Ita Fort Explained

Ita Fort
Partof:Arunachal Pradesh
Location:Itanagar, Arunachal Pradesh, India
Map Type:India Arunachal Pradesh
Map Size:280
Pushpin Map:India Arunachal Pradesh#India
Pushpin Map Caption:Location of Ita fort in Arunachal Pradesh, India
Pushpin Label Position:left
Coordinates:27.092°N 93.632°W
Built:11th - 14th century
Builder:Sutiya kingdom
Materials:Bricks, Granite, and Lime mortar
Condition:Ruins
Controlledby:Government of Arunachal Pradesh

Ita Fort in Itanagar town is an important historical sites in the state of Arunachal Pradesh, India. The name literally means "Fort of Bricks" (brick being called "Ita" in the Assamese language). It also lends its name to the city Itanagar, the capital of Arunachal Pradesh. The Ita Fort at Arunachal Pradesh is generally assumed to be built by the Sutiya kings in the 14th or the 15th centu.[1] The fort has an irregular shape, built mainly with bricks dating back to the 14th - 15th century. The total brickwork is of 16,200 cubic metre lengths which was probably built by kings of the Sutiya kingdom which ruled the region during that time. The fort has three different entrances at three different sides, which are the western, the eastern and the southern side[2] (similar to the walls of Tamreswari Temple and Rukmini Nagar).

Archaeological finds from the site are on displayed at the Jawaharlal Nehru Museum, Itanagar.

History

The bricks used in the fort hint to later repairs in the 14th-15th century. The ruins of a hill fort on the banks of the Buroi river bear the same builder's marks as the ones found in the ruins of the Tamreswari Temple near Sadiya, which might indicate that the Sutiya fortifications were spread till Biswanath.[3] The location of Ita fort well to the east of Buroi shows that the Ita fort was also one of the Sutiya hill forts.

In the year 1941, the political officer of former Balipara frontier tract, Mr. D.N. Das, in an article published in the Journal of Assam Research Society, claimed the fort to be the capital of Ramachandra/Mayamatta Mayapur. But, from the assamese chronicle Adi Charita[4] (which is itself dubious[5]), it is known that Ramachandra had his capital in Pratappura, due to which, he was known as Pratappuriya. Pratappura has been identified to be located near Biswanath.[6] The Pratapgarh ruins may have formed the eastern borders of the kingdom as evident from the Uma-tumani island (near Biswanath) stone inscription which mentions the ruler as Pratapuradhikari.[7] Further, it is also known that Ramachandra/Pratapuriya's son Arimatta or Sansanka had his kingdom in present day Kamrup, Darrang and Sonitpur districts with capital at Baidargarh (Betna) and annexed the Kamata kingdom by killing the Kamateswar Phengua.[8] These might point that the Ita fort had nothing to do with Arimatta line of kings.

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Tourism in Arunachal Pradesh . Arunachalpradesh.nic.in . 2012-03-27 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120320144930/http://arunachalpradesh.nic.in/tourism.htm . 2012-03-20 .
  2. "The eastern gate the highest point of the fort is heavily damaged one. Built on stone masonry, this gate overlooks Doimukh in the Dikrong valley"
  3. https://archive.org/stream/EarlyHistoryOfKamarupa/Early-history-of-Kamarupa_djvu.txt Barua, K.L An Early History of Kamrupa 1933, p. 271.
  4. "It is supposed to have been written in 1586 saka (1664 AD)"
  5. [Maheswar Neog]
  6. https://archive.org/details/JournalOfTheAsiaticSocietyOfBengalVolIv1835/page/n237/mode/1up?q=Jitari Journal of Asiatic Society of Bengal, p.190-191, Pratappura, capital city of Ramachandra was located near Biswanath, in the vicinity of Agnigarh.
  7. http://dspace.nehu.ac.in/bitstream/1/9357/1/A%20new%20reading%20(N%20Gogoi).pdf The Uma-tumani Rock inscription has the word Pratapapuradhikari indicating Pratappura to be located nearby.
  8. https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.45465/page/n38/mode/1up?q=Arimatta Gait, Edward, A History of Assam, p.18