Joymoti Konwari Explained

Joymoti Konwari
Birth Date:Mid 17th-century,
Birth Place:Madurigaon, Sivasagar, Assam
Death Place:Jerenga Pathar, Sivasagar
Spouse:Gadadhar Singha
Children:Lai
Lechai
Parents:Laithepena Borgohain and Chandradaru

Joymoti Konwari was the wife of Ahom prince Gadapani (later Supatphaa). She died at the hands of the royalists under Sulikphaa Loraa Roja without disclosing her exiled husband Gadapani's whereabouts in the Naga Hills, thereby enabling her husband to rise in revolt and assume kingship.

Biography

Joymoti was born in the middle of the 17th-century in Maduri to Laithepena Borgohain and Chandradaru. She was married to Langi Gadapani Konwar, later an Ahom king, Supatphaa, who established the Tungkhungia line of kings.

A few buranjis mention her but not as Joymati but only as a nameless Gadapani’s wife. Most of what is known about her life is obtained from the ballads and folklore popular among the people of Upper Assam and not on actual evidence.

Legacy

Since the early 20th-century literary figures such as Padmanath Gohain Baruah and Lakshminath Bezbaruah transformed the "ordinary story" of Joymati into a "fictional tale" of a female hero's moral victory against the male military might and as a representation of the Ahom glory.

The story of Joymati attained a new fame when it was filmed in 1935 by Jyotiprasad Agarwala.

By 1918, Joymoti came to be seen as a virtuous Hindu women with Kumudeswar Barthakur first bestowing the title of Satiupon Jaymati and publishing Jaymati Kahini (1918) in which she was represented as the embodiment of Hindu female chastity, devoted to her husband and dharma. This depiction of her by Barthakur was an effort to "Indianise" her character away from her Tai roots.

Memorials and monuments

Joysagar Tank

Joymoti and Gadadhar Singha's eldest son Rudra Singha (Sukhrungphaa, 1696–1714) succeeded his father. In honour of the memory of his mother Joymoti, Rudra Singha built the Joysagar Tank in 1697 at Sibsagar. It is believed to be the biggest man-made lake in India,[1] comprising an area covering 318acres of land, including its four banks,[2] out of which 155acres is filled with fresh water. A 2 km-long earthen water pipeline once ran from the tank to the Rangpur Palace (Kareng Ghar), supplying water to the royal palace.

Fakuwa Dol

Rudra Singha also built the Fakuwa Dol in 1703–04, a pyramid-shaped temple constructed before the Rangnath (Shiva) Temple on the banks of the Joysagar Tank. It is said that Rudra Singha, once again to perpetuate the memory of his mother Soti Joymoti, constructed the temple and placed a golden idol of her within it. The circumference of the Dol was about 90feet, and its height from base to top was 30feet. There were eight brick pillars around the temple.

Joymoti Day

Sati Joymoti Divas, commemoration day of Joymoti, is held annually in Assam on 27 March.[3]

Sati Joymoti Award

The State Government of Assam has instituted an annual award in the name of Joymoti, presented to women in recognition of excellence in their chosen fields of work.[4]

Film and theatre

See main article: article, Joymoti (1935 film) and Joymoti (2006 film). Joymoti (1935 film) was the first Assamese language film, directed and produced by Jyoti Prasad Agarwala. In 2006, Manju Borah released another film by the same name. The 19th-century Assamese writer Lakshminath Bezbaruah depicted her life in the drama Joymoti Kuwori.

See also

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Joydol Joysagar Tank . OnlineSivasagar.com . 7 April 2013.
  2. Web site: Sukhaangpha (1923) to Rudra Singha (1714) . The Assam Chronicle . 28 February 2011 . 7 April 2013 . dead . https://archive.today/20130628112128/http://www.assamchronicle.com/node/7 . 28 June 2013 . dmy-all .
  3. Web site: Jaymati . Assaminfo.com . 7 January 2019.
  4. Web site: Assam Govt. to Introduce Award after Ahom Princess Joymoti . Northeast today . 1 February 2012 . 19 April 2012 .