| Nriputungavarman | |
|---|---|
| Pallava King | |
| Reign | c. 869 – c. 880 CE | 
| Predecessor | Nandivarman III | 
| Successor | Aparajitavarman | 
| Spouse | Viramahadevi  Kadavanmadevi  | 
| Dynasty | Pallava | 
| Father | Nandivarman III | 
| Mother | Shankha | 
| Pallava Monarchs (200s–800s CE) | |
|---|---|
| Virakurcha | (??–??) | 
| Vishnugopa I | (??–??) | 
| Vishnugopa II | (??–??) | 
| Simhavarman III | (??–??) | 
| Simhavishnu | (??–??) | 
| Mahendravarman I | 600–630 | 
| Narasimhavarman I | 630–668 | 
| Mahendravarman II | 668–670 | 
| Paramesvaravarman I | 670–695 | 
| Narasimhavarman II | 695–728 | 
| Paramesvaravarman II | 728–731 | 
| Nandivarman II | 731–795 | 
| Dantivarman | 795–846 | 
| Nandivarman III | 846–869 | 
| Nrpatungavarman | 869–880 | 
| Aparajitavarman | 880–897 | 
Nriputungavarman[1][2] (fl. c. 869–880 CE) was a king of the Pallava dynasty. Nriputungavarman was the younger son of Nandivarman III and his wife, the Rashtrakuta princess Shankha.[3] Nrpatungavarman[4] had at least two queens, Viramahadevi[5] and Kadavanmadevi, as both appear in his inscriptions as donors. Under his reign, the rock-cut shrine at Namakkal was sculpt and a Vishnu temple in Ukkal was commissioned for his queen.[6]
A copper plate inscription dating to the eighth year of the reign of Nriputunga Varman was unearthed in Bahour in 1879. The inscription in both Sanskrit and Tamil describes a grant of income from three villages to a seat of learning at Bahour.[7][8]
References
- ↑ "History Of Kongu". 1986.
 - ↑ "The Pallavas – Part 3 – Indian History and Architecture".
 - ↑ Venkayya, V. (1911). "Velurpalaiyam Plates of Nandivarman III". Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland: 521–524. doi:10.1017/S0035869X00041617. JSTOR 25189883.
 - ↑ The Body of God: An Emperor's Palace for Krishna in Eighth-Century Kanchipuram (Oxford University Press, USA ed.). D Dennis Hudson. 2008. ISBN 9780195369229.
 - ↑ Anjali Verma (2018). Women and society in early medieval India : re-interpreting epigraphs. Routledge India. ISBN 978-0429448010.
 - ↑ "Copper Plates".
 - ↑ Chithra Madhavan (19 May 2016). "Bahur, seat of learning". The Hindu. Retrieved 14 January 2020.
 - ↑ Hultzsch, E. (1896). "Two Tamil Inscriptions at Ambur". Epigraphia Indica. IV (23): 180–183. Retrieved 14 January 2020.
 
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.