‘BEST KING RULER OF TAMILNADU’ GREAT KING RAJA RAJA SOZHAN I - GENERAL INFORMATION
'Great king' Raja Raja Sozhan I
King
name : Raja Raja Sozhan I.
Birth
name : Arulmozhivarman.
Year
of birth : 947 CE, Aippasi month, Monday, ‘Sadhayam’
natchathiram).
Year
of death: 1014 CE.
Father’s
name : Sundara Sozhan.
Mother’s
name : Vaanavan Madheviyaar.
Spouse
name : Logama Deviyaar (The queen).
Nationality
:
Indian.
Religion
:
Hindu.
Social
group : King family.
Mother
tongue : Tamil.
Known
languages : No information.
Height
& Weight : No information.
Blood
Group : No information.
Identification
Marks : No information.
Educational
qualification : No information.
Job
details: Sozha king, Sozha dynasty, Thanjavur.
Governing
organization : Sozha dynasty.
Monthly
income : No information.
Native
place : Thirukovilur.
Family
members’ details : 1 elder brother, 1 elder sister, more
than 15 wives, a son and a daughter.
Elder brother name : Adithya II / Adithya
Karikalan.
Elder
sister name : Kundhavai Piraattiyaar / Kundhavai
Naachiyaar.
Other
spouses’ name : Sozha maadeviyaar, abimaanalaiiyaar,
piruthvi magasdevi.
Heirs
:
4.
Son
name : Rajendra sozhan / Rajendra sozhan I.
Daughters’
name : Kundhavai, Madhevadigal & Gangamadevi.
Government
palace address : Sozha government palace, Flyover Road,
Balaganapathy Nagar, Thanjavur sistrict, Pincode - 613007.
Ninaividam
:
Udaiyaalur, Thanjavur district.
Year
of throne ascension : 985 CE.
Reign
duration : 947 - 1014 CE.
Predecceor
:
Uthama Sozhan.
Successor
:
Rajendra Sozhan I.
Started
to bulid the big temple : 1003 CE.
Completed
building the big temple : 1010 CE.
Raja
Raja Sozhan I, born Arulmoli Varman, often described as Rajaraja the Great, was
a Chola emperor (reigned c. 985–1014) chiefly remembered for reinstating the
Chola power and ensuring its supremacy in south India and Indian Ocean.
His
extensive empire included the Pandya country (southern Tamil Nadu), the Chera
country (Malabar Coast and western Tamil Nadu) and northern Sri Lanka. He also
acquired the Lakshadweep and Maldive Islands in the Indian Ocean. Campaigns
against the Western Gangas (southern Karnataka) and Chalukyas extended the
Chola influence as far as the Tungabhadra River. On the eastern coast he
battled with the Chalukyas for the possession of Vengi (the Godavari
districts).
Rajaraja,
an able administrator, also built the great Brihadisvara Temple at the Chola
capital Thanjavur. The temple is regarded as the foremost of all temples in the
medieval south Indian architectural style. During his reign, the texts of the
Tamil poets Appar, Sambandar and Sundarar were collected and edited into one
compilation called Thirumurai. He initiated a massive project of land survey
and assessment in 1000 CE which led to the reorganisation of the country into
individual units known as valanadus. Rajaraja died in 1014 CE and was succeeded
by his son Rajendra Chola I.
Early
life
According
to the Thiruvalangadu copper-plate inscription, Rajaraja's original name was
Arulmoḷi (also transliterated as Arulmozhi) Varman, literally "blessed
tongued". He was born around 947 CE in the Aipassi month, on the day of
Sadhayam star. He was a son of the Chola king Parantaka II (alias Sundara) and
queen Vanavan Mahadevi. He had an elder brother - Aditya II, and an elder
sister - Kundavai.
Rajaraja's
ascension ended a period of rival claims to the throne, following the death of
his grandfather Parantaka I. After Parantaka I, his son Gandaraditya ascended
the throne. When Gandaraditya died, his son Uttama was a minor, so the throne
passed on to Parantaka I's younger son Arinjaya. Arinjaya died soon, and was succeeded
by his son Parantaka II. It was decided that the throne would pass on to Uttama
after Parantaka II: this decision was most probably that of Parantaka II,
although the Thiruvalangadu inscription of Rajaraja's son Rajendra I claims that
it was made by Rajaraja.
Rajaraja's
elder brother died before him, and after the death of Uttama, Rajaraja ascended
the throne in June–July 985. Known as Arumoḷi Varman until this point, he
adopted the name Rajaraja, which literally means "King among Kings". He
also called himself Shivapada Shekhara (IAST: Śivapada Śekhara), literally,
"the one who places his crown at the feet of Shiva".
Military
conquests
Rajaraja
inherited a kingdom whose boundaries were limited to the traditional Chola
territory centred around Thanjavur-Tiruchirappalli region. At the time of his
ascension, the Chola kingdom was relatively small, and was still recovering
from the Rashtrakuta invasions in the preceding years. Rajaraja turned it into
an efficiently-administered empire which possessed a powerful army and a strong
navy. During his reign, the northern kingdom of Vengi became a Chola
protectorate, and the Chola influence on the eastern coast extended as far as
Kalinga in the north.
A
number of regiments are mentioned in the Thanjavur inscriptions. These
regiments were divided into elephant troops, cavalry and infantry and each of
these regiments had its own autonomy and was free to endow benefactions or
build temples.
Initial
campaigns against neighbours
It
is known that Rajaraja celebrated a major victory at Kandalur Salai (south
Kerala) in c. 988 CE. This battle is remembered with the famous phrase
"Kandalur Salai Kalamarutta". The engagement seemed to be an effort
of the Chola navy or a combined effort of the navy and the army. The salai originally
belonged to the Ay chief, a vassal of the Pandya king at Madurai, in the
mid-860s. Involvement of either Chera or Pandya warriors in this battle remain
uncertain. The conquest of Vizhinjam by the general of Rajaraja (mentioned in
the Thiruvalangadu Plates) is sometimes equated with this battle. Rajaraja's
inscriptions start to appear in Kanyakumari district in the 990s and in Trivandrum
district in early 1000s.
According
to Thiruvalangadu Plates, just after killing the "Andhra Bhima",
Rajaraja conquered "the Parasurama kingdom" (c. 1002-03 CE), probably
identical with Kerala. The multiple references to the conquest of
"Kudamalainadu" or "Malainadu" may also be a reference to
the conquest of Kerala (see below, Kudamalainadu is generally identified with
Coorg). Tiruppalanam and Tiruvenkatu (999 and 1000 CE) inscriptions mention the
gift of an idol by king from the booty obtained in Malainadu and the treasures
taken from the Chera king.
The
Senur inscription (1005 CE) of Rajaraja states that he destroyed the Pandya
capital Madurai; conquered the "haughty kings" of Kollam (Venatu),
Kolla-desham (Musika), and Kodungallur (Chera); and that the "kings of the
sea" waited on him. The 1014 CE Thanjavur inscriptions credit him with
victories over the Chera and the Pandya in "Malainadu". Some of these
victories in Malainadu were perhaps won by prince Rajendra Chola for his
father.
After
defeating the Pandyas, Rajaraja adopted the title Pandya Kulashani
("Thunderbolt to the Race of the Pandyas"), and the Pandya country
came to be known as "Rajaraja Mandalam" or "Rajaraja
Pandinadu". While describing the Rajaraja's campaign in trisanku kastha
(the south), the Thiruvalangadu Grant of Rajendra I states that he seized
certain Amarabhujanga. Identification of this prince (Pandya prince?, a general
of the Pandya king?, Kongu Chera prince?) remains unresolved. Kongu Desa
Rajakkal, a chronicle of the Kongu Nadu region, suggests that this general
later shifted his allegiance to Rajaraja, and performed the Chola king's kanakabhisheka
ceremony.
After
consolidating his rule in the south, Rajaraja assumed the title Mummudi Chola
("the Chola who Wears Three Crowns"), a reference to his control over
the three Tamil kingdoms of the Cholas, the Pandyas, and the Cheras.
Conquest
of Sri Lanka
In 993, Rajaraja invaded Sri Lanka, which is called Ila-mandalam in the Chola records. This invasion most probably happened during the reign of Mahinda V of Anuradhapura, who according to the Chulavamsa chronicle, had fled to Rohana (Ruhuna) in south-eastern Sri Lanka because of a military uprising. The Chola army sacked Anuradhapura, and captured the northern half of Sri Lanka. The Cholas established a provincial capital at the military outpost of Polonnaruwa, naming it Jananatha Mangalam after a title of Rajaraja. The Chola official Tali Kumaran erected a Shiva temple called Rajarajeshvara ("Lord of Rajaraja") in the town of Mahatittha (modern Mantota), which was renamed Rajaraja-pura.
Comparing Rajaraja's
campaign to the invasion of Lanka by the legendary hero Rama, the Thiruvalangadu
inscription states:
Rama
built with the aid of monkeys, a causeway across the sea, and then with great
difficulties defeated the king of Lanka by means of sharp edged arrows. But
Rama was excelled by this King whose powerful army crossed the ocean by ships
and burnt up the King of Lanka.
Thiruvalangadu
copper plates
In
1017, Rajaraja's son Rajendra I completed the Chola conquest of Sri Lanka. The
Cholas controlled Sri Lanka until 1070, when Vijayabahu I defeated and expelled
them.
Chalukyan
conflict
In
998 CE, Rajaraja captured the regions of Gangapadi, Nolambapadi and Tadigaipadi
(present day Karnataka). Raja Chola extinguished the Nolambas, who were the
feudatories of Ganga while conquering and annexing Nolambapadi. The conquered
provinces were originally feudatories of the Rashtrakutas. In 973 CE, the
Rashtrakutas were defeated by the Western Chalukyas leading to direct conflict
with Cholas. An inscription of Irivabedanga Satyashraya from Dharwar describes
him as a vassal of the Western Chalukyas and acknowledges the Chola onslaught. In
the same inscription, he accuses Rajendra of having arrived with a force of
955,000 and of having gone on rampage in Donuwara thereby blurring the
moralities of war as laid out in the Dharmasastras. Historians like James
Heitzman and Wolfgang Schenkluhn conclude that this confrontation displayed the
degree of animosity on a personal level between the rulers of the Chola and the
Chalukya kingdoms drawing a parallel between the enmity between the Chalukyas
of Badami and the Pallavas of Kanchi.
By
1004 AD, the Gangavadi province was conquered by Rajaraja. The Changalvas who
ruled over the western part of the Gangavadi province and the Kongalvas who
ruled over Kodagu were turned into vassals. The Chola general Panchavan Maraya
who defeated the Changalvas in the battle of Ponnasoge and distinguished
himself in this affair was rewarded with Arkalgud Yelusuvira-7000 territory and
the title Kshatriyasikhamani. The Kongalvas, for the heroism of Manya, were
rewarded with the estate of Malambi (Coorg) and the title Kshatriyasikhamani. There
were encounters between the Cholas and the Hoysalas, who were vassals of the
Western Chalukyas. An inscription from the Gopalakrishna temple at Narasipur
dated to 1006 records that Rajaraja's general Aprameya killed minister Naganna
and other generals of the Hoysalas. A similar inscription in Channapatna also
describes Rajaraja defeating the Hoysalas. Vengi kingdom was ruled by Jata
Choda Bhima of the Eastern Chalukyas dynasty. Jata Choda Bhima was defeated by
Rajaraja and Saktivarman was placed on the throne of Vengi as a viceroy of the
Chola Dynasty. After the withdrawal of the Chola army, Bhima captured Kanchi in
1001 CE. Rajaraja expelled and killed the Andhra king called Bhima before
re-establishing Saktivarman I on the throne of Vengi again. Rajaraja gave his
daughter Kundavai in marriage to his next viceroy of Vengi Vimaladitya which
brought about the union of the Chola Dynasty and the Eastern Chalukya Kingdom
and which also ensured that the descendants of Rajaraja would rule the Eastern
Chalukya kingdom in the future.
Kalinga
conquest
The
invasion of the kingdom of Kalinga occurred after the conquest of Vengi.
Conquest
of Kudamalainadu/Malainadu
There
are multiple references to the conquest of "Kudamalainadu" or
"Malainadu" and the capture of the fort of "Udagai" by king
Rajaraja (from c. 1000 onwards). The word Kudagumalai-nadu is substituted in
place of Kudamalainadu in some of the inscriptions found in Karnataka and this
region has been generally identified with Coorg (Kudagu).
It
is said that the king conquered Malainadu for the sake of messengers in one day
after crossing 18 mountain passes (Vikrama Chola Ula). Kulottunga Chola Ula
makes reference to Rajaraja cutting off 18 heads and setting fire to Udagai. Kalingathupparani
mentions the institution of Chadaya Nalvizha in Udiyar Mandalam, the capture of
Udagai, and the plunder of several elephants from there.[9] Tiruppalanam
inscription (999 CE) mentions the gift of an idol by king from the booty
obtained in Malainadu.
Naval
expedition
One
of the last conquests of Rajaraja was the naval conquest of the islands of
Maldives ("the Ancient Islands of the Sea Numbering 1200"). The naval
campaign was a demonstration of the Chola naval power in the Indian Ocean.
The
Cholas controlled the area around of Bay of Bengal with Nagapattinam as the
main port. The Chola Navy also had played a major role in the invasion of Sri
Lanka. The success of Rajaraja allowed his son Rajendra Chola to lead the Chola
invasion of Srivijaya, carrying out naval raids in South-East Asia and briefly
occupying Kadaram.
Personal
life
Rajaraja
indulged in a lot of queens some of whom were Dantisakti Vitanki aka
Lokamadevi, Vanavan Madevi aka Thiripuvāna Mādēviyār, Panchavan Madeviyar,
Chola Mahadevi, Trailokya Mahadevi, Lata Mahadevi, Prithvi Mahadevi, Meenavan
Mahadevi, Viranarayani and Villavan Mahadevi. He had at least three daughters.
He had a son Rajendra with Thiripuvāna Mādēviyār. He had his first daughter
Kundavai with Ulaga Madeviyar. Kundavai married Chalukya prince Vimaladithan.
He had two other daughters named Mathevadigal and Ģangamādevi or Arumozhi
Chandramalli. Rajaraja died in 1014 CE in the Tamil month of Maka and was succeeded
by Rajendra Chola I.
Administration
Before
the reign of Rajaraja I, parts of the Chola territory were ruled by hereditary
lords and princes who were in a loose alliance with the Chola rulers.[64]
Rajaraja initiated a project of land survey and assessment in 1000 CE which led
to the reorganization of the empire into units known as valanadus. From the
reign of Rajaraja I until the reign of Vikrama Chola in 1133 CE, the hereditary
lords and local princes were either replaced or turned into dependent officials.[64]
This led to the king exercising a closer control over the different parts of
the empire. Rajaraja strengthened the local self-government and installed a
system of audit and control by which the village assemblies and other public
bodies were held to account while retaining their autonomy. To promote trade,
he sent the first Chola mission to China.
His elder sister
Kundavai assisted him in administration and management of temples.
Officials
Rajendra
Chola I was made a co-regent during the last years of Rajaraja's rule. He was
the supreme commander of the northern and north-western dominions. During the
reign of Raja Chola, there was an expansion of the administrative structure
leading to the increase in the number of offices and officials in the Chola
records than during earlier periods. Villavan Muvendavelan, one of the top
officials of Rajaraja figures in many of his inscriptions. The other names of
officials found in the inscriptions are the Bana prince Narasimhavarman, a
general Senapathi Krishnan Raman, the Samanta chief Vallavaraiyan Vandiyadevan,
the revenue official Irayiravan Pallavarayan and Kuruvan Ulagalandan, who
organised the country-wide land surveys.
Religious
policy
Rajaraja
was a follower of Shaivism but he was tolerant towards other faiths and had
several temples for Vishnu constructed and encouraged the construction of the
Buddhist Chudamani Vihara at the request of the Srivijaya king Sri
Maravijayatungavarman. Rajaraja dedicated the proceeds of the revenue from the
village of Anaimangalam towards the upkeep of this Vihara.
Arts
and architecture
Rajaraja
embarked on a mission to recover the hymns after hearing short excerpts of
Thevaram in his court. He sought the help of Nambi Andar Nambi. It is believed
that by divine intervention Nambi found the presence of scripts, in the form of
cadijam leaves half eaten by white ants in a chamber inside the second precinct
in Thillai Nataraja Temple, Chidambaram. The brahmanas (Dikshitars) in the
temple opposed the mission, but Rajaraja intervened by consecrating the images
of the saint-poets through the streets of Chidambaram. Rajaraja thus became to
be known as Tirumurai Kanda Cholan meaning one who saved the Tirumurai. In his
work Nambiyandar Nambi Puranam alias Tirumurai Kanda Puranam, Nambi identifies
his patron as Rasarasamannan-Abhayakula-sekharan, that is king Rajaraja, the best
of the race of Abhaya. Thus far Shiva temples only had images of god forms, but
after the advent of Rajaraja, the images of the Nayanar saints were also placed
inside the temple. Nambi arranged the hymns of three saint poets Sambandar,
Appar and Sundarar as the first seven books, Manickavasagar's Tirukovayar and
Tiruvacakam as the 8th book, the 28 hymns of nine other saints as the 9th book,
the Tirumandiram of Tirumular as the 10th book, 40 hymns by 12 other poets as
the 10th book, Tirutotanar Tiruvanthathi - the sacred anthathi of the labours
of the 63 nayanar saints and added his own hymns as the 11th book. The first
seven books were later called as Tevaram, and the whole Saiva canon, to which
was added, as the 12th book, Sekkizhar's Periya Puranam (1135) is wholly known
as Tirumurai, the holy book. Thus Saiva literature which covers about 600 years
of religious, philosophical and literary development.
Brihadisvara Temple
In
1010 CE, Rajaraja built the Brihadisvara Temple in Thanjavur dedicated to Lord
Shiva. The temple and the capital acted as a center of both religious and
economic activity. It is also known as Periya Kovil, RajaRajeswara Temple and
Rajarajeswaram. It is one of the largest temples in India and is an example of
Dravidian architecture during the Chola period. The temple turned 1000 years
old in 2010.[83] The temple is part of the UNESCO World Heritage Site known as
the "Great Living Chola Temples", with the other two being the
Gangaikonda Cholapuram and Airavatesvara temple.
The
vimanam (temple tower) is 216 ft (66 m) high and is the tallest in the world.
The Kumbam (the apex or the bulbous structure on the top) of the temple is
carved out of a single rock and weighs around 80 tons. There is a big statue of
Nandi (sacred bull), carved out of a single rock measuring about 16 feet long
and 13 feet high at the entrance. The entire temple structure is made out of
granite, the nearest sources of which are about 60 km to the west of temple.
The temple is one of the most visited tourist attractions in Tamil Nadu.
Coins
Before
the reign of Rajaraja the Chola coins had on the obverse the tiger emblem and
the fish and bow emblems of the Pandya and Chera Dynasties and on the reverse
the name of the King. But during the reign of Rajaraja appeared a new type of
coins. The new coins had on the obverse the figure of the standing king and on
the reverse the seated goddess. The coins spread over a great part of South
India and were also copied by the kings of Sri Lanka.
Inscriptions
Due
to Rajaraja's desire to record his military achievements, he recorded the
important events of his life in stones. An inscription in Tamil from Mulbagal
in Karnataka shows his accomplishments as early as the 19th year. An excerpt
from such a Meikeerthi, an inscription recording great accomplishments,
follows:
Hail!
Prosperity! In the 21st year of (the reign of) the illustrious
Ko-Raja-Rajakesarivarman, alias the illustrious Rajaraja-deva, who, -while both
the goddess of fortune and the great goddess of the earth, who had become his
exclusive property, gave him pleasure,-was pleased to destroy the ships at
Kandalur and conquered by his army, which was victorious in great battles,
Vengai-nadu, Ganga-padi, Nulamba-padi, Tadigai-padi, Kudamalai-nadu, Kollam,
Kalingam and Ira-mandalam, which is famed in the eight directions; who,-while
his beauty was increasing, and while he was resplendent (to such an extent)
that he was always worthy to be worshipped,-deprived the Seriyas of their
splendour,-and (in words) in the twenty-first year of Soran Arumori, who
possesses the river Ponni, whose waters are full of waves.
Rajaraja
recorded all the grants made to the Thanjavur temple and his achievements. He
also preserved the records of his predecessors. An inscription of his reign
found at Tirumalavadi records an order of the king to the effect that the
central shrine of the Vaidyanatha temple at the place should be rebuilt and
that, before pulling down the walls, the inscriptions engraved on them should
be copied in a book. The records were subsequently re-engraved on the walls
from the book after the rebuilding was finished.
Another
inscription from Gramardhanathesvara temple in South Arcot district dated in
the seventh year of the king refers to the fifteenth year of his predecessor
that is Uttama Choladeva described therein as the son of Sembiyan-Madeviyar.
In
popular culture
1.Rajaraja Cholan, a
1973 Tamil film starring Sivaji Ganesan.
2.Ponniyin Selvan by
Kalki revolves around the life of Rajaraja, the mysteries surrounding the
assassination of Aditya Karikalan and the subsequent accession of Uttama to the
Chola throne.
3.Nandipurathu Nayagi
by Vembu Vikiraman revolves around the ascension of Uttama Chola to the throne
and Rajaraja's naval expedition.
4.Rajaraja Cholan by
Kathal Ramanathan.
5.Kandalur Vasantha
Kumaran Kathai by Sujatha which deal with the situations leading Rajaraja to
invade Kandalur.
6.Rajakesari and Cherar
Kottai by Gokul Seshadri deal with the Kandalur invasion and its after-effects.
7.Bharat Ek Khoj, a
1988 historical drama in its episodes 22 and 23 portrays Raj Raja Chola.
8.Kaviri Mainthan, a
2007 novel by Anusha Venkatesh.
Historical
movies about Raja Raja Sozhan I and Sozhas
1.Raja Raja Sozhan
(1973), Release date – 31.03.1973, Actor Sivaji Ganesan, Director
A.P.Nagarajan.
2.Mettukkudi (1996),
Release date - 29.08.1996, Actor Karthik, Director Sundar C.
3.Dasavatharam (2008),
Release date - 13.06.2008, Actor Kamal Hasan & Napoleon, Director K.S.Ravikumar.
4.Aayirathil Oruvan (2010), Release date - 14.01.2010, Actors Karthi & Parthipan, Director Selvaraghavan.
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