PALLAVAS
Introduction to Pallavas Chalukyas etc. The
history of the region south of the Vindhyas between 300 and 750 A.D.
constitutes a water-shed. After the collapse of the Satavahanas, Ikshvakus rose
to power in the Krishna-Guntur region. They were supplanted by the pallavas. In
northern Maharashtra and Vidharba the Satavahanas were succeeded by the
Vakatakas. They in turn, were followed by the Chalukyas of Badami. After two
centuries they were overthrown by their feudatories, the Rashtrakutas in 757
A.D.
During the period review, the region south of
the Vindhyas witnessed the march of Brahmanism. In early stages, extensive
Buddhist monuments came into existence. A little later Jainism came to prevail
in Karnataka. And the peninsula, as a whole saw the emergence of a stone temple
for Shiva and Vishnu in Tamilnadu under the Pallavas, and in Karnataka under
the chalukyas of Badami. In a way, south India ceased to be the land of
megaliths inearly 4th century A.D.
Along with religion, the language of the rulers
and the literate class witnessed a transformation. From about 400 A.D. Sanskrit
became the official language of the peninsula.
The history of the pallavas illustrate three
characteristics the L.C.Ms. of Indian history till the 17th century: wars with
neighbouring States, controversial neature of historical material, and royal
patronage of literature and arts.
ORIGIN
Very little reliable information on the origin
of the Pallavas is available. They appear to have intruded into the south.
Katyayana (fourth century B.C.) mentions the Pandyas and the Cholas, but not
the Pallavas, Ashoka (third century B.C.) refers to the Cholas, the Pandyas and
Keralas, but not the Pallavas.
The Pallavas were a branch of the Pahleves of
Parthians is the opinion of some scholars, like father Heras; but there is no
positive evidence for the Phalava migration into the south.
That Pallavas were an indigenous dynasty which
rose to power after the dismemberment of the Andhra empire, is another thesis.
Probably their leaders gathered around them selves the Kurumbas, the Moravars,
the killers and other predatory tribes in order to form one great community.
According to srinivas Aiyangar, the Pallavas belonged to the anciert Naga
people who them selves were composed of a primitive Negri, an element of
Australisian and the later mixed race. To start with they lived in the
Tondaimandalam districts around Madras. Later, they conquered Tanjore and
Trichinopoly districts. The Pallavas recruited their troops from the martial
tribute of pallis of Kurumbas. The Pallavas were the hereditary enemies of
Tamil Kings. Even now the term palava means a rogue in Tamil language; and a
section of the Pallavas who settled in the Chola and pandya countries came to
be known as kallar or thieves. All these people doubtless belong to a Naga
race.
The third is that the Pallava dynasty emerged
and owed its origin to a Chola prince and the Naga princess of Manipallavam an
is land near Ceylon. According to this theory, the son born out of the wedlock
was made the king of Tondaimandalam by his father, and the dynasty was so named
after his mother's home land. Dr. Krishnaswamy Aiyangar argues that the
Pallavas are mentioned as Tondaiyar in the literature of the Sangam era and
that they were descended from the Naga chieftains but owed allegiance to the
Satavahana kings. But this theory, too, is doubtful because of their continual
fight with the cholas and their striking northern character as compared to the
Cholas.
Dr. K.P.Jayaswal argues that the pallavas were
a branch of the Brahmin dynasty of the Vekatakas. Except for their early
copperplate charters which are in Prakrit. All the other epigraphich records
are in Sanskrit. Hiuen-Tsang says that their language and literature differed
very slightly from that of northern India. The Talagunda inscription, however.
States that the Pallavas were Kshatriyas.
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