Haripuñjaya Explained

Native Name:
Conventional Long Name:Haripuñjaya/Hariphunchai
Common Name:Haribhuñjaya, Hariphunchai, Haripunjaya
Era:Post-classical
Event Start:Legendary founding of Haripuñjaya by Suthep
Date Start:629
Event End:Besieged and captured by Ngoenyang
Date End:1281
Life Span:629–1281
Event1:More probable founding of Haripuñjaya
Date Event1:750
P1:Dvaravati
P2:Lavo KingdomLopburi
S1:Ngoenyang
Image Map Caption:Mainland Southeast Asia in 1100 CE
Capital:Haripuñjaya (Lamphun)
Common Languages:Mon, Pali, Lawa, Northern Thai
Religion:Buddhism (Theravada, Mahayana)
Government Type:Mandala kingdom
Leader1:Camadevi (Jamadevi)
Year Leader1:662-669, or 662-679, or 659-688
Leader2:Yip (Yi Ba)
Year Leader2:c. 1281
Title Leader:Monarch

Haripuñjaya[1] [2] [3] (Central and Northern Thai: Thai: หริภุญชัย, also spelled Haribhuñjaya) was a Mon kingdom in what is now Northern Thailand, existing from the 7th or 8th to 13th century CE. Its capital was at Lamphun, which at the time was also called Haripuñjaya.[4] In 1292 the city was besieged and captured by Mangrai of the Tai kingdom of Lan Na.[4]

Founding

According to the Camadevivamsa and "Jinakalamali" chronicles, the city was founded by a hermit named Suthep in 629 AD, and the Mon ruler of Lavo Kingdom (present-day Lopburi) sent his daughter Jamadevi to become its first queen. However, this date is now considered as too early, and the actual beginning is placed at around 750 AD. At that time, most of what is now central Thailand was under the rule of various Mon city states, known collectively as the Dvaravati kingdom. Queen Jamadevi gave birth to twins, the older succeeding her as the ruler of Lamphun, and the younger becoming ruler of neighboring Lampang.

Flourishing and downfall

The kingdom under King Adityaraja, came into conflict with the Khmers in the twelfth century. Lamphun inscriptions from 1213, 1218, and 1219, mention King Sabbadhisiddhi endowing Buddhist monuments.[4]

The chronicles say that the Khmer unsuccessfully besieged Haripuñjaya several times during the 11th century. It is not clear if the chronicles describe actual or legendary events, but the other Dvaravati Mon kingdoms did in fact fall to the Khmers at this time. The early 13th century was a golden time for Haripuñjaya, as the chronicles talk only about religious activities or constructing buildings, not about wars. Nevertheless, Haripuñjaya was besieged in 1292 by the Tai Yuan king Mangrai, who incorporated it into his Lan Na ("One Million Rice Fields") kingdom. The plan set up by Mangrai to overpower Haripuñjaya began by dispatching Ai Fa (Thai: อ้ายฟ้า) on an espionage mission to create chaos in Haripuñjaya. Ai Fa managed to spread discontent among the population, which weakened Haripuñjaya and made it possible for Mangrai to take the kingdom over.[5] [6] [7] [8] Phraya Yi Ba, the last king of Haripuñjaya, was forced to flee south to Lampang.[4]

List of rulers

Names of monarchs of the Haripuñjaya kingdom according to Tamnan Hariphunchai (History of Kingdom of Haripuñjaya):

  1. Camadevi (662-669)
  2. Hanayos (669-749)
  3. Kumanjaraj (749-789)
  4. Rudantra (789-816)
  5. Sonamanjusaka (816-846)
  6. Samsara (846-856)
  7. Padumaraj (856-886)
  8. Kusadeva (886-894)
  9. Nokaraj
  10. Dasaraj
  11. Gutta
  12. Sera
  13. Yuvaraj
  14. Brahmtarayo
  15. Muksa
  16. Traphaka
  17. Uchitajakraphad, King of Lavo
  18. Kampol
  19. Jakaphadiraj, King of Atikuyaburi
  20. Vasudev
  21. Yeyyala
  22. Maharaj, King of Lampang
  23. Sela
  24. Kanjana
  25. Chilanka
  26. Phunthula
  27. Ditta
    1. Chettharaj Jeyakaraj
  28. Phatijjaraj
  29. Thamikaraj
  30. Ratharaj
  31. Saphasith
  32. Chettharaj
  33. Jeyakaraj
  34. Datvanyaraj
  35. Ganga
  36. Siribun
  37. Uthen
  38. Phanton
  39. Atana
  40. Havam
  41. Trangal (1195-1196)
  42. Yotta (1196-1270)
  43. Yip (1270-1292)

References

Notes and References

  1. Book: Robert L. Brown . The Dvāravatī Wheels of the Law and the Indianization of South East Asia . Brill . 1996.
  2. Book: Donald K. Swearer . Sommai Premchit . The Legend of Queen Cāma: Bodhiraṃsi's Cāmadevīvaṃsa, a Translation and Commentary . State University of New York Press . 1998.
  3. Book: David K. Wyatt . Thailand: A Short History . 2nd . Silkworm Press . 2004 . 15, 21, 24–26, 34–37.
  4. Book: Coedès, George. George Coedès

    . George Coedès. Walter F. Vella. trans.Susan Brown Cowing. The Indianized States of Southeast Asia. 1968. University of Hawaii Press. 978-0-8248-0368-1.

  5. Web site: Chiang Mai : Nop Buri Si Nakhon Ping. Ministry of Education. 1 January 2002. 26 February 2021.
  6. Web site: The Chiang Mai Chronicle / Summary . 26 February 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210930030204/http://eagle.orgfree.com/Outdoors/6825/archive/cc.html . 30 September 2021 . dead.
  7. Book: Janos Jany. 288. Legal Traditions in Asia: History, Concepts and Laws. 8 April 2020. Springer . 9783030437282. 26 February 2021.
  8. Web site: Lanna. 26 February 2021.