Mukunda Manikya
Mukunda Manikya | |
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Maharaja of Tripura | |
Reign | 1729–1739 |
Predecessor | Dharma Manikya II |
Successor | Joy Manikya II |
Born | Chandramani Thakur |
Died | 1739 |
Wives[1] |
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issue[1] |
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House | Manikya dynasty |
Father | Rama Manikya |
Religion | Hinduism |
Kingdom of Tripura | |||
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Part of History of Tripura | |||
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Tripura monarchy data | |||
Manikya dynasty (Royal family) | |||
Agartala (Capital of the kingdom) | |||
Ujjayanta Palace (Royal residence) | |||
Neermahal (Royal residence) | |||
Rajmala (Royal chronicle) | |||
Tripura Buranji (Chronicle) | |||
Chaturdasa Devata (Family deities) | |||
Mukunda Manikya (d. 1739) was the Maharaja of Tripura from 1729 to 1739.
Life[]
Originally named Chandramani Thakur, he was the youngest of the four surviving sons of Maharaja Rama Manikya.[2][3] Each of his elder brothers had successively ruled Tripura;[citation needed] under Ratna II's rule, Chandramani had been sent as a hostage to the Mughal viceregal court at Murshidabad, while during the reigns of Mahendra and Dharma II, he was appointed Barathakur and Yuvraj respectively.[4][note 1]
When he succeeded Dharma in 1729, Chandramani assumed the regnal name Mukunda Manikya.[6] He proved to be a pious monarch, donating lands to Brahmins and Kshatriyas.[7] He attempted to maintain cordial relations with the Mughals, sending his son Panch Cowrie Thakur as a hostage[8] and informing on a plot to kill the Mughal Faujdar at Udaipur by his cousin Rudramani.[9]
However, in 1739, he was overthrown by the Mughals due to failing to provide Tripura's annual tribute of five elephants.[10] Udaipur was raided and Mukunda, alongside his sons Bhadramani, and nephew Gangadhar, were arrested. Unable to bear this humiliation, he poisoned himself, with his queen performing sati in his funeral pyre. He was succeeded by Rudramani (afterward known as Joy Manikya II), who was chosen over Mukunda's sons after he drove the Mughals out of Udaipur.[9]
Notes[]
References[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b Sarma, Ramani Mohan (1987). Political History of Tripura. Calcutta: Puthipatra. p. 128.
- ^ Sarma (1987, p. 116)
- ^ Roychoudhury, Nalini Ranjan (1983). Tripura through the ages: a short history of Tripura from the earliest times to 1947 A.D. Sterling. p. 30.
- ^ Sarma (1987, pp. 119, 120, 125)
- ^ Saha, Sudhanshu Bikash (1986). Tribes of Tripura: A Historical Survey. Agartala: Rupali Book House. p. 63.
- ^ Gan-Chaudhuri, Jagadis (1980). Tripura, the land and its people. Leeladevi. p. 31. ISBN 9788121004480.
- ^ DebBarma, Chandramani (2006). Glory of Tripura civilization: history of Tripura with Kok Borok names of the kings. Parul Prakashani. p. 25.
- ^ Sur, Hirendra Kumar (1986). British Relations with the State of Tripura, 1760-1947. Saraswati Book Depot. p. 13.
- ^ Jump up to: a b Sarma (1987, p. 127)
- ^ Chib, Sukhdev Singh (1988). Tripura. Ess Ess Publications. p. 14. ISBN 978-81-7000-039-6.
- Kings of Tripura
- History of Tripura
- Dethroned monarchs
- 1739 deaths
- 18th-century suicides
- Suicides in India