is of importance as emphatically calling our attention to the pleasant and temperate climate of the capital as held by the Gangeya Kings. What other place except Kalingapatam, by its name and moderate climate can satisfy this condition? Mukhalingam being Kalinganagara of these grants is out of the question, as such pleasantness of climate is unfortunately denied to the whole area of Parlakemidi which suffers from 1. Edited by Hultzsch, Epi. Indi., Vol. III, pp. 127. 2. Ibid "Om, Hail! From the victorious city of Kalinga, which is pleasant on account of the simultaneous existence of the comforts of all seasons." 3. Edited by Fleet, Indian Antiquary, XVI, pp. 131: According to Fleet, Hultzsch, Keilhorn and Sewell, "The Kalinganagar that is mentioned in lines 1--10, is the modern Kalingapatam, a well-known town in the Ganjam District, at the mouth of the Vamsadhara river about, 16 miles north of Chicacole.'' 4. Edited by Keilhorn, Epi. Ind., III, p. 220. He translates the repeated passage "Kalinganagar which is charming with delights of all seasons." 5. Edited by Fleet, Ind. Ant., Vol. XVIII, p. 143. p. 633 the sultry heat of the summer, tedious rains of the rainy season and the comparative rigour of the winter. Further, the Chicacole grant of Indra-Varman, dated the 146th year, puts the Identification beyond all chances of mis-conceptions. It reads "Svasti! Jaladhi-Jula-taranga-Kara-Pallavangita-Sakala-Kalinga vanitala-t i l a k a m a n a t Vijaya Kalinganagarat "meaning 'Hail! From the victorious city of Kaling- anagara, which is the ornament of all the land Kalinga, which is embraced by the fingers of waves of the water of the ocean.' (1) Against the identification of Kalingapatam as the ancient site, Mr. Krishnarao has raised two groundless doubts. He means to say that 'Pattana' cannot mean a 'city' or 'capital' and is without exception associated with seaport towns, such as, Nagapattana, Visakhapattana, Masulipattana, etc. Such view is untenable. I should immediately cite the case of Seringapatam, (2) which is not a seaport town. Again he finds not a single town, the name of which ends with the appellation nagara. We have innumerable instances to quote that the names of the sea-side towns and with the terminations of puram, which is equivalent to the word Nagara, i.e., Gopalpur, Puri, Laichanpur, Chandpur, Narasapur, and so on. In Sanskrit the words Nagara, Pattana, and Pura are synonymous. No Sanskrit dictionary nor a book of literature can say anything on this point to the contrary. According to some authorities, however, a nagara means a large town in the midst of 800 villages and a pattana is a place, where a king with his retinue resides.(3) This explanation adds a special support 1. The Ganga grant of Indravarman (146th year). Edited by Fleet, Ind. Ant, Vol. XIII, p. 143. 2. Other cases of pattana having no connection with sea are Patana (Anhalwarapattan in N. Baroda). Mungipattana, 28 miles S.-W. of Aurangabad, it was the capital of Salivahana. 3. Bhrataa, quoted in Sabda-Kalpadruma. p. 633 to my points namely, that Kalingapattana was the site of a royal city. In Kalingapatam, there is a village which bears the singnificant name 'Kalingapatam' and it is there that the old sites were first explored by me. While treating the question of the identification of Kalinganagara, it has been rather rash on the part of Mr. Krishnarao to remark point blank that 'Kalingapatam has no traces of antiquity,' Evidently, he never visited Kalingapatam in search of its antiquities and ancient cites, even if he did in vain, he never consulted the official reports, which would have altered his opinion. Sewell listing the antiquities of the Madras Presidency wrote, "Calingapatam--Seaport at the mouth of the Vamsadhara river......In a thatched shed, in a field are five stone-images worshipped by Sivites, reputed to be of great age .....A mound near the present town are plainly the site of the ancient city and small gold coins are sometimes found there. Specimens have been sent but I am unable to identify them.''(1) Last summer, while in Calingapatam, I had the same mound excavated for the first time and the result brought to light the remains of a buried city. This place is locally known Kota-Dibba which means 'a mound of a fort.' The other old mound I explored by trial excavations is called Jagati metta and it proved to be an elevated basement for hot-air baths as described in Buddhist books. Both these sites have been locally regarded as very ancient, the former extending over many acres of land with an elevated surface, has lain fallow for many centuries. No plantation or cultivation has ever been attempted on the ground. Every year after the rains ancient gold-coins are found by the villagers of the village called Calingapatam. I had occasion of examining three or four of such coins and I found, they bore clear letters of early Gupta or Kushan script. In last June, I continued an excavation there for about a month 1. List of the Antiquarian remains in the Presidency of Madras (Arch. Sur. of Southern India), by R. Sewell, Vol. I, p.7 cf., the Imperial Gazetteer of India Vol. VII (second edition), p. 330, "after rain, a mound which covers the site of the old city gives up small gold coins of great age." p. 634 and found from the different layers of the trial trenches dug by us, ancient pottery, glazed tiles. porcelain pieces and long lines of walls made of Mauryan bricks with large dimensions. All these finds and the general outlook of the excavated sites prove beyond doubt the existence of a capital or fortified city over many ages probably from the time of Kharavela down to the time of the Gangeya Kings.