Satyavarman

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Satyavarman
raja-di-raja
King of Champa
Reign770-787
Coronation770
Predecessor
Successor
Born?
Kauthara, Champa
Died787
Kauthara
Names
Śrī Satyadeveśvara
HouseFifth dynasty
Father
Mother?
ReligionHinduism, Buddhism

Jaya Satyavarman (?–787 CE), was the second king of the Fifth dynasty of Champa, modern-day Central Vietnam, reigned from 770 to 787. He was the son of king , founder of a dynasty that centralized around the southern part of Champa.[1]

In 774 and 787, Javanese raiders assaulted Champa, plundered the Po Nagar temple, vandalized and looted the temple's treasures and burned the statue of Siva. Inscription C. 216 describes the "darkness" of invaders' skin complexion.[2] Satyavarman quickly repulsed the invaders and rebuilt the temple.[2]

References[]

  1. ^ ECIC I p. 351, Arlo Griffiths and William A. Southworth, La stèle d’installation de Śrī Satyadeveśvara : une nouvelle inscription du Campā trouvée à Phước Thiện, Journal Asiatique, 295 (2007), 349-381.
  2. ^ a b Golzio 2004, p. 37.

Bibliography[]

  • Golzio, Karl-Heinz (2004), Inscriptions of Campā based on the editions and translations of Abel Bergaigne, Étienne Aymonier, Louis Finot, Édouard Huber and other French scholars and of the work of R. C. Majumdar. Newly presented, with minor corrections of texts and translations, together with calculations of given dates, Shaker Verlag
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