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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Origin  





2 Beruas  



2.1  Beruas tree  







3 Gallery  





4 See also  





5 References  





6 External links  














Gangga Negara






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

(Redirected from Gangga Nagara)

City of the Ganges
Gangga Negara (Malay)
c. 2nd century–1025/1026
Beruas, Manjung (as Dinding on the map above) was the presumed location of Gangga Negara, as seen in this map of British Malaya.
Beruas, Manjung (as Dinding on the map above) was the presumed location of Gangga Negara, as seen in this map of British Malaya.
CapitalBeruas
Common languagesOld Malay
Religion
Hindu
GovernmentMonarchy
Raja 
History 

• Establishment

c. 2nd century

• Defeated by Chola Empire

1025/1026
Succeeded by
Kedah Kingdom
Today part ofMalaysia

Gangga Negara (literally City of the Ganges) was a semi-legendary Malay-Hindu kingdom mentioned in the Malay Annals. Researchers believe that the kingdom was centred at Beruas and it collapsed after an attack by King Rajendra Chola IofTamilakam, between 1025 and 1026. According to another Malay annals, the Hikayat Merong Mahawangsa known as the Kedah Annals, Gangga Negara may have been founded by Merong Mahawangsa's son Raja Ganji Sarjuna of Kedah, allegedly a descendant of Alexander the Great or by the Khmer royalties no later than the 2nd century.[1] Raja Gangga Shah Johan was one of its kings.

Origin[edit]

Gangga Negara means "City on the Ganges" in Sanskrit,[2] the name derived[citation needed] from Ganganagar in northwest India where the Kambuja peoples inhabited. The Kambujas are an Indo-Iranian clan of the Indo-European family, originally localised in Pamirs and Badakshan. Commonly known as Hindu traders, they built their colonies[citation needed]inSoutheast Asia around 2,000 years ago[3] at the Mekong valley and also at the Malay archipelago in Funan, Chenla, Champa, Khmer, Angkor, Langkasuka, Sailendra, Srivijaya, etc. Historians[who?] found that the Kambuja traders travelled from Gujarat to Sri Lanka and then to Ligor (Nakhon Sri Thammarat) of the northern Malay Peninsula, overland to Thailand and Cambodia.

Beruas[edit]

The first research into the Beruas kingdom was conducted by Colonel James Low in 1849 and a century later, by H. G. Quaritch Wales. According to the Museum and Antiquities Department, both researchers agreed that the Gangga Negara kingdom existed between 100 and 1000 CE[4] but could not ascertain the exact site. For years, villagers had unearthed artefacts believed to be from the ancient kingdoms, most of which are at present displayed at the Beruas Museum. Artefacts on display include a 128 kg cannon, swords, kris, coins, tin ingots, pottery from the Ming dynasty and various eras, and large jars. They can be dated back to the 5th and 6th century.[5] Through these artefacts, it has been postulated that Pengkalan (Ipoh), Kinta Valley, Tanjung Rambutan, Bidor and Sungai Siput were part of the kingdom. Artefacts also suggest that the kingdom's centre might have shifted several times. Gangga Negara was renamed to Beruas after the establishment of Islam there.

Beruas tree[edit]

The district of Beruas has found some royal Acehnese gravestones and this evidence has it linked to another historical source that a Samudera Pasai prince from Aceh named Malik rested at a Beruas tree, this tree gave the area its name where it can still be found in the nearby villages of Pengkalan Baru[6] and Batang Kubu.[7]

Gallery[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Brown, C.C. (1952). "The Malay Annals". Journal of the Malayan Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society. 25 (2/3 (159)): 5–276. JSTOR 41502950. Retrieved 28 July 2022.
  • ^ S. Durai Raja Singam Printed by Liang Khoo Printing Co., 1962 -Language Arts & Disciplines -253 pages
  • ^ Peter Church, ed. (2012). A Short History of South-East Asia. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-11-183-5044-7.
  • ^ Research on the Early Malay Doctors 1900-1957 Malaya and Singapore, By Faridah Abdul Rashid
  • ^ Neutron radiography: proceedings of the second world conference, Paris, France, June 16-20, 1986 John Penrose Barton, Commission of the European Communities, D. Reidel, 1987 -928 pages
  • ^ "Nama asalnya Belukar Sambang". Utusan. 18 June 2016. Retrieved 24 January 2019.
  • ^ Othman bin Mohd. Yatim; Hassan Shuhaimi bin Nik Abd. Rahman (Nik.); Abd. Hamid Zamburi; Zainol Haji Hussin; Abd. Latib Ariffin (1994). Beruas: kerajaan Melayu kuno di Perak. Persatuan Muzium Malaysia, Muzium Negara. p. 3. OCLC 34548687.
  • External links[edit]


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Gangga_Negara&oldid=1225223905"

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