Beyond the Empire of Jagannātha: Politics and Culture of Goddess Worship in Early -Medieval North Odisha by Madhuparna Roychowdhury

Beyond the Empire of Jagannātha: Politics and Culture of Goddess Worship in Early -Medieval North Odisha

AUTHOR- Madhuparna Roychowdhury

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INFORMATION

  • AUTHOR : Madhuparna Roychowdhury
  • HB ISBN : 978-93-6627-582-6
  • Year : 2024
  • Extent : 372
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The regional tradition of goddess worship is as important as the famous Jagannātha temple and its realm of ritual influence for the religious and cultural life of Odisha. Beyond the Empire of Jagannātha: Politics and Culture of Goddess Worship in Early-Medieval North Odisha studies the well-known temple of Kicakeśvarī at Khiching in the modern district of Mayurbhanj in north Odisha. This was the region over which the celebrated Bhañja rulers of medieval Khijjingakot.t.aman.d.ala ruled, with their centre of power in Khiching, during the early medieval times. The tradition of goddess worship also acted as an important catalyst in stabilizing the relationship between sub-regional rulers and the local population. Besides investigating the wider implications of sub-regional state formation, this book also analyses the fluctuating political relationship between the larger kingdoms of the coast and the local Bhañja principalities. The book brings together epigraphic, ethnographic and archival materials in an attempt to establish a connection between the history of early-medieval Bhañja rulership with developments in relatively modern times.

Contents

List of Abbreviations

Acknowledgements

Introduction

  1. Magic of the Bhañja Name
  2. Rulers, Subjects and the Cult of the Goddess
  3. Power in Stone: The Many Voices of the Temple of Kicakeśvarī in Northern Odisha
  4. Revisiting the Empire of Jagannātha

Bibliography

Index

The Author

Madhuparna Roychowdhury teaches in the Department of Ancient Indian History and Culture at the University of Calcutta. Her book Displaying India’s Heritage: Archaeology and the Museum Movement in Colonial India (2015), is a highly acclaimed work on museum history. A Recipient of S.R. Das Memorial Prize, awarded by the Indian History Congress in 2010, and the Charles Wallace India Trust Fellowship in 2017–18, she has written on early-medieval religion and culture and is interested in ancient and medieval archaeological sites and temples.