| Ror Dynasty |
||||
|
||||
| Capital | Rori | |||
| Religion | Buddhism Hinduism |
|||
| Government | Absolute Monarchy | |||
| Maharaja | Dhaj, Ror Kumar | |||
| Dadror | ||||
| Historical era | Iron Age India | |||
| - Established | 450 BC | |||
| - Disestablished | 489 AD | |||
|
Stone age (7000–3000 BCE)
|
|
Bronze age (3000–1300 BCE)
|
|
Iron age (1200–26 BCE)
|
|
Classical period (1–1279 CE)
|
|
Late medieval age (1206–1596 CE)
|
|
Early modern period (1526–1858 CE)
|
|
Other states (1102–1947 CE)
|
|
Colonial period (1505–1961 CE)
|
|
Kingdoms of Sri Lanka (543 BCE–1948 CE)
|
|
Nation histories
|
|
Regional histories
|
|
Specialised histories
|
The Ror Dynasty ruled from Rori, the capital of Sindh now town of Sukkur, Pakistan, which was built by Dhaj, Ror Kumar in the 5th century BCE. Rori has been known by names such as Roruka and Rorik since antiquity. Buddhist Jataka stories talk about exchanges of gifts between King Rudrayan of Roruka and King Bimbisara of Magadha.[1] Divyavadana, the Buddhist chronicle has said that Ror historically competed with Patliputra in terms of political influence.[2] The scholar T.W. Rhys Davids has mentioned Roruka as one of the most important cities of India in the seventh century B.C.[3]
Shortly after the reign of Rudrayan, in the times of his son Shikhandi, Roruka got wiped out in a major sand storm.[4] This event is recorded in both Buddhist (Bhallatiya Jataka) and Jain[5] annals. It was then that the legendary Dhaj, Ror Kumar (Rai Diyach in Sindhi folklore) built Rori Shankar Rohri and Sukkur in Pakistan in the year 450 BC.
Following the foundation of Rori Shankar is Rohri and Sukkur in Pakistan by Dhaj, Ror Kumar, 41 kings followed him one after the other till Dadror. Listing them starting from 450 BC till 489 AD, the dynasty grew as follows:[6]
The bards report that Dadror was poisoned by his head priest, Dewaji (Rai Dynasty#Chronology of Rai rulers of Sindh) in 620 AD[7] and he was followed by five Brahmin kings before the capture of Rori or Al Ror by the Arabs. On the other hand, written records like the Chachnama report that the Brahmin usurper was Chach and not Dewaji.[8] Considering that the bards may have made a mistake in their orally transmitted reports from generation to generation, we can place a greater faith on the date of 620 AD and that corresponds well with Chach, the usurper's lifetime. That would mean that the dynasty reported as the Rai Dynasty was a continuation of the founding Ror Dynasty of Rori and Rai Sahasi II was not killed by Chach jumping onto his horse's back in an open field (as in Chachnama) but in cold blood by mixing poison in his food.[9]
| Preceded by – |
Ror Dynasty 450 BC–489 AD |
Succeeded by Rai Dynasty |
|
||||||||
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)