Twipra Kingdom
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Twipra Kingdom (known as the Tripura Kingdom in the sanskritized form) was one of the largest ancient Kingdoms of the Tipra people of the Bodo-Kachari ethnicity in the North eastern part of South Asia having a chronicle of 184 Kings till the present times.
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[edit] Geographical spread
The present political areas which were part of the TIPRA Kingdom are :
- Sylhet, Dhaka and Chittagong Divisions of Bangladesh
- Cachar Valley of Assam
- Mizoram and Tripura states of India
The Tipra Kingdom in all its various ages comprised the areas with the borders:
- Khasi Hills in the North
- Manipur Hills in the North-East
- Arakan Hills of Burma in the East
- The Bay of Bengal to the South
- The Brahmaputra river to the West
[edit] Foundation
The TWIPRA Kingdom was founded and ruled by the Tipra people (Todays people with the Debbarman-Debbarma surnames) and also comprised the Jamatia, Riang, Tripura-Noatia, Halam communities of today as subjects.
TWIPRA is short for TWIMA BUPRA in Tipra language which means confluence/meeting place of Rivers,i.e. the confluence of the Brahmaputra river. Tipra is the shorter form of Twipra.
[edit] Before 1st Century B.C.
Scientists have pointed out that the Bodo-Kachari group of people migrated from South China via Tibet to present areas of North-East India and Bangladesh well before the 1st century B.C when Buddhism was formally introduced to China because the Bodo-Kachari people show no trace of Buddhism.
The Bodo-Kachari people gradually settled into the present areas and formed the communities of the Bodo, Kachari, Garo, Tipra, Dimasa, Koch peoples. They formed their respective powerful Kingdoms such as the:
- Kachari Kingdom in Assam
- Koch Kingdom in West Bengal
- Twipra Kingdom in East Bengal
The Bodo-Kachari people basically stayed around the Brahmaputra river (which they called the 'Big River', Dima/Twima) and around its tributaries.
These communities were well-established in these lands long time before the Aryan settlement of Bengal and Assam.
[edit] After 1st century B.C.
The Tipra Kingdom was established around the confluence of the Brahmaputra river (Twima) with the Meghna and Surma rivers in todays Central Bangladesh area. The capital was called Khorongma (Kholongma) and was along the Meghna river in the Sylhet Division of present-day Bangladesh.
The Kings of the Tipra had the title of 'FA' (Pha means 'Father' in Kokborok) justifying the Chinese-Confucian view of a King as a Father of the Country.
[edit] 8th Century A.D. Onwards
In the 8th century A.D. the Kingdom shifted its capital eastwards along the Surma river in Sylhet near present Kailasahar town of North Tripura.
[edit] Religion of the Tipra people
The religion of the Tipra had 14 Gods and Goddesses known as choddha devta (in Bengali) and is still preserved in the Choddha Devta Mandir in Old Agartala, which is maintained by the Tipra priests known as Chontai's, who oversee the festivals of the Kharchi and Ker according to traditions. It was similar to the Chinese folk religions.
[edit] Ratna Fa
Ratna Fa adopted the title Manikya at this time and since then the Kings of Tripura have the Title of Manikya till the death of Bir Bikram Kishore Manikya in 1947 AD.
Ratna Fa shifted the capital to Rangamati on the banks of the river Gumti now in South Tripura.
[edit] Glorious period
A glorious period of the Tipra started where they ruled over their most vast area at this time. Rangamati was renamed Udaipur after Udai Manikya.
Kings such as Govinda Manikya ruled over large areas and confronted and stopped the advance of the Mughal's and other Muslim Kingdoms at this time.
[edit] British Era
Finally after many wars over the centuries with the Muslim Sultans and Mughals the territory of Tipra gradually started diminishing and by the time the British came to rule Bengal in the 18th century Tipra came to include only the Tippera District (present Comilla Division in Bangaldesh) and Hill Tippera District (present Tripura state in India). Sylhet (including Cachar) and Chittagong was lost by then to the British.
[edit] Bir Bikram Kishore Manikya
The last independent and coronated King of Tripura Bir Bikram Kishore Manikya died in 1949, ending the Independence and existence of the once powerful Twipra Kingdom.
[edit] See also
[edit] Refrences
- Tripura Buranji 17th Century Ahom Chronicle.
- Progressive Tripura , 1930
- Rajmala, royal chronicle of Tripura Kings.