Rakai Pikatan Explained

Rakai Pikatan was a king of the Sanjaya dynasty Mataram Kingdom in Central Java who built the Prambanan temple, dedicated to Shiva, which was completed in 856 AD. Rakai Pikatan was also called Mpu Manuku.

Birth Name:Dyah Saladu
Spouse:Pramodhawardhani
Successor:Rakai Kayuwangi Dyah Lokapala
Issue:Rakai Kayuwangi Dyah Lokapala
Royal House:Sanjaya
Succession:Great King of Mataram
Reign:c. 847 – 856
Predecessor:Samaratungga
Religion:Shivaist Hinduism
Regnal Name:Rakai Pikatan Dyah Saladu
(Wanua Tengah inscription)

Rakai Pikatan Dyah Kamulyan Sang Prabhu Linggeswara Sakabhumandala
(Wangsakerta script)

Rakai Mamrati Sang Jatiningrat
(Wantil inscription)
Sang Prabhu Jatiningrat

The monarch of the Mataram Kingdom before Rakai Pikatan was Samaratungga of the Shailendra Dynasty. He had one son, Balaputra, and one daughter, Pramodhawardhani. Rakai Pikatan and the Sanjaya dynasty were Shivaite Hindus and are recorded in the Wantil Inscription as having married a daughter of another religion. This is most likely Pramodhawardhani, the Mahayana Buddhist daughter of Samaratungga.

It's believed that Pikatan fought his brother-in-law Balaputra, forcing him to move to Srivijaya in 856.[1] Other interpretations based on the Kayumwungan inscription put Balaputra as Pramodhawardhani's uncle rather than her brother as inscriptions only list Pramodhawardhani as a child of Samaratungga. Hence, Balaputra went to Srivijaya not because of force but because he had no claim as a brother of the monarch.

According to the interpretation of Loro Jonggrang legend, Pramodhawardhani's likeness was the model for Durga's image in the Prambanan temple.

References

Notes and References

  1. 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.