Kadunkon or Kadungon was also the name an earlierPandyaking, mentioned in theSangam literature.

Kadunkon(Tamil: கடுங்கோன்) was aPandyaking who revived the Pandya rule inSouth Indiain the 6th century CE. Along with thePallavakingSimhavishnu,he is credited with ending theKalabhrarule, marking the beginning of a new era in theTamilspeaking region.[1]

Kadunkon
Pandyadhiraja
King of Pandyan Kingdom
Reignc. 590–620 CE
SuccessorMaravarman Avanisulamani
Diedc. 620
IssueMaravarman Avanisulamani
DynastyPandya
ReligionHinduism

Kadunkon's title was "Pandyadhiraja",[2]and his capital wasMadurai.He was succeeded by his sonMaravarman Avanisulamani.[3]

Dates

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Most historians, includingR. C. Majumdar,state the period of Kadunkon rule as 590–620 CE.[4][5][6][7]

Velvikudi Grant

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TheSangam literaturementions theearly Pandya dynasty,which is believed to have gone into obscurity during theKalabhra interregnum.The last known king of this dynasty wasUgrapperuvaludi.[12]

Kadunkon is the next known Pandyan king.[12]Not much information is available about him.[13]Most of the knowledge about him comes from theVelvikudi inscriptionof the Pandya king Parantaka Nedunchadaiyan (also Nedunjadaiyan or Nedunchezhiyan). According to this inscription, Kadunkon defeated several petty chieftains and destroyed "the bright cities of unbending foes".[3][14]It describes him as the one who liberated the Pandya country from the Kalabhras and emerged as a "resplendent sun from the dark clouds of the Kalabhras".[15]His defeat of Kalabhras (who were probablyJainsorBuddhists) was hailed as the triumph ofShaivism.[16]

References

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  1. ^Majumdar, Ramesh Chandra(1987) [1968].Ancient India.Motilal Banarsidass.p. 395.ISBN978-81-208-0436-4.OCLC3756513.
  2. ^Sastri, K A Nilakanta (1964).The Culture and History of the Tamils.K.L. Mukhopadhyay. p. 20.OCLC17907908.
  3. ^abChopra, Pran Nath; T.K. Ravindran; N. Subrahmanian (2003) [1979].History of South India.S. Chand & Company Ltd. p. 79.ISBN81-219-0153-7.OCLC6357526.
  4. ^Sen, Sailendra (2013).A Textbook of Medieval Indian History.Primus Books. p. 45-46.ISBN978-9-38060-734-4.
  5. ^Majumdar, Ramesh Chandra;Achut Dattatraya Pusalker; Asoke Kumar Majumdar (1977).The History and Culture of the Indian People.Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan.p. 267.OCLC59089562.
  6. ^Perera, L. H. Horace; M Ratnasabapathy (1954).Ceylon & Indian history from early times to 1505 A.D.Colombo: W.M.A. Wahid. p. 161.OCLC12935788.
  7. ^Pollock, Sheldon Ivan (2003).Literary Cultures in History: Reconstructions from South Asia.University of California Press.pp.306.ISBN978-0-520-22821-4.OCLC46828947.
  8. ^K. A. Nilakanta Sastri 1929,p. 41.
  9. ^K. A. Nilakanta Sastri 1958,p. 165.
  10. ^Noburu Karashima 2014,pp. 370.
  11. ^Noburu Karashima 2014,pp. 86.
  12. ^abN. Subrahmanian 1994,p. 115.
  13. ^Tripathi, Rama Shankar (1999) [1942].History of Ancient India.Motilal Banarsidass. p. 483.ISBN978-81-208-0018-2.OCLC43890119.
  14. ^Rao Bahadur H. Krishna Sastri, ed. (1983) [1924].Epigraphia Indica Vol. XVII.Archaeological Survey of India.pp. 291–309.
  15. ^Padmaja, T. (2002).Temple of Krishna in South India: History, Art and Traditions in Tamilnadu.Abhinav Publications. p. 44.ISBN978-81-7017-398-4.OCLC52039112.
  16. ^Ramaswamy, Vijaya (1997).Walking Naked: Women, Society, Spirituality in South India.Indian Institute of Advanced Study. p. 69.ISBN978-81-85952-39-0.OCLC37442864.

Bibliography

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