Ahom kingdom

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Ahom Kingdom
1228–1826[1]
Coat of arms of Ahom kingdom
Coat of arms
Ahom-kingdom-c1826p.png
The Ahom Kingdom, final years.
StatusHistorical sovereign state
CapitalCharaideo
Charagua
Bakata
Garhgaon
Rangpur
Jorhat
Common languages
Religion
Demonym(s)Assamese
GovernmentAristocratic monarchy[2]
Chao Pha, Swargadeo[3] 
• 1228–1268
Sukaphaa
• 1497–1539
Suhungmung
• 1603–1641
Susenghphaa
• 1696–1714
Sukhrungphaa
• 1833–1838
Purandar Singha
History 
• Established by Sukaphaa
1228
1497
1543–68
1615-1682
1769
1817
1826[1]
Population
• 1711[4]
2,880,000
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Kamarupa Kingdom
Konbaung Dynasty
Colonial Assam
Today part ofIndia
Myanmar

The Ahom kingdom (/ˈɑːhɔːm/, 1228–1826)[1] was a late medieval[5] kingdom in the Brahmaputra Valley in Assam. It maintained its sovereignty for nearly 600 years having successfully resisted Mughal expansion in Northeast India. Established by Sukaphaa, a Tai prince from Mong Mao (present-day Yunnan Province, China), it began as a mong in the upper reaches of the Brahmaputra based on wet rice agriculture. It expanded suddenly under Suhungmung in the 16th century[6] and became multi-ethnic in character, casting a profound effect on the political and social life of the entire Brahmaputra valley. The kingdom became weaker with the rise of the Moamoria rebellion, and subsequently fell to repeated Burmese invasions of Assam. With the defeat of the Burmese after the First Anglo-Burmese War and the Treaty of Yandabo in 1826, control of the kingdom passed into East India Company hands.

Though it came to be called the Ahom kingdom in the colonial and subsequent times, it was largely multi-ethnic, with the ethnic Tai-Ahom people constituting less than 10% of the population toward the end.[7] People from different ethnic groups became a part of the Ahom population due to the process known as Ahomisation. The identity of the Ahom people in this kingdom was fluid, with the king controlling who belonged to it and who did not.[8] The Ahoms initially called their kingdom Mong Dun Shun Kham till 1401 (Assamese: xunor-xophura; English: casket of gold), but adopted Assam in later times.[9] The British-controlled province after 1838 and later the Indian state of Assam came to be known by this name. The kingdom maintained close political ties with other Tai-states especially with Mong Kwang (Nara) till the end of its rule in the 19th century.[10]

History

The Ahom kingdom was established in 1228 when Sukaphaa, a Tai prince, entered the Brahmaputra valley having crossed the rugged Patkai mountain range from Mong Mao.[11] During Sukaphaa's journey from his homeland he was supported and joined by other Tai chiefs and common followers[12] totaling about nine thousand persons.[13] His destiny was Upper Assam, earlier the domain of the Kamarupa kingdom but which had since lapsed into retarded conditions,[14] and his intention was not to conquer and raid but to permanently settle in fallow land and practice agriculture.[15] The Tai-shans had with them the basic political structures for state-building, surplus producing technologies such as sedentary wet-rice cultivation and hydrology, a patriarchal social organisation based on chiefs, and a literary form of their language.[16] Whereas the earlier state formations (Kamarupa) borrowed political structures from North India that led to Indo-Aryan domination, the Ahom state formation provided an alternate model built on Southeast Asian political structures, and which provided the space for the development of a distinct political, social and cultural identity.[17] Though Brahminical myth-making was a common feature that all ancient and medieval kingdoms in Assam utilised for legitimacy to various degrees,[18] including the Chutia and Kachari kingdoms, the Ahoms were able to use their alternate Lengdon-based legitimacy to effectively with the indigenous people; but the Tungkhungia kings veered towards Saktism[19] and the persecution of the shudra Mahantas and their laity that began during the reign of Siva Singha ultimately led to the Moamoria rebellion and ultimately the eclipse of the kingdom.[20]

Mong Dun Shun Kham

Sukaphaa (1228–1268) spent a couple of decades moving from place to place establishing colonies and finally settled down in Charaideo in 1253.[21][22] He established the offices of the Dangarias— the Burhagohain (Chao-Frongmung) and the Borgohain (Chao-Thaonmung).[23] In the 1280s, these two offices were given independent regions of control; partly hereditary and partly elected, the king and the two counsellors held each other in check and balance.[23] These institutions of checks and balances thus seeded held fast for six hundred years—in the 18th century John Peter Wade, a British officer, observed these unique institutions and novel system of government.[24] Sukaphaa had instructed that events during his rule be chronicled, a practice sustained by his successors; and there emerged the institution of Buranji writing, a practice of historiography rare in India.[25] In the late medieval era, the Ahom kingdom was known to be a kaghazi raj (a kingdom with records) just as the Mughal Empire was.[26]

At the time of their advent, the Ahoms came with advanced technologies of rice cultivation, and it was their belief that they were divinely ordained to turn fallow land to agriculture and also to absorb stateless and shifting agriculturists to their own ways.[27] The shifting people were called kha and many such kha people were ceremonially adopted into different Ahom clans,[28] a process called Ahomisation. Sukaphaa befriended those among the Morans and Barahi who were amenable to join him and put to the sword those who opposed him,[29] and in due course, many others were incorporated into Ahom clans.[30] The Ahoms were acutely aware of their smaller numbers, and adroitly avoided confrontations with larger groups.[31] The additions via Ahomisation enhanced the Ahom numbers significantly. This process of Ahomization was particularly significant till the 16th century when under Suhungmung, the kingdom made large territorial expansions at the cost of the Chutiya and the Kachari kingdoms.

At this initial stage the kingdom was still not fully sovereign. Sukaphaa sent his word of allegiance and tributes to Mong Mao, a practice that was continued by some of his successors till about the early 14th century when the power of Mong Mao faded to be replaced the power of Mong Kwang, at which point the Ahoms stopped the tributes.[32] The Ahoms began to call their domain Mong Dun Sun Kham ("a country of golden gardens").[33] Though Sukaphaa had avoided the Namdang region mindful of the numerically small Ahom contingent,[34] but his son Suteuphaa made the Kacharis withdraw on their own via a stratagem and the Ahoms expanded into it;[35] but no further expansions of the Ahom domain occurred for the next two hundred years. The Ahom kingdom, for most of its history, had been closed and population movement closely monitored—nevertheless, there were two significant contacts. One was a friendly encounter with Chutia kingdom that turned into a conflict, and the other was a marriage alliance with the Kamata kingdom.[36] At the end of the 14th century, the nascent Ahom polity faced crises of succession, two regicies, and three quick interregnum periods when the kingdom was without a king.[37]

Assam

Sudangphaa Bamuni Konwar (r. 1397–1407), born and raised in a Brahmin household in Habung, was identified as a descendant of a past king and installed on the throne by the Burhaohain and Borgohain.[38] He established Brahmin officers, advisors and communities near the capital and the Brahmin influence, tough negligible, was felt for the first time.[39] A number of rebellions erupted purportedly against this influence and Sudangphaa was able to suppress them and solidify his rule.[40] One of the rebels invited a military expedition from Mong Kwang (called Nara in the Buranjis, the successor state of Mong Mao to which the early Ahom kings used to send tribute) in 1401, but Sudangphaa defeated the expedition with the result that the boundary between the two polities were fixed at Patkai.[41] This event was significant since it moved the Ahom polity from implicit subordination to explicit sovereignty, and this was accompanied by the transition of the name of the polity from Mong-Dun-Sun-Kham to "Assam",[9] a derivative from Shan/Shyam.[42] Sudangphaa established a new capital at Charagua, broke the clan allegiances that held the Ahom polity together earlier replacing it with political authority, and introduced the tradition of the singarigharutha ceremony, the state coronation of the Ahom kings that symbolised royal Ahom soverignity, authority and legitimacy.[43] Sudangphaa brought the Ahom kingdom very close to a full-fledged state.[44]

The next hundred years saw the kingdom mostly suppressing rebellious Naga groups, but a conflict with the Dimasa kingdom in 1490 saw the Ahoms suing for peace, and not strong enough to take them on frontally. The alliance that the Ahom royalty had developed with the Brahmans was progressively strengthening.[45]

Full state and expansion

The Ahom kingdom transitioned into a full state rather dramatically in a short period during the reign of Suhungmung Dihingia Raja (r. 1497–1539).[46] It began first with a consolidation of the militia in 1510,[47] followed by an expansion into the Bhuyan region at Habung in 1512 (probably with the help of the descendants of the Habungia Brahmans settled during Sudangpha's time[48]). The Indo-Aryan Bhuyans were relocated to the capital and absorbed into the lower echelons of the growing state as scribes and warriors.[49] They in turn helped in the elimination of the royalty of the advanced Chutia kingdom in 1523; and that kingdom's nobility, commanders, professional classes, warriors and technologies were absorbed into the Ahom kingdom.[50] It was this formation of the Ahom kingdom that met the aggression from Bengal under Turbak in 1532 and it was able to eliminate the aggressive leadership (with significant loss to itself) and pursue the retreating invaders to the Karatoya river.[51] In 1536, after the series of contacts with the Kachari kingdom, the Ahom rule extended up to the Kolong river in Nagaon;[52] and by the end of Suhungmung's reign, the size of the kingdom had effectively doubled.[53]

These expansions created significant changes in the kingdom—the Assamese speaking Hindu subjects outnumbered the Ahoms themselves;[54] and the absorption of the Chutia kingdom meant a wide range of artisan skills became available to it increasing the scope for division of labour.[55] To provide legitimacy to the rule of the Ahom kings among the new subjects Suhungmung assumed the title Swarganarayana (Swargadeo),[56] though nothing like the Rajputisation process occurred with the Ahoms.[57] The nature of the kings institutional relationship to the ministers changed with the creation of a new position, the Borpatrogohain, named after a Chutia office;[58][59] and the creation of the offices of Sadiyakhowa Gohain (territories acquired from the Chutia kingdom)[60] and the Marangikhowa Gohain (territories acquired from the Kachari kingdom),[52] both of which were reserved for the Borgohain and Burhagohain lineages.[61] The traditional nobles (Chao) now aligned with the Brahmin literati and an expanded ruling class developed.[62] And when the Ahoms under Ton Kham Borgohain[63] pursued the invaders and reached the Karatoya river[64] they began to see themselves as the rightful heir of the erstwhile Kamarupa kingdom.[65]

Mature state

The Ahom kingdom took many features of its mature form under Pratap Singha (r. 1603–1641). The Paik system was reorganized under the professional khel system, replacing the kinship-based phoid system. Under the same king, the offices of the Borphukan, and the Borbarua were established along with other smaller offices. No more major restructuring of the state structure was attempted until the end of the kingdom. In 1616, the Battle of Samdhara was fought with the Mughals in which the Mughals had a disastrous defeat , this battle also marked the beginning of Ahom–Mughal conflicts which lasted the till 1682.

Jayadhwaj Singha in 1657 taking advantage of instability of the Mughals during the (War of succession), crossed Barnadi, the recongnised boundary of the Mughal Kamrup on the east, and advanced towards Guwahati, defeated the faujdar of Guwahati. And became the master of Guwahati. The Mughal faujdar Mir Lutfullah, fled to Dacca, abondaning Kamrup, taking every opportunity Jayadhwaj Singha pushed as far as Sherpur in Mymensingh District of Bangladesh and the northern part of Sylhet, and the latter place was fortified and garrisoned. Arrangements were made to control the newly conquered tracts. The whole of Brahmaputra Valley, from Sadiya on the east to Sherpur on south was brought under the Ahom domains under one sway, this is also the time when the Ahom state attained the greatest territorial expansion. For nearly three years, the Ahoms remained in undisputed possession of the newly conquered tracts. [66]

In 1662, Aurangzeb to bring the lost tracts and to punish the rebels elements in that quarter, launched an invasion under his chief lieutenant Mir Jumla II, in this invasion the Ahoms couldn't resist up well , and the Mughals occupied the capital, Garhgaon. Unable to keep it, and in at the end of the Battle of Saraighat, the Ahoms not only fended off a major Mughal invasion but extended their boundaries west, up to the Manas river. The western border was fixed at Manas river after the Battle of Itakhuli, which remained the same till the annexation by the British.

Following the Battle of Saraighat, the kingdom fell into 10 years of political unrest, where the ministers held more power and influence than the kings themselves. This was first engineered due to a religious dispute. The first minister to hold this influence was Debera Borbarua, succeeded by Atan Burhagohain and then Laluksola Borphukan who even surrendered Guwahati back to the Mughal in his bid to become the king. During this period 7 kings were placed and deposed. The political unrest was put to a pause by Gadadhar Singha, and established the Tungkhungia regime, a sub clan of princes, which ruled till the end of the kingdom.

Tungkhungia regime

Swargadeo Gadadhar Singha (1682-1696) established the Tungkhungia regime in Assam with iron hands in 1682 after suppressing all the internal conflicts and conspiracies, which lasted till the down fall of the kingdom in 1826. Also in 1682 he had defeated the Mughals in the Battle of Itakhuli. Gadadhar Singha had directly came into conflict with the Vaisnava Satras of Assam, who began to exercise immense power over the state and the nobles and started a ruthless persecution of the fake kewalaiya bhakats (fake disciples).

The rule of Tungkhungia Ahom kings was marked by achievements in the Arts and engineering constructions, the Tungkhungia reigme witnessed a relative time of peace and stability till the Moamoria rebellion, also festering internal conflicts that tore the kingdom asunder. According to Guha (1986) Ahom Assam continued to flourish till 1770. The Tungkhungia regime witnessed a relative time of peace till first half of 18th century, where the population increased, trade expanded, Coinage and monetization made headway. New arts and crafts, new crops and even new style of dress were introduced.

Rudra Singha (1696–1714) during his reign the kingdom reached its zenith, he had subjugated the Jayantia and the Kachari kingdoms and, abandoned the policy of isolation and encouraged trade with different parts of the world, he had also planned to organise a confederacy of Hindu rulers to invade Bengal. Rudra Singha was a devout hindu, he had invited Parvatiya Gosain alias Krishnaram Bhattacharya to take his initiation/sharan and promised him to be given take care of Kamakhya Temple, this factor had a great significance in the history of Assam, Rudra Singha had also expressed from his deathbed that all his sons should become kings in order, which was in violation of the law of primogeniture nature of Ahom kingship. He introduced Islamic prayers in the court that his successors continued.[67]

All Ahom kings from Siva Singha to Rajeswar Singha were disciples of Parvatiya Gosain or his relatives, Lakshmi Singha (1769-1780) was refused initiation by Parvatiya Gosain because of his based illegitimacy, so he had taken initiation of new Sakta preist Ramananda Acharyya alias Pahumariya Gosain because of his establishment in Pahumara, Gaurinath Singha had taken initiation from the son of Pahumariya Gosain.[68][69][70] Again from Kamaleswar Singha had reverted to Ekasarana Dharma.

File:Ahom king receiving attendants.jpg
Ahom king Swargadeo royal court.
File:The vassal chiefs Prostration before the Ahom king.jpg
The subsidiary kings prostrating before the Ahom king.
File:Ahom army inside of Royal camp..jpg
Ahom army inside of Royal camp.

His son and successor Siva Singha had dropped his father plan to invade Bengal but he accepted the initiation of Krishnaram Bhattacharya Nyayavagish according to his father's advice and became a orthodox Hindu Sakta. Siva Singha was greatly influenced by the Brahmana priest and astrologers. He installed his chief queens as de-facto rulers because of evil consequences of the evil chatra-bhanga-yoga as predicted by his spiritual guides and astrologers in 1722, his chief queen Phuleshwari was made the de-facto ruler who assumed the title of Bor Raja or the 'chief king' and the name of Pramateswari, after the death of Phuleswari in 1731 there were two more successive Bor Rajas, Ambika and Sarbeshwari till the death of Siva Singha in 1744. Reign of Siva Singha witnessed the golden age and Assamese manuscripts and temple buildings and a time of internal peace, there was no war in his reign expect a Dafla attack in 1717 who rose into revolt and were easily suppressed and subdueded. During his reign three great ponds which got the title of Sagar (ocean), were dug up- Sivasagar Tank, Gaurisagar Tank and the Lakshmisagar Tank, and in the surrounding, temples were constructed. Beside that in Lower Assam numerous temples were erected or reconstructed through Tarun Duara Borphukan by the orders of Siva Singha.

File:Ahom King riding horse..jpg
Ahom king riding horse.

Siva Singha was succeeded by his younger brother Pramatta Singha, his reign was peacefull with no internal conspiracies expect a failed attempt to capture the palace by the Tipam Raja. Pramatta Singha had constructed the famous Rang Ghar with bricks, and had constructed many temples.

File:Ahom king receiving the Vassal kings and chiefs..jpg
Ahom king receiving the Vassal kings and chiefs.

Pramatta Singha was succeeded by his younger brother Rajeswar Singha in 1751. Reign of Rajeswar Singha was also peacefull, Rajeswar Singha was an orthodox Hindu, and witnessed the last days of the Ahom glory and power. In 1762 there was a expedition to Manipur to expel the Burmese out of the Manipuri throne, and a army of 40,000 men was sent under the command of Harnath Senapati Phukan, but was a complete fail even before reaching Manipur, however a second contigent was sent under the Command of Kirti Chandra Borbarua through the route of Raha and the Kachari kingdom. The army which consisted of 10,000 troops proceeded far as the Merap river and recovered the Manipuri throne from the Burmese. Later the Manipuri King Ching-Thang Khomba or Jai Singh send many gifts to the ahom king including his daughter Kuranganayani for mairrage to the king. Rajeswar Singha constructed many temples including the Negheriting Shiva Doul and the administrative buildings of Talatal Ghar and Kareng Ghar, Rajeswar Singha died in 1769 and the throne was passed to Lakshmi Singha through the mechanism of Kirti Chandra Borbarua. Reign of Lakshmi Singha witnessed the first Moamoria rebellion and the subsequent downfall of the Ahom kingdom [71][72] Astabhujdeva the Mayamara Mahanta had made a prediction that a disaster will befall with the accession of Lakshmi Singha[73]

Down fall

The Ahom kingdom by the mid-18th century was indeed an over-burdened hierarchical structure, supported by a weak institutional base and meargre economic surplus. The Paik system which in the 17th century had helped the kingdom to repulse the repeated Mughal invasions, had became extremely outdated.[74] The later phase of the rule was also marked by increasing social conflicts, leading to the Moamoria rebellion were able to capture and maintain power at the capital Rangpur for some years but were finally removed with the help of the British under Captain Welsh. The following repression led to a large depopulation due to emigration as well as execution, but the conflicts were never resolved. A much-weakened kingdom fell to repeated Burmese attacks and finally after the Treaty of Yandabo in 1826, the control of the kingdom passed into British hands.

Ahom economic system

File:Loot and provisions being brought..jpg
Loot and provisions being brought.
Silver rupee of Rudra Singha

The Ahom kingdom was based on the Paik system, a type of corvee labor that is neither feudal nor Asiatic. The first coins were introduced by Jayadhwaj Singha in the 17th century, though the system of personal service under the Paik system persisted. In the 17th century when the Ahom kingdom expanded to include erstwhile Koch and Mughal areas, it came into contact with their revenue systems and adapted accordingly.

Trade

Trade was carried on usually through barter and use of circulation of money was limited. According to Shihabududdin Tailash, currency in the Ahom kingdom consisted of cawries, rupees and gold coins. With the increase of external trade since the reign of Rudra Singha, there was a corresponding increase in the circuation of money. Inscriptions dating from the reign of Siva Singha, gives the price of number of commodities like rice, ghee, oil, pulses, goat, pegion in connection with worship in different temples of the kingdom.[75] This concludes that the barter economey was in the process of being replaced by the money economy, which was the outcome of Assam's developing economic ties both with feudal India and the neigbouring countries of the north east.

Trade with Tibet

Due to trade with Tibet, a coin of Jayadhwaj Singha carries a single Chinese character on each side reading Zang Bao. This had been translated as 'treasury of your honour'. Nicholas Rodhes read the inscription as 'Currency of Tibet', Also these two characters were used by the Chinese in Lhasa between 1792 and 1836 with the meaning 'Tibetan currency. Furthermore, there was a significant contact between China and tibet in the mid-seventeen century, so it is not unlikely that the Assamese would have thought have thought that a Chinese character was an appropriate for Assamese-Tibetan trade coin. This piece evidently was an attempt by Jayadhwaj Singha to facilitate trade with Chinese knowing person coming from the direction of Tibet.[76] Rudra Singha is also said to have established an extensive trade with Tibet and to have encouraged intercourse with other nations although he strictly limited the extent to which foreigners were allowed into the country. Presumably, some of the coins of his reign were struck with the silver earned from these trading activities.[77]

Another point by which we can understand the trade relation of Ahoms with other nations is through the use of Silver coins. It is to be noted that there are no silver mines in the northeast or in the rest of India, so the metal entered as a result of trade.

Extent

In extent the kingdom's length was about 500 miles (800 km) and with an average breadth of (60 miles) 96 km. It roughly corresponded to six districts of the Brahmaputra valley- Undivided Lakhimpur , Undivided Dibrugarh district, Undivided Sivasagar, Undivided Nagaon, Undivided Darrang and Undivided Kamrup . The uttarkul or northern bank was more populated and fertile but the Ahom kings set up their capital at dakhinkul on the south bank because it had more inaccessible strongholds and defensible central places.[78]

Demographics

Population

From 1500 to 1770 A.D., one comes across definite signs of demographic growth in the region. There was terrible depopulation In course of the Moamoria rebellion 1769-1809, when more than half of the population was wiped out. Again, during the Burmese regime, the atrocities committed during (1817-1825) further reduced the population by 1/3. The census of British, after annexation of Ahom kingdom shows, in 1826, only 7 to 8 lalkhs were survived as population.

During the reign of Pratap Singha (1603–41), when the territories of Kamrup was not included in the Ahom territory, the relevant adult Male population in (15-60 age group) could be estimated as 4.2 lakhs and later 6.1 lakhs. The total population during the reign of Pratap Singha were 1,680,000 and 2,440,000 respectively during the time frame of 1615-1620. 1669, the total population fell meanwhile during to lingering the Ahom–Mughal conflicts and a sevre drought of 1665, the total adult population for 1669 could be estimated to 4 lakhs. The total population could be estimated to 1,600,000 in 1669. This population estimates are excluding Kamrup, till this time Ahoms had not yet annexed Kamrup.

In 1711 during the reign of Rudra Singha when Kamrup had already became a Intergal part of Ahom Assam. The militia register in his state revealed that 2,60,000 paiks could be mobilized if the combatants (Kanri) alone were called up, 3,60,000 paiks, if the non-combatants (chamua). With this force, men-ment for non-manual services, too, were also called up to form the army of which consisted 4,00,000 if included the auxiliary force of his vassals. The population during his reign, (1711) is estimated to be 2,880,000.

Ending 1750s the population of the Ahom kingdom upto Manas will be 3,000,000.[79] The population would fall to more than half ending 1805.

Urbanization

However there were towns, but only a small percentage of the population lived in such towns. Some important towns of Ahom time were Rangpur, Garhgoan, Guwahati and, Hajo, etc. The capital city of Rangpur, was found 20 miles in extet and thickly populated in 1794 by Wesh. However, the population never exceeded 10 thousand.[80]

Ahom administration

Ahom king Rudra Singha receiving the kings of the Dimasa and the Jaintia kingdoms in his court.

Swargadeo and Patra Mantris

The Ahom kingdom was ruled by a king, called Swargadeo (Ahom language: Chao-Pha), who had to be a descendant of the first king Sukaphaa. Succession was generally by primogeniture but occasionally the great Gohains (Dangarias) could elect another descendant of Sukaphaa from a different line or even depose an enthroned one.

File:Ahom king on elephant.jpg
Ahom king Swargadeo Siva Singha on his elephant.

Dangarias: Sukaphaa had two great Gohains to aid him in administration: Burhagohain and the Borgohain. In the 1280s, they were given independent territories, they were veritable sovereigns in their given territories called bilat or rajya. The Burhagohain's territory was between Sadiya and Gerelua river in the north bank of the Brahmaputra river and the Borgohain's territory was to the west up to the Burai river.[81] They were given total command over the paiks that they controlled. These positions were generally filled from specific families. Princes who were eligible for the position of Swargadeo were not considered for these positions and vice versa. In the 1527, Suhungmung added a third Gohain, Borpatrogohain.[82] The Borpatrogohain's territory was located between the territories of the other two Gohains.

Royal officers: Pratap Singha added two offices, Borbarua and Borphukan, that were directly under the king. The Borbarua, who acted as the military as well as the judicial head, was in command of the region east of Kaliabor not under the command of the Dangarias. He could use only a section of the paiks at his command for his personal use (as opposed to the Dangariyas), the rest rendering service to the Ahom state. The Borphukan was in military and civil command over the region west of Kaliabor, and acted as the Swargadeo's viceroy in the west. Borbaruas were mostly from different Moran, Kachari, Chiring and Khamti communities, while Borphukans were from the Chutia community.[83] The Borbarua and Borphukan offices were not hereditary and thus could be chosen from any families.

Patra Mantris: The five positions constituted the Patra Mantris (Council of Ministers). From the time of Supimphaa (1492–1497), one of the Patra Mantris was made the Rajmantri (Prime Minister, also Borpatro; Ahom language: Shenglung) who enjoyed additional powers and the service of a thousand additional paiks from the Jakaichuk village.

Other officials

The Borbarua and the Borphukan had military and judicial responsibilities, and they were aided by two separate councils (sora) of Phukans. The Borphukan's sora sat at Guwahati and the Borbarua's sora at the capital. Six of them formed the council of the Borbarua with each having his separate duties. The Naubaicha Phukan, who had an allotment of thousand men managed the royal boats, the Bhitarual Phukan, the Na Phukan, the Dihingia Phukan, the Deka Phukan, and the Neog Phukan formed the council of Phukan. The Borphukan also had a similar council of six subordinate Phukans whom he was bound to consult in all matters of importance. This council included Pani Phukan, who commanded six thousand paiks, Deka Phukan who commanded four thousand paiks, the Dihingia Phukan, Nek Phukan and two Chutiya Phukans.

The superintending officers were called Baruas. The Baruas of whom there were twenty or more included Bhandari Barua or treasurer; the Duliya Barua, who was in charge of the royal palanquins; the Chaudang Barua who superintended executions; Khanikar Barua was the chief artificer; Sonadar Barua was the mint master and chief jeweler; the Bez Barua was the physician to the Royal family, Hati Barua, Ghora Barua, etc. Other officials included twelve Rajkhowas, and a number of Katakis, Kakatis, and Dolais. The Rajkhowas were governors of given territories and commanders of three thousand paiks. They were the arbitrator who settled local disputes and supervised public works. The Katakis were envoys who dealt with foreign countries and hill tribes. The Kakatis were writers of official documents. The Dolais expounded astrology and determined auspicious time and dates for any important event and undertaking.

Governors

Members of the royal families ruled certain areas, and they were called Raja.

  • Charing Raja, the heir apparent to the Swargadeo, administered the tracts around Joypur on the right bank of the Burhidihing river.
  • Tipam Raja is the second in line.
  • Namrup Raja is the third in line

Members of the royal families who occupy lower positions are given regions called mels, and were called meldangia or melkhowa raja. Meldangia Gohains were princes of an even lesser grade, of which there were two: Majumelia Gohain and Sarumelia Gohain.[84]

Royal ladies were given individual mels, and by the time of Rajeshwar Singha, there were twelve of them. The most important of these was the Raidangia mel given to the chief queen.[85]

Forward governors, who were military commanders, ruled and administered forward territories. The officers were usually filled from the families that were eligible for the three great Gohains.

  • Sadiya Khowa Gohain based in Sadiya, administered the Sadiya region that was acquired after the conquest of the Chutia kingdom in 1524.
  • Marangi khowa Gohain administered the region that was contiguous to the Naga groups west of the Dhansiri; acquired from the Kachari kingdom in 1526.
  • Solal Gohain administered a great part of Nagaon and a portion of Chariduar after the headquarters of the Borphukan was transferred to Gauhati.
  • Kajalimukhiya Gohain served under the Borphukan, administered Kajalimukh and maintained relations with Jaintia and Dimarua.[86]
  • Khamjangia Gohain administered the region of Khamjang (part of Naga hills).
  • Banrukia Gohain administered the region of Banruk (part of Sibsagar district).
  • Tungkhungia Gohain administered the region of Tingkhong.
  • Banlungia Gohain administered the region of Banlung (Dhemaji) that was acquired after the conquest of the Chutia kingdom in 1524.
  • Bhatialia Gohain administered the region of Habung acquired from the Chutia kingdom in 1524. Later Borpatrogohain was created in its place.
  • Dihingia Gohain administered the region of Mungklang (Dihing) that was acquired after the conquest of the Chutiya kingdom in 1524.
  • Kaliaboria Gohain administered the region of Kaliabor.
  • Jagiyal Gohain served under Borbarua, administered Jagi at Nagoan and maintained relations with seven tribal chiefs, called Sat Raja.[86]
  • Mohongia Gohain and Mohongor Gohain based in the salt mines of Sadiya and Mohong (Naga hills) conquered from Chutia kingdom and Nagas.

Lesser governors were called Rajkhowas, and some of them were:

The dependent kings or vassals were also called Raja. Except for the Raja of Rani, all paid an annual tribute. These Rajas were required to meet the needs for resources and paiks when the need arose, as during the time of war.

Paik officials

The Ahom kingdom was dependent on the Paik system, a form of corvee labor, reorganized in 1608 by Momai Tamuli Barbarua.[87] Every common subject was a paik, and four paiks formed a got. At any time of the year, one of the paiks in the got rendered direct service to the king, as the others in his got tended to his fields. The Paik system was administered by the Paik officials: A Bora was in charge of 20 paiks, a Saikia of 100 and a Hazarika of 1000. A Rajkhowa commanded three thousand and a Phukan commanded six thousand paiks.[87]

Land survey

Supatphaa became acquainted with the land measurement system of Mughals during the time he was hiding in Kamrup before he succeeded to the throne. As soon as the wars with Mughals were over he issued orders for the introduction of a similar system throughout his dominions. Surveyors were imported from Koch Behar and Bengal for the work. It was commenced in Sibsagar and was pushed on vigorously, but it was not completed until after his death. Nowgaon was next surveyed, and the settlement which followed was supervised by Rudra Singha himself. According to historians, the method of survey included measuring the four sides of each field with a nal, or bamboo pole of 12 feet (3.7 m) length and calculating the area, the unit was the "lucha" or 144 square feet (13.4 m2) and 14,400 sq ft (1,340 m2). is one "Bigha". Four 'bigha' makes one 'Pura'. A similar land measurement system is still being followed in modern Assam.

Bohi-Khowa-Borphukanar bortop (reigning Borphukan's Bortop) which was gifted to Swargadev Rajeswar Singha. Biggest among all the Bortop (Cannon).

Military

File:Ahom soldiers.jpg
Royal soldiers stationed at the gate, equipped with various ornaments and weapons.

The Ahom military forces included infantry, cavalry, Elephantry, Artillery, Spies and Navy. Land was given to Martial Paiks or peasants in exchange for service. They were organised under various head. Bora was the leader of twenty paiks, Saikia was the leader of a hundred or more, and Hazarika was the leader of a thousand, a Barua was leader of 2000 soldiers, a Rajkowa a leader of 3000 soldiers and a Phukan of 6000 soldiers. The army's commander-in-chief was known as Borphukan. Swords, spears, bows, and arrows, guns, matchlocks, cannons were the primary weapons of the war. The soldiers had been trained to stand firm in battle. The cavalry commander was Ghora Barua, and the elephant commander was Hati Barua.[88]

The people of mediaeval Assam were aware of the use of incendiary weapons. However, firearms were first introduced in the early 16th century. The Ahom troops quickly became experts in the manufacture of various types of guns, small and large, matchlocks, artillery, and large cannon. Kharghariya Phukan was the officer in charge of the manufacture of gunpowder.[88]

The navy was the most important and powerful division of the Ahom forces. The main warships were known as bacharis. This shape was similar to Bengali kosahs, and each could carry 70 to 80 men. They were tough and powerful, and by the end of the period, many of them were armed with guns. The Fathiya-i-ibriya mentions 32,000 ships belonging to the king of Assam at the time of Mir Jumla's invasion. These were primarily made of chambal wood and were thus light and fast and so difficult to sink. The navy was led by the Naobaicha Phukan and Naosaniya Phukan.[88]

Forts were built in strategic locations to provide armed resistance. The Ahom soldiers were skilled at attacking the enemy at night. On the battlefield, a small group of Ahom soldiers could often outnumber thousands of enemy soldiers. Aside from their numerical strength, the Ahom paiks' physical strength, courage, and endurance were the most important factors in the Ahom military's invincibility.[88]

Strength

The numerical strength of Pratap Singha army consisted of 100,000 foot soldiers, 1,000 war elephants and a large fleet, estimated by the author of Badshahnama.[citation needed]

The same king army at a different time was estimated by the author of Baharistan-i-Ghaibi at 300,000 foot soldiers, 180 war elephants and 4,000 war-boats.[citation needed]

In 1669, the combined strength of the Infantry and cavalry under the command of the Ahoms was estimated at 1 lakh.[citation needed]

Rudra Singha had raised a huge army of 4,00,000 to invade Bengal in November of 1714.[citation needed]

Judicial Administration

In civil matters, Hindu laws were generally followed, while the criminal law was characterized by sternness and comparative harshness, where the general principle was that of an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth, and the culprit was punished with precisely the same injury as that inflicted by him on the complainant. The Barbarua and the Barphukan were the chief judicial authorities in their respective provinces, and trials were conducted before them.[89]

The punishment of the crimes were generally harsh, the offenders were punished by various manners like- by impaling, grinding between two cylinders, starving to death, slicing of the body in pieces, hoeing from head to foot etc. The common punishments were- extraction of eyes and knee caps, slicing off nose, beating with sticks etc.[90]

Classes of people

File:Lower rank ahom soldiers.jpg
Group of lower ranked assamese soldiers, equipped with shields and spears

Subinphaa (1281–1293), the third Ahom king, delineated the Satgharia Ahom ("Ahom of the seven houses") aristocracy: the Chaophaa, the Burhagohain and the Borgohain families, and four priestly lineages—the Deodhai, the Mohan, the Bailung and the Chiring Phukan . These lines maintained exogamous marital relationships. The number of lineages increased in later times as either other lineages were incorporated, or existing lineages divided. The king could belong to only the first family whereas the Burhagohain and the Borgohain only to the second and the third families. Most of the Borphukans belonged to the Chutia ethnic group, whereas the Borbaruas belonged to the Morans, Dimasas, Chiring and Khamti groups.[83] Later on Naga, Mising and Nara (Mongkawng) oracles became a part of the Bailung group.[91] The extended nobility consisted of the landed aristocracy and the spiritual class that did not pay any form of tax.

The apaikan chamua was the gentry that was freed from the khels and paid only money-tax. The paikan chamua consisted of artisans, the literati and skilled people that did non-manual work and rendered service as a tax. The kanri paik rendered manual labor. The lowest were the licchous, bandi-beti and other serfs and bondsmen. There was some degree of movement between the classes. Momai Tamuli Borbarua rose from a bondsman through the ranks to become the first Borbarua under Prataap Singha.

Culture

Music and dance

File:Music performance at the court of the kings..jpg
Music performance at the court of the kings.

The culture of dance and music was widespread and the most popular manifestation of it was Bihu. Different styles of dances were performed Queen Phuleshwari was originally attached to Siva temple at Dergaon. Many types of musical instruments were used. Mughal music performances like Nageras under the Royal patronage were introduced. Rudra Singha had right regards for Mughal music and sent Assamese musicians to Delhi to learn the playing of the instruments like Pakhuaj. The king also appointed certain officers like Gyan barua, for the promotion of music and art.[92] The Assamese monarchs Rudra Singha and his son Siva Singha were both writers of songs. Rajeswar Singha was the author of a drama entitled Kichak Bandh. To celebrate the visit of the Rajas of Manipur and Cachar, a Bhaona entitled as Ravan-Badh, was performed at the Ahom capital Rangpur, Assam and the master of the performance was the Deka-Barbarua, son of Kirti Chandra Barbarua, in this Bhaona[93] 700 men took part.

Architecture

Ahom architecture
Kareng Ghar is a seven-storied royal palace built by Rajeswar Singha
Rang Ghar, built by Pramatta Singha in Ahom Kingdom's capital Rangpur, is one of the earliest pavilions of outdoor stadia in the Indian subcontinent

The metropolis at Rangpur contains the famous Talatal Ghar, Rang Ghar and in Garhgoan, Kareng Ghar.[94]

Temples

The first temple thought to be constructed by Ahoms was in the banks of Karatoya by Suhungmung Dihingia Roja, after defeating and chasing the musalman invaders till Karatoya. The most notable temples of the Ahom period are the Sivasagar group of temples constructed between 1731 and 1734 these temples are dedicated to Shiva, Vishnu, and Devi. The Siva temple was built of stone and bricks and is one of the high-altitude Siva temples in India and is a place of great sanctity. Gaurisagar group of temples were constructed between 1715 and 1715 of which the Devi dol is the main temple, beside there is the other two temples dedicated to Siva and Vishnu. The Devi dol was built of stone and bricks, it's stone artwork is best among the other Ahom temples, next to Joy dol. The Shiva dol of Gaurisagar is very much similar to that of Shiva dol of Sivasagar. The Joysagar group of temples are standing on the bank of Joysagar tank. The temples were constructed in 1698 by Rudra Singha, the main tempe is the Joy dol or the Kesavaraya Vishnu dol, this is the biggest temple based on Nilachal architecture after the Kamakhya Temple. The stone work of Joy dol is the finest among all the Ahom temples, beside Joy dol there are more temples dedicated to Shiva, Ganesha, Devi, and, Surya. Negheriting Shiva Dol constructed in 1765 by Rajeswar Singha.This temple is constructed of brick and stone and is built in Panchayatana style with the main temple in the middle and the subsidiary temple surrounding it, it is one of the most unique temples constructed by Ahoms. The other temples of the Ahoms are the, the Surya Mandir, the Ranganath Dol, the Fakua Dol and the Ganesa Mandir at Joysagar, the Visnu Dol on the bank of the Rudrasagar Tank near Bhatiapar, the Visnu Dol and the Jagatdhatri Dol at Kalogoan, the Visnu Dol and the Devi Dol on the bank of the Namti tank. The Mahesvara Ghar (Garakhia Dol) on the southern bank of the Dikhow river at Nazira, the Thowra Dol on the north-east of Sibsagar city, the Siva Dol on the bank of the Brahmaputra at Dergaon, the Piyali Phukanar Dol at Galeky, the Bezar Dol at Demow, Hara Gauri dol, Gauri Ballabh dol, and multiple temples at Lower Assam built through the Borphukan, etc. Apart from these there are a number of other temples which exist today only in ruins like the Bogi Dol near Joysagar, the Borpatra Dol at Kenduguri, the Keri Rajmao Dol at Mathichiga, the Ikhneswar Dol at Rangpur, the Govindra Dol at Gargaon, the Langkuri Dol, the Gota Dol at Charaideo, the Naphuki Rajmao Dol at Naphuk, the Sam Rajmao Dol at Nazira etc.[95]

Tanks

The excavations of tanks was one of the notable works system under Ahoms. There grandeur was enhanced by construction of temples in their bank. Among the largest of tank there is the Joysagar tank excavated by Rudra Singha in 1698, this tank covers an total area of 318 acres of which 155 acres in underwater, many notable temples were constructed on it's bank. Phuleswari Devi had excavated the Gaurisagar or Namdangar puskarni in the chronicles, this tank was excavated on (17 Feb, 1724) and the excavation was completed in (30 June 1724).[96] In includes a total area of 293 acre of which 150 acre is underwater, on its bank three temples are built dedicated to Devi, Shiva and Vishnu.[97] Queen Ambika devi had excavated the Sivasagar Tank in 1733, it has an total area of 257 acre of which 127 acre is underwater. Besides this, there are some more great Tanks, like- Lakshmi Sagar, Vishu Sagar or Rajmao Pukhuri, and Rudra Sagar. The number of other tanks excavated by the Ahom rulers is estimated to be approximately, 200.[98]

Painting

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b "After 1770 started its period of decline-civil wars and depopulation followed by foreign occupations culminating in the final eclipse of 1826 by its take-over by the British." (Guha 1983:9)
  2. ^ "(T)he Ahom system was in reality both 'monarchical' and 'aristocratical' as Captain Welsh pointed out long ago" (Sarkar 1992:3)
  3. ^ Sarkar (1992, pp. 6–7)
  4. ^ "It is suggested that the actual population of the Ahom territories up to the Manas ranged from two to three millions over one-and-a-half century ending 1750." Guha, Medieval Northeast India:Polity, Society and Economy, 1200-1750 A.D. pp. 26–30.
  5. ^ Nitul Kumar Gogoi (2006). Continuity and Change Among the Ahom. Concept Publishing Company. pp. 65–. ISBN 978-81-8069-281-9.
  6. ^ "The Chutiya power began to decline with the beginning of the 16th century. Taking advantage of an anarchical condition in the Chutia kingdom under the rule of inefficient Dhirnarayan (c1504-1523), the Ahom King Suhungmung or Dihingia Raja (1497-1539) annexed the kingdom in 1523"(Dutta 1985:29)
  7. ^ "The Ahoms were never numerically dominant in the state they built and, at the time of 1872 and 1881 Censuses, they formed hardly one-tenth of the populations relevant to the erstwhile Ahom territory (i.e, by and large, the Brahmaputra Valley without the Goalpara district.)" (Guha 1983:9)
  8. ^ (Saikia 2004:140–141) By emphasizing the fluidity of this identity, the swargadeos controlled and directed the continuous movement within and beyond this group which, in turn, never allowed for developing any sense of loyalty to or cohesiveness of the group. Ahom was not an identity to die for in precolonial Assam; in fact, nobody could ever claim ownership of this label because it was left to the discretion of the swargodeo to award or demote a person to and from this status
  9. ^ a b "Tributes seem to have flowed to their original state in Upper Burma from Mungdungshunkham and probably the covert colonialism ended in 1401 when the boundary between Mungdungshunkham and the Nara kingdom was finally fixed at the Patkai hills. There is reason to believe that the name Mungdunshunkham is closely associated with this covert colonialism of the time and it automatically disappeared when Mungdunshunkham became Asom after their new name Ahom.(Buragohain 1988:54–55)
  10. ^ "In his letter, the Mong Kwang ruler requested Kamaleswarsingha (1795-1811) for help against the king of Burma who had invaded his territory. Referring to the close tie existing between the two kingdoms, the Mong Kwang ruler hoped for positive response from the Ahom king to repel the Burmese invaders"(Phukan 1991:892)
  11. ^ (Gogoi 2002, p. 25)
  12. ^ (Buragohain 2013:84)
  13. ^ "The Tais under Sukapha left Mong Mao in A.D. 1215 and not Mong Mit in 1227 as suggested by some scholars. There were atleast five mong (state or dependencies) chiefs who joined Sukapha with their contingents. Some of them came with their families, and the total strength is computed as 9,000." (Phukan 1992, p. 51)
  14. ^ "The political heritage of ancient Kamarupa had not left Upper Assam totally untouched. After its eclipse, though the south-eastern part of Upper Assam had lapsed into retarded conditions, the fragmented political structures incorporating that tradition still loomed large in the form of petty chiefdoms (bhuyan-raj) in the vicinity. It was under such circumstances that the Ahoms started building a state system of their own in the easternmost extremity of the Brahmaputra Valley." (Guha 1983:10)
  15. ^ "Sukapha came not as a raiding conqueror but as the head of an agricultural folk in search of land. It appears he did not encroach upon the lands of the local peasants, rather he opened up new areas of settlement, procuring with shrewd diplomacy what he direly needed for the purpose---the service of the local inhabitants." (Baruah 1986:222)
  16. ^ Guha (1983, pp. 10–12)
  17. ^ Baruah (1986, pp. 223–224)
  18. ^ (Buragohain 1988:4)
  19. ^ "Gadadhar Singha lent towards Saktism and persecuted the Vaishnava Mahantas and Gosains, His son Rudra Singha in the later part of his rule became an open supporter of faith and from his death onward that faith became the creed of the Ahom monarchs" (Baruah 1986:406)
  20. ^ "(Phuleshwari Bor-Raja) summoned the Sudra Mahantas to the Durga Puja held in a Sakta shrine and compelled them to bow their heads before the goddess and have their foreheads besmeared with the blood of sacrificed animals and made them accept nirmali and prasad. More than others, the powerful Mayamara Mahanta considered it a serious insult, not to be forgotten or forgiven, and in consultation with his disciples, he decided to take vengeance at an opportune moment. The subsequent history of Assam is essentially a history of the Moamariya rebellion, which was the most important factor causing the downfall of the Ahom monarchy." (Baruah 1986:295)
  21. ^ "For years the community went on moving from place to place as a self-governed body of armed peasants in search of a suitable site. In course of their journey they left behind some small colonies at strategic places like Khamjang and Tipam. But after their temporary experimental stays at several sites, the main body finally settled by 1253 in the fertile Dikhou valley, now forming the Sibsagar district." (Guha 1983:12)
  22. ^ Charaideo in the Sanskritised version of the Ahom name Che-Tam-Doi. (Phukan 1992:53)
  23. ^ a b Guha (1983, p. 13)
  24. ^ "(Wade) had then seen the Ahom political system functioning in its worst days. He found "the civil constitution of the kingdom partly Monarchical partly Aristocratical exhibiting a system highly artificial, regular and novel, however defective in other respects"." (Guha 1983:7)
  25. ^ "(Sukapha) ordered his chroniclers to keep record of all events. This was the glorious beginning of the history-writing in Assam—a precious contribution to Indian historiography." (Baruah 1986:222)
  26. ^ "Another characteristic was that the Ahom-rule like its contemporary the Mughal was literally a kaghazi raj. The rulers governed their kingdom not merely on oral directions but written orders and decisions that were recorded and preserved in their archives." (Sarkar 1992:2)
  27. ^ "The Ahoms thus believed that they were divinely ordained, firstly, to extend their permanent wet rice culture to areas dominated by large-scale fallowing and shifting cultivation and, secondly, to absorb stateless shifting cultivators into a common polity with themselves. These two aspects of the Ahom thrust in Upper Assam determined, bye and large, the course of the medieval state-formation process there." (Guha 1983:12)
  28. ^ "Non-Ahom tribes practising shifting cultivation were contemptuously described by the Ahoms as Kha people (meaning 'slave" or 'culttlrally inferior foreigner'). These non-Ahoms were, however, always free to adopt the latter's Tai culture, the very essence of which, in the words of the German anthropologist Von Eickstedt, was "association with wet rice cultivation. Besides, there is evidence in the chronicles that many Kha families were ceremonially adopted into various Ahom clans." (Guha 1983:12)
  29. ^ "The Marans and the Barahis who dwelt in the region between Dikhau and the Dichang rivers were the first groups of tribal people who Sukapha won over to this side by a policy of peace and conciliation. Those among them who challenged Sukapha were ruthlessly killed. (Baruah 1986:222)
  30. ^ "(In Upper Assam), the Ahoms assimilated some of their Naga, Moran and Barahi neighbours and later, also large sections of the Chutiya and Kachari tribes. This Ahomisation process went on until the expanded Ahom society itself began to be Hinduised from the mid-16th century onward." (Guha 1983:12)
  31. ^ "After two years' stay at Song-Tak Sukapha turned back and came to Simaluguri (Tun Nyeu). Here he learned through spies of heavy concentration of population on the Namdang (Nam Deng, "red river") and considered it not worthwhile to make any attept (sic) to reduce them to submission." (Phukan 1992:53)
  32. ^ (Phukan 1992:54)
  33. ^ "Sukapha and his men called their small kingdom Mung-dun-sun-kham, meaning a country full of golden gardens—gardens that they kept smiling through their own toil." (Baruah 1986:223)
  34. ^ "Buranjis refer that Sukapha on his way to Charaideo came across a large concentration of Kachari population on the Namdang, a tributary of the Dikhow, which he tactfully avoided. 'Let us face the Borahis and the Morans first, and the Kacharis afterwards. Any combination of the former two with the latter will not be to our advantage.'" (Phukan 1992:56)
  35. ^ (Phukan 1992:56–57)
  36. ^ Baruah (1986, p. 224)
  37. ^ "The regicide of 1389, the long interregnum that followed it and the revolts of the three subordinate Ahom chiefs of Mung Khamjang, Mung Aiton and Mung Tipam all these events that took place towards the end of the 14th century were signs of growing social contradictions." (Guha 1983:18)
  38. ^ "Meanwhile Taokhamthi was dethroned and assassinated in 1389. As he died without leaving an heir to succeed him, the ministers took charge of the kingdom and started searching out a prince to be the king, because according to the Ahom right of kingship, only the direct descendants Sukapha on the male line were eligible to sit on the throne. On receiving the information that there was a son of the deceased king born mysteriously in the house of a Brahman, the ministers sought him out and made him the king." (Baruah 1986:225)
  39. ^ "During 1397-1407, for instance, even a group of Brahmins were invited to come over to settle down and help in royal affairs. Nevertheless, for another hundred years or so the Brahmanical influence at the royal court remained negligible, with little change beyond the superficial level in the traditional clan-based socio-political institution." (Guha 1983:28)
  40. ^ Guha (1983, pp. 18–19)
  41. ^ "In the reign of Sudangpha Bamuni Konwar (1397-1407), who was elected king at the age of 15, revolts were suppressed, and the boundary between the Ahom and the Nara (Mogaung) territories was, for the first time, firmly delimited." (Guha 1983:18)
  42. ^ "Ahoms also gave Assam and its language their name (Ahom and the modern ɒχɒm 'Assam' come from an attested earlier form asam, acam, probably from a Burmese corruption of the word Shan/Shyam, cf. Siam: Kakati 1962; 1-4)." (Masica 1993, p. 50)
  43. ^ "(Sudangphaa) was the first Ahom king to perform his coronation ceremony, which was called Singari-ghar-utha, as the coronation hall had to be made of Singari wood. The ceremony was performed according to the Ahom rites but it is possible that his Brahmana foster-father blessed him with Vedic mantras when the king assumed the Hindu titles of Maharaja and Rajrajeswar Chakraborty."(Baruah 1986:226)
  44. ^ "Yet, by the end of the 14th- century it was no longer a pristine polity, but something more than that—a state-like organisation." (Guha 1983:19)
  45. ^ Baruah (1986, p. 227)
  46. ^ "The years1497-1539---when the polity leaped into statehood has seen taken as the convenient watershed." (Guha 1983:27)
  47. ^ "Yet another important event of his reign was the carrying out of a state-wise census (piyal) of the adult male population in 1510. A survey of clans and crafts was also made to specify the nature of their respective militia duties." (Guha 1983:21)
  48. ^ (Baruah 1986:227)
  49. ^ "He first annexed Habung in 1512... Since then resettled Bhuyan chiefs and their relations began to be absorbed as scribes and warriors in the lower echelons of the growing state machinery." (Guha 1983:19)
  50. ^ "Further, as a result of the annexation of the Chutia kingdom, many families of Brahmanas, Kayasthas, Kalitas, Daivajnas etc. and a large number of artisans viz. bell-metal workers, goldsmiths, blacksmiths, oil-pressers, gardeners, washermen, and weavers were transferred to the Ahom capital" (Baruah 1986:230)
  51. ^ "The victorious Ahom army pursued the retreating Muslim soldiers as far as the Karatoya." (Baruah 1986:233)
  52. ^ a b (Baruah 1986:231)
  53. ^ "By 1539, the Ahom territory became at least twice as big as what it was in size around 1407." (Guha 1983:19)
  54. ^ "By 1539, the Ahom territory became at least twice as big as what it was in size around 1407. More importantly its Assamese-speaking Hindu subjects were now more numerous than the Ahoms themselves." (Guha 1983:19)
  55. ^ "This resulted in the availability of a wider range of artisan skills as well as a greater scope for division of labour within the kingdom." (Guha 1983:19)
  56. ^ "The king assumed the Hindu title of Svarga-narayanaa (god of heaven) also came to be addressed as Swarga-deva in Assamese." (Guha 1983:19)
  57. ^ "Yet another fact to note is that all Ahoms, irrespective of their royal or ordinary descent, remained free of any kind of Rajputisation process" (Guha 1983:0)
  58. ^ "Suhumgmung Dihingiya Raja made also a big departure from tradition by raising the number of his chief counsellors from two to three and giving the third and new counsellor the same Gohain status. This he did even in the face of stiff opposition from the other two. It appears that the novel designation of Barpatragohain was borrowed from the civil list of Habung where the local ruler, a dependent of the Chutiya king, had the title of Vrhat-Patra." (Guha 1983:20)
  59. ^ "The king succeeded in tilting the constitutional balance in his favour, partly because of the long felt need for an expanded administration, but largely because his position had meanwhile been strengthened by a number of war victories." (Guha 1983:21)
  60. ^ "The whole Chutiya territory was then annexed to the Ahom kingdom and an officer called Sadiya-khowa Gohain was appointed to administer it. The first incumbent to this office was Phrasenmung." (Baruah 1986:229)
  61. ^ "In an attempt to appease the aggrieved Gohains, two new offilces of frontier governors were created to be always exclusively held by members of their lineages." (Guha 1983:21)
  62. ^ "Suhumrnung intle-duced the Saka era in place of the old system of calculating dates by the sixty-year Jovian cycles. According to some chroniclers, he also started striking coins to mark the coronation. The hereditary nobles (Chao) were now allying themselves with the Brahmin literati with a view to forming an expanded ruling class." (Guha 1983:20–21)
  63. ^ Tom Kham was the son of Phrasengmong Borgohain and Mula Gabhoru, both warriors who were killed in battles against Turbak.
  64. ^ "The Ahom expeditionary force, led by General Ton Kham and aided by General Kan Seng and General Kham Peng, pursued the retreating enemies across Muslim domains of Kamarupa and Kamata receiving little resistance in them and reached Karatoya, the eastern boundary of Gaur proper, where the victors washed their swords."(Gogoi 1968, p. 302)
  65. ^ :The Ahom statesmen and chroniclers wishfully looked forward to the Karatoya as their natural western frontier. They also looked upon themselves as the heirs of the glory that was ancient Kamarupa by right of conquest, and they long cherished infructuous their unfulfilled hopes of expanding up to that frontier." (Guha 1983:24), and notes.
  66. ^ Sudhindra Nath Bhattacharya, A History of Mughal North-east Frontier Policy. pp. 320, 321.
  67. ^ "(Rudra Singha) accepted a Muslim named Shah Newaj as a priest in the court, who used to pray for the prosperity of the kingdom in Islamic form. This custom introduced by him was followed by his successors." (Baruah 1978, p. 577)
  68. ^ S.L. Baruah, Comprehensive History of Assam. p. 317.
  69. ^ S.K. Bhuyan, Anglo Assamese relations 1771-1826.
  70. ^ Gait, A History of Assam. p. 177.
  71. ^ Baruah, S L (1986) A Comprehensive History of Assam, Munhiram Manoharlal.
  72. ^ Baruah S.L. (1993), Last days of Ahom Monarchy, New Delhi.
  73. ^ S.K. Bhuyan, Anglo Assamese Relations 1771-1826.
  74. ^ Guha, The Decline of the Ahom kingdom of Assam: 1765-1826. p. 2.
  75. ^ Comprehensive history of Assam, SL Baruah. p. 442.
  76. ^ N.G Rodhes and S.K. Bose , 'The coinage of Assam' Vol ll, 2004. pp. 9–10.
  77. ^ COINAGE AND CURRENCY OF THE AHOMS AND JAINTIAPUR: SOME REFLECTIONS ON TRADE. p. 479.
  78. ^ Baruah, S. L. (1993), Last Days of Ahom Monarchy, New Delhi. p. 32.
  79. ^ Guha, Medieval Northeast India: Polity, Society and Economy, 1200-1750 A.D. pp. 26–30.
  80. ^ Guha, Medieval Northeast India: Polity, Society and Economy, 1200-1750 A.D. p. 31.
  81. ^ (Gogoi 2002:42)
  82. ^ Thao-mung mungteu(Bhatialia Gohain) was made Chao-sheng-lung(Borpatrogohain in Lakni Rungrao 1527.(p.61.)
  83. ^ a b "Most of the Borbaruas were selected from Moran, Kachari, Chiring and Khamti families. The office of the Governor general, lower Assam, was appointed from a Chutiya family." (Gogoi 2006:9)
  84. ^ (Gogoi 2002:43)
  85. ^ (Gogoi 2002:43)
  86. ^ a b (Gogoi 2002:44)
  87. ^ a b (Sen 1979:553)
  88. ^ a b c d Acharyya, Nagendra Nath (1 June 1957). The History of Mediaeval Assam, 1228-1603 (PDF) (PhD). The School of Oriental and African Studies London. p. 115. Retrieved 22 September 2022.
  89. ^ Mohan, Dipankar (October 2017). A Study into the Ahom System of Government during Medieval Assam (PDF) (MPhil). Dept. of Bengali, Karimganj College, Karimganj, Assam, India. p. 91. Retrieved 23 September 2022.
  90. ^ Baruah, Comprehensive History of Assam. p. 400.
  91. ^ "...a number of oracles were included in the Bailung group. Thus there were the Naga-Bailung, Miri-Bailung and Nara Bailung"(Gogoi 2006:9)
  92. ^ (Baruah 1986:424)
  93. ^ Studies in the History of Assam. p. 64.
  94. ^ Comprehensive history of Assam, SL Baruah. p. 429.
  95. ^ Biswas, S.S, Sibsagar.
  96. ^ Nityananda Gogoi, Geography of Medieval Assam (PDF). p. 177.
  97. ^ Biswas, S.S. Sibsagar. p. 77.
  98. ^ Biswas, S. S, Sibsagar. p. 78.

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Coordinates: 26°55′59″N 94°44′53″E / 26.93306°N 94.74806°E / 26.93306; 94.74806