Hindu calendar for the month of June, 1993. List of all Hindu festivals in June, 1993 holidays & daily panchang. Jyaistha and Asadha are the lunar months corresponding to June. Ashadha month 1993 started on June 5.
Hindu calendar for the month of April, 1993. List of all Hindu festivals in April, 1993 holidays & daily panchang. Chaitra and Vaisakha are the lunar months corresponding to April. Vaisakha month 1993 started on April 7.
Hindu calendar for the month of July, 1993. List of all Hindu festivals in July, 1993 holidays & daily panchang. Asadha and Sravana are the lunar months corresponding to July. Sravana month 1993 started on July 4.
Hindu calendar for the month of February, 1993. List of all Hindu festivals in February, 1993 holidays & daily panchang. Magha and Phalguna are the lunar months corresponding to February. Phalguna month 1993 started on February 7.
Hindu calendar for the month of January, 1993. List of all Hindu festivals in January, 1993 holidays & daily panchang. Pausa and Magha are the lunar months corresponding to January. Magha month 1993 started on January 9.
Hindu calendar for the month of November, 1993. List of all Hindu festivals in November, 1993 holidays & daily panchang. Kartika and Agrahayana are the lunar months corresponding to November. Agrahayana month 1993 started on November 30.
Hindu calendar for the month of May, 1993. List of all Hindu festivals in May, 1993 holidays & daily panchang. Vaisakha and Jyaistha are the lunar months corresponding to May. Jyeshta month 1993 started on May 7.
Hindu calendar for the month of October, 1993. List of all Hindu festivals in October, 1993 holidays & daily panchang. Asvina and Kartika are the lunar months corresponding to October. Kartika month 1993 started on October 31.
The history of Odisha begins in the Lower Paleolithic era, as Acheulian tools dating to the period have been discovered in various places in the region.[1] The early history of Odisha can be traced back to writings found in ancient texts like the Mahabharata, Maha Govinda Sutta and some Puranas. The region was also known to other kingdoms in region of East Indies due to maritime trade relations.
In 1568 CE, considered a pivotal point in the region's history, the region was conquered by the armies of the Sultanate of Bengal led by the iconoclast general Kalapahad. The region lost its political identity and the following rulers of the region were more often tributary lords than actual kings. By 1593, Odisha had passed completely to the Mughal Empire and became part of the Bengal Subah. After 1751, the Marathas gained control of the region. During the Maratha administration, literature and poetry flourished. In 1803, the region was passed onto the British Empire, where they divided the region into parts of other provinces. In 1936, the province of Odisha was formed on the basis of populations of Odia-speaking people.
140 million years ago (mya), the peninsular India, including Orissa, was a part of the Gondwana supercontinent. Due to this, some of the oldest rocks in the subcontinent, dating to Precambrian times,[27] are found in Orissa. Some of the rocks, like the Mayurbhanj granite pluton, have been dated to 3.09 billion years ago (Ga).[28] The coal-fields in Mahanadi and Ib river basins are known to be one of the richest sites for fossils in the subcontinent.[29] This has led to the discovery of new species, like the charophytes from the Permian Period, which were found in the Talcher region and the Upper Permian megaspores from the Ib river area.[30]
In the districts of Mayurbhanj, Keonjhar, Sundargarh and Sambalpur, Acheulian tools dating to Lower Paleolithic times have been discovered.[1] The Gudahandi hills in Kalahandi district have rock carvings and paintings dating to Upper Paleolithic.[31] From Kuchai, near Baripada, various Neolithic tools like hoes, chisels, pounders, mace heads, grinding stones and also pieces of pottery.[32][31] Prehistoric paintings and inscriptions have also been found in Garjan Dongar in Sundergarh district, and Ushakothi in Sambalpur district[33] and Vimkramkhol in Jharsuguda district.[34][35] There has been an uncertainty about the inscriptions at Ushakothi and Vimkramkhol regarding whether they are in a proto-Brahmi script.[36] Yogimath near Khariar has cave paintings from the Neolithic.[37][36]
According to some scriptures (Mahabharata and some Puranas), a king Bali, the Vairocana and the son of Sutapa, had no sons. So, he requested the sage, Dirghatamas, to bless him with sons. The sage is said to have begotten five sons through his wife, the queen Sudesna.[2] The princes were named Anga, Vanga, Kalinga, Sumha and Pundra.[3][4] The princes later founded kingdoms named after themselves. The prince Vanga founded Vanga kingdom, in the current day region of Bangladesh and part of West Bengal. The prince Kalinga founded the kingdom of Kalinga, in the current day region of coastal Odisha, including the North Sircars.[5]
The Mahabharata also mentions Kalinga several more times. Srutayudha, the king of Kalinga, son of Varuna and river Parnasa, had joined the Kaurava camp in the Kurukshetra War. He had been given a divine mace by his father on request of his mother, which protected him as long he wielded it. But, Varuna had warned his son, that using it on a non-combatant will cause the death of the wielder himself. In the frenzy of battle, harried by Arjuna's arrows, he made the mistake of launching it at Krishna, Arjuna's charioteer, who was unarmed. The mace bounced off Krishna and killed Srutayudha.[39] The archer who killed Krishna, Jara Savara, and Ekalavya are said to have belonged to the Sabar people of Odisha.[40][41]
In the 6th century sutrakara (chronicler), Baudhayana, mentions Kalinga as not yet being influenced by Vedic traditions.[43] He also warns his people from visiting Kalinga (among other kingdoms), saying one who visits it must perform penance.[44]
Mahapadma Nanda the ruler of Magadha is presumed to have conquered Kalinga during his reign around c. 350 BCE. The Hathigumpha inscriptions mentions the suzerainty of the Nandas in the Kalinga region.[45] The inscriptions also mention irrigation projects undertaken by the Nanda kings in the state during their reign.[46]
The Kalingans had used personnel from the Atavika region, which was in the west of Kalinga, during the war.[47] According to his edicts, Ashoka conquered the coastal region of Kalinga but didn't try to conquer the Atavika region.[49][50] The Mauryans governed the Kalinga region as a province. They used Tosali as the regional capital and judiciary center. A kumara (viceroy) ruled from Tosali, modern-day Dhauli. Samapa, modern-day Jaugada, was another administrative centre.[48] Ashoka erected two edicts in the region, at Jaugada and Dhauli.
In the 1st century BCE, Mahameghavana established the Mahameghavahana dynasty in Kalinga. Kharavela was the third ruler of the dynasty. He reigned in the second half of the 1st century BCE. Most of the information about Kharavela comes from the Hathigumpha inscription in Udayagiri near Bhubaneswar. The inscription also calls the dynasty as Chedi (also spelled Cheti)[46] The inscription records his life from his boyhood to his 13th regnal year.
The record stops at his 13th regnal year. It is presumed that he was succeeded by his son, Kudepasiri.[52][53] The Mahameghavahana dynasty (or a successor Sada dynasty) probably continued to rule over Kalinga and Mahishaka as evident from the inscriptions and coins discovered at Guntupalli and Velpuru, Andhra Pradesh, which mention a series of rulers with the suffix Sada.[54]
Gautamiputra Satakarni is known to have invaded Kalinga during his reign.[55] The Nashik prashasti inscription of Gautamiputra's mother during the reign of Vasisthiputra Pulumavi, located in the Nasik Caves, states that his orders were obeyed by the circle of all kings and calls him the lord of mount Mahendra among a list of other mountains.[56][57]
The Kushan Empire may have reached Kalinga or parts of it during the first three centuries[58] of the common era as evident from coins found at several places in notably in Jaugada, Sisupalgarh and Gurubai in Manikapatana (Puri) among others. More imitation coins are found than real ones. So, the local rulers possibly circulated them in the post-Kushana period. There is coin of one Maharaja Rajadhiraja Dharmadamadhara which has been found in Sisupalgarh. There is a Kushana motif on one side and a human head on the other.[59]
In c. 313 BCE, a princess of Kalinga, Hemamala, is recorded to have fled the kingdom with a tooth of Buddha, a sacred relic, hidden in her hair and presented it to king Sirimeghavanna of Sri Lanka.[61] According to the legend, Khema took a tooth from the pyre of Buddha and later gave in to a king, Brahmadutta. He built a temple at a city called Dantapura. After several generations, during the reign the Guhasiva, the prince of Ujjain came to Dantapura to worhship the relic. He married the daughter of Guhasiva, Hemamala, and was later called Dantakumara (Prince Tooth). When a king attacked Kalinga, Dantakumara and Hemamala fled with the relic to protect it.[62][63]
In post-Samudragupta period, a new dynasty called Matharas arose in south Kalinga, they ruled from Pishtapura but also issued copper grants from Simhapura.[65] Their kingdom was probably spread from Mahanadi to Godavari.[66]
Another dynasty of rulers arose in western Odisha during post-Gupta period, they are called Sharabhapuriya dynasty. Not much is known about this dynasty. Everything known about them, comes from the inscriptions on copper plates and coins. They may or may not have also been known as the Amararyakula dynasty.[67] This dynasty is supposed to have started by one Sarabha, who may have been a feudal chief under the Guptas. They ruled over the modern-day region of Raipur, Bilaspur and Kalahandi.[67] Their rule lasted from c. 499 to about 700 CE.
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