This inscription is arguably the oldest written document is the history of Southeast Asia and intriguingly, it starts with what seems to be an outrageous fib.
The inscription is one of seven carved on sacrificial Vedic yupa posts, which strongly resemble menhirs, erected by a King called Raja Rajendra Mulavarman around 400CE. Here the Mahabharat is invoked by the Raja who has made a sacrifice in the Kutei region of Borneo.
Mulavarman compares himself to Yudhistra of the Mahabharat and says he defeated his enemies and made them pay tax. He also claims to have brought many Shaivite Brahmins from India into his kingdom.
The text is written in Sanskrit in the Pallava grantha script developed in Kanchipuram in Tamil Nadu and it records in detail a Vedic fire sacrifice- except what it says sounds most improbable.
As one historian dryly noted: "Mulavarman's claims of having presented his court Brahmins with at least twenty thousand - and perhaps as many as ninety thousand - cattle, in a heavily forested region where indigenous societies have no known history of large-scale cattle herding..
... and are more likely to have used buffalo, pigs, and even chickens as ceremonial gifts and sacrifices), does beggar belief. The other gifts listed seem, on the whole, no more plausible. Ghee for example is not commonly used by Southeast Asians.
"This combination of hyperbole and general implausibility probably indicates that the list of gifts was more symbolic than real."
Its a fascinating inscription because it seems to record the moment the rulers of the region embraced not just Hinduism (+ Brahmins + Vedic sacrifices) but also the written language of the Pallava kingdom of Tamil Nadu, which became the basis for every script in modern SE Asia.
It also proves that these changes came not with the sword, but peacefully with the lure of civilisational & spiritual sophistication, as Mulavarman's grandfather has an indigenous non-Sanskrit name: Kadunga. Indianisation, in other words, has come with conversion not conquest.
Correction! This inscription is the oldest in Indonesia*. The oldest inscription in SE Asia is found at at Vo-Canh on the SE coast of Vietnam. Its script is Old Cham, v similar to the S Indian scripts of the Ikshvaku/Nagarjunakonda kingdom who see to have traded with the Chams.
This is the Vo-Canh inscription, c 200-275 CE
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Prambanan is the 9thC royal temple complex of the Sanjayas of Mataram, situated immediately beneath the acropolis of their palace on the outskirts of modern Yogyakarta.
Its an extraordinary rich and sophisticated group of temples
Despite being overwhelmingly Shaivite in orientation,Prambanan contains one of the very earliest and most perfect representations in stone of the Ramayana, which, perhaps surprisingly, is more complete than any surviving cycle of similar date in India.
Candi Plaosan & Candi Sewu
Two exquisite complexes of mid 9thC Buddhist temples near Yogyakarta.
They were built by Sri Kahulunnan or Pramodhawarardhi, the daughter of Samaratungga, descendant of Sailendra Dynasty, and who was married to Rakai Pikatan of the Hindu Sanjaya dynasty.
The confluence of these two great Javanese dynasties produced these remarkable masterworks.
Borobudur, begun around 825, is the quite simply the largest Buddhist temple in the world. It is decorated with around 500 statues of Lord Buddha, arranged in terraces of decreasing size, as if on the sacred slopes of Mount Meru.
It was built possibly by the Sangramadha Nanjaya Sailendra dynasty of Mataram, Central Java, or maybe “charismatic religious leaders rather than kings.” For surprisingly there is no great temple or palace complex associated with it.
The only inscription associated with Borobudur dates from 842 and is from a woman who gave land to sustain it. For all the mystery, this is the climax of the ninth century golden age of Java, when so many remarkable monuments were built here, both Hindu and Buddhist.
Java’s earliest Hindu temple complex, built between 675 and 725, lies high on the Dieng Plateau, some three hours drive from Borobodur in the Highlands of Central Java.
Here, up amid the sulphur springs and occluded by plumes of sulphurous steam belching out of geysers within the rim of a still active volcano, is the sacred space known as '‘The Place of the Gods.”
The temples are all Shaivite, though on the Trimurti temple, Brahma and Vishnu are also depicted in some of the very earliest Hindu figure sculpture to survive from SE Asia.
Out of quarantine and out into the wild volcanic Highlands of Central Java. The 7thC temples of Gedong Songo are strung up the ridge of an eerie volcano, where plumes of sulphurous steam belch out of the ground and mingle with thick cloudbanks scudding up bamboo slopes.
The temples themselves look sometimes Gupta, sometimes Pallava, with a hint of Kashmir- all topped with curving Chinese-style flying eves- a mixture you'd see nowhere in India and yet are contemporary with the earliest Indian stone mandirs in MP and coastal Tamil Nadu.
The guards, all Muslims, all reported regular night time sightings of Hindu queens and their spirit courts.
I am completely thrilled that our beloved @JaipurLitFest is returning to Jaipur after a spell online due to the pandemic. We are coming back with a truly spectacular line up of literary superstars from across the world
In fiction we have this year’s Booker winner, the great Damon Galgut, his predecessors Monica Ali & DBC Pierre, Pullizer winner Jonathan Franzen and Turkish superstar and Booker shortkisteen @Elif_Safak indianexpress.com/article/books-…
We have Charlotte Higgins talking about Greek Myths, Benjamin Brose on Xuanzang, Rob Macfarlane on nature writing and the underworld, Rupert Everett on Hollywood, Vidya Dehejia on Chola bronzes, Lisa Taddeo on Women & Colin Thubron on the Amur River. zeenews.india.com/india/jaipur-l…