Ambika, Bar Raja

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Ambika
Bar Raja
Queen Ambika Devi (cropped).jpg
Ambika, as Bar Raja, depicted in a manuscript c.18th century
Bar Raja
Tenure1732 1738
BornDraupadi
Sivasagar
Died1738
Chinatali, Ahom Kingdom (Present- day Assam, India)
Spouse
Ramnath Solal Gohain
(sep. 1732)

(m. 1732)
Issue 3, including Tipam Raja
Religion Hinduism
Siva Singha and Ambika in a procession, c. 1735. King Siva Singha and Queen Ambika riding in procession.jpg
Siva Singha and Ambika in a procession, c.1735.

Ambika, Bar Raja (born Draupadi; died 1738) was the Chief Consort of Ahom King, Sutanphaa. She became Bar Raja, shortly after the death of her older sister, Phuleshwari. She is known for constructing the Sivasagar Sivadol and the Sivasagar Tank. She was a great patron of learning and education. [1]

Life and marriages

Bar Raja Ambika in the court, on her lap sitting the Tipam Raja Queen Ambika with the heir-apparent.jpg
Bar Raja Ambika in the court, on her lap sitting the Tipam Raja

Ambika was born with the name Draupadi. [1]

Draupadi was married to Ramnath Solal Gohain of the Miri Handikoi family, by whom she had two sons. [1] [2]

Draupadi's elder sister, Phuleshwari, died in 1731. [3] The King, Siva Singha, then forcibly married Draupadi and forced her to separate from her husband. Her two sons from her previous marriage then lived with their father and Draupadi took on the name Ambika. They had a son, Ugra Singha, the Tipam Raja. [4] [5]

Ambika was a great patron of art, at her patronage, the famous manuscript on elephantry Hastividyarnava was commissioned. Bhagavada book VI, and Dharma Purana composed by Kavichandra Dvijya and illustrated by Badha Ligira, are another important works of art at that time. [5]

Ambika died in 1738 at north of Chinatali. [6] The King in 1739 married Akari Gabhuru, daughter of deposed Solal Gohain, of Madurial family, and conferred her the title of Bar Raja, and renamed her as Sarbeswari. [7]

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Mula Gabharu was the daughter of the Ahom king, Supimphaa, and the wife of the Borgohain Frasengmung. She organised women warriors after her husband had fallen in battle against Turbak, an invader sent by the Sultan of Bengal in 1532, and herself fell in the Battle of Kachua. During the battle, women warrior Jayanti, Pamila, Lalita etc. were the companions of Nang Mula.

Phuleswari, also known as Pramateswari Devi, was the chief consort of an Ahom king Siva Singha of Ahom kingdom of what is now Assam who ruled the kingdom from 1722 to 1731 A.D. She was the first queen of Ahom kingdom to govern the kingdom directly. She was originally a dancer in a religious temple dedicated to the Hindu God Shiva. When the king saw her, he was captivated by her beauty and decided to marry her and made her his chief consort. Phuleswari after having assumed the title of Bor Raja, coins were minted on her, alongside her husband.

References

  1. 1 2 3 Gogoi, Padmeswar (1968). The Tai and the Tai Kingdoms: With a Fuller Treatment of the Tai-Ahom Kingdom in the Brahmaputra Valley. Department of Publication, Gauhati University.
  2. Saikia, Sayeeda Yasmin (1992). History at the Crossroads: An Analysis of the Satsari Buranji of Assam. University of Wisconsin--Madison.
  3. Menon, Mady (2020-08-25). NINU: A Saga of the Valorous Wanchos. Notion Press. ISBN   978-1-64919-932-4.
  4. Bhattacharjee, Jayanta Bhusan (1986). Studies in the History of North-east India: Essays in Honour of Professor H.K. Barpujari. North-Eastern Hill University.
  5. 1 2 Gupta, Rajatananda Das (1972). Eastern Indian Manuscript Painting. D. B. Taraporevala Sons.
  6. Digital, A. T. (2021-01-31). "On the pedestal". assamtribune.com. Retrieved 2023-02-03.
  7. ( Gogoi 1968 :513)