We find that the Mon, Mon-Khmer, Pyu(Tritsu) and Mramma(Buramah) as the tribes are originated in and part of the Indus (or) Hindu Civilization the heart of it was in Punjab, North-Western India. We have already provided many texts Mahabaratas, Puranas, Epic literatures which are attested, for authenticity, integrity and accuracy though these are written by various authors and various places in the course of ancient time line. Now we are about to explore , analyse, find corroborations , summarise and conclude that the above mentioned ancient tribes of modern Burma, Cambodia, Vietnam and Siam(Thailand). Earlier we have reported that these tribes or races and their languages, cultures and traditions are inter-twined and mingled each other’s. It was absolutely natural that when they agreed live together and when time to sort out the problems with arms, they fought. Whilst there are several battles fought among feudatory, tribes and their kings or emperors, remarkably they flourished in architecture, cultures such as music and dances, literature and produced the remarkable coins. They chart maritime and inland trade route and communicated and traded with the world economies of the time since at least 2500 years ago.
For
the clarity, we will utilize the following terminology.
1 Mon
in Burma as Mon-Rman
2 Mon
in Cambodia and Siam, as Mon- Chamboj
3 The
Cham in Vietnam, Annam as Chamba, etc.
When and wherever we find the word Talaing, we shall
replace it with “Mon-Rman” because the foreign writers or authors are referring
to the Mon of the Ramnna-desa which was part of modern Burma. We know and note
that the word started by “T” referring to our Mon friends and relative is Taboo.
The word will not be used by the present authors unless it is the term of the
original texts.
There are two genealogical or lineages of the Indian
kings which were responsible and involved in Burma and south-east Asia architecture and culture and history.
1 Varman
line
2 Pala
line
We find that Combodia and lower Burma are ruled by
the kings from Varman line. As this is of the subject-matter, we will discuss
in reasonable length. There are numerous
texts and works supporting that Varman dynasties which are ruling modern Lower
Burma, Cambodia and south Vietnam so-called Champa in early 1st
Million AD.
History
of ancient relationship of modern Burma and modern Cambodia
Before
proceeding with the documentary evidences of the Hindu Civilisation of Main
Land South East Asia under Varman lines of the kings, there are some very
interesting findings of interrelationship among these polities in general. In
particular, we find that modern Lower Burma Prome as well as upper
Burma, “Pugama or Pagan” and Phnom Penh
of modern Cambodia are inter-related. This finding could confidently confirm
that these two cities and kingdoms are part of one whole “Brahmadesa”. To
verify that we have to revisit TSK’s Burmese Sketches.
Burma
is known to the Manipuris as Maran , to the Shans and Assamese as Man, and to the
Palaungs as Mrang. The Takings call the Burmans Hamera, which is abbreviated to
Hame. To the European writers of the i6th, 17th and i8th
centuries, the country was known as ' Buraghmah,' and to the people of Bengal it
is known as ' Brahmodesh’ which is the Bengali
form of the Pali designation ‘Brahmadesa ' or the country of Brahma, the
creator of the Hindu Triad. Now, ‘b ' and ' m ‘ are interchangeable in the Indo-Chinese
languages, and ' Brahma ' became ' Mrahma,' and the letter ‘h ' being, by assimilation,
changed into ' m ' the word ' Mrahma’ assumed the form ' Mramma '.{Taw Sein Ko (1913)pp:19}[1]
Burmese prose, the form ' Mranma ' is
used, while in works written in Pali, the form ' Mramma-desa ' invariably
occurs. The derivation of the word ' Mranma ' is intimately connected
with that of the word ' Prome,' the centre of the Brahma cult and of Brahmanical influence.
This word should be spelt ' Prohm,' because it is another form
of the Talaing name 'Brohm.
Again, ' Brohm '
is another form of ' Brahm', ‘a' and ‘o ' being
interchangeable. Therefore, Prome means, ' the City of Brahma.' There is thus every
reason to suppose that, in the first century A.D., when the fugitives from Prome found an asylum at Pagan, they were known to the
surrounding tribes as the ' people from the City of Brahma ' or simply as the ‘Brahma
People.’{Taw Sein Ko
(1913)pp:19-20}[1]
Also Mahesh Kumar Sharan has
pointed out in his work titled ‘Studies In Sanskrit Inscriptions Of
Ancient Cambodia’ as under;
Cambodia
is the Europeanised form of Sanskrit name ‘Kambuja’—the
land of Rsi Kambu. In vernacular of
the country the region is called Khmer. In vernacular of the country
the region is called Khmer. This Khmer has been differently pronounced in
different languages: in Chinese they called it Kihmich, in Javanese Kmir and in
Arabic Qimara. This name Kambuja originally
meant only the northern portion of Cambodia. Under the name Chenla, Cambodia
was a kingdom subordinate to Funan. After the fall of Funan it was applied to
the whole of Cambodia. The Chinese name Funan represents the old Khmer word Vnam or B’iu-Nam (in modern Khmer Phnom)
which means a hill.[2]
I-tsing
says that in his time Funan had become Panan. This change
may perhaps correspond to the hardening of the labio-dental ‘v’ into the labial
‘b’ or ‘bh’. P.C. Bagchi opines that the old
pronunciation ‘biu-nam’ would have stood for a name like
Prum or Brum which can be considered as a local adaptation of the name Brahma. The ancient kings of Funan, according to Bagchi, are
called the Brahma-Kumara in the Thai annals, and thus it is probable that the
name Funan originally would have represented Brahma i.e. Brahmadesa,
the country of the Brahmanas. There was a time when Cambodia comprised parts of
Laos, Thailand (Siam), and even Cochin-China.[2]
Thus far in the transliteration and liguistical
evolution there are slight difference in spelling and pronunciation in English of the names of two cities , namely
Prome in modern Burma and Phnom in modern Cambodia. But literally in historical
sense the meaning of the two cities are the same “Brahmadesa”
the city of Brahman people. An then Prome is ancient “Sri Ksetra” the city and
the country of Pyu or Tritsu. Therefore we can conclude that Mon-Khmer,
Mon-Reman, Pyu (Tritsu) are collectively called Brahman or Burman at the later
time.
Sir Charles Eliot informed us through his work of
1921 that the Camodia or Camboja was founded and ruled by the Varman line of kings of Indian Bramana.
The first
important king is Bhavavarman
(c. 500 A.D.), a conqueror and probably a usurper, who extended his kingdom
considerably towards the west. His career of conquest was continued by
Mahavarman (also called Citrasena), by Isanavarman and by Jayavarman1. This last prince was on the throne in
667, but his reign is followed by a lacuna of more than a century.
Notices in the Chinese annals,
confirmed by the double genealogies given for this period in later
inscriptions, indicate that Camboja was divided for some time into two states,
one littoral
and the other inland. Clear history begins again
with the reign of Jayavarman
II (802-869). {ELIOT,
SIR CHARLES(1921)}[3]
The above is for the Kamboja or
modern Cambodia. For modern Burma in
general and lower Burma Prome or Pyu kingdom “Sri Ksetra”
British Researcher “E. Moore” has informed us about Vraman Kings of Sri Ksetra,
modern Prome thorough research findings as below in her work of 2004.
Royal names on stone urns,
Although royal names are found on objects such as
the terracotta votive tablets mentionedearlier, the Sriksetra urns have been the principal guide to a dynastic
line. As might be expected, the names on the urns differ from chronicle
accounts, which begin the Sriksetra
lineage in 444BC with King Duttabaung in the 101st year after the
passing away of the Buddha. This date has been questioned, with archaeological
data suggesting that the city was built about the 2nd century BC. However,
dates are few, and it is likely that the site was inhabited long before this.
Given this rather amorphous timeframe, the dates inscribed on the urns are
important markers of points in the chronology of the site. The urn dates,
however, do not specify an era. One solution has been to use the ‘Burmese’ era,
starting in 638 AD.
Another reading suggests that the Gupta era was employed,
the result being a different sequence of names, one placed in the 4th century
AD (San Win 2001, cited by Than Tun (1994). A review of this evidence is given
here, as the urns give the clearest existing in situ confirmation of the
sequence of rulers during at least one period of the site’s occupation. [4]
The
Pyu writing on the four initial finds was first deciphered by O.Blagden, and
found to give the names of kings of the Vikrama and Varman dynasties (1917).
Each urn is inscribed on the upper rim with what was thought to be a name, date
and age of death. One, the urn of the relative of Suriyavikrama, also has 8
lines inscribed on the rounded bottom, although Blagden did not publish this
inscription. The writing here and on the rims is in Pyu with interlinear Brahmi,
stylistically dated to the 7-8th century AD (Luce 1985: 48, 126-7). The names
and dates derived from this reading, and the measurements of the stone urns,
are given below: [4]
The people, their tradition and culture
Burmese Traditional Dance {Image source: Courtesy of Google}
Cambodian Traditional Dance {Image source :Courtesy of Google}
References.
[1] Taw Sein Ko (1913) “Burmese Sketches”
[2] Mahesh Kumar Sharan, (2003)” Studies In Sanskrit Inscriptions Of Ancient Cambodia”
[3] ELIOT,
SIR CHARLES(1921) “HINDUISM AND BUDDHISM - AN HISTORICAL SKETCH”
[4] Elizabeth Moore :
“Interpreting
Pyu material culture: Royal chronologies and finger-marked bricks” Myanmar Historical Research Journal, No(13) June
2004, pp.1-57
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