Nilambar
Kāmateshwar
Reign1480–1498
PredecessorChakradhwaj
SuccessorAlauddin Husain Shah
Diedc. 1498
DynastyKhen dynasty
ReligionHindu

Nilambar (Assamese: নীলাম্বৰ) or Nīlambara (reigned 14801498) was the last Khen ruler or Kamadeswar of the Kamata kingdom in Western Assam and North Bengal. He ruled from the city of Kamatapur (now called Gosanimari).

Rule

Nilambar was the son of Chakradhwaj (1460–1480) and assumed the throne on the death of his father. He was a successful warrior and is regarded as the most powerful king of his lineage. He expanded the kingdom to include the present districts of Cooch Behar in West Bengal and northern Mymensingh in Bangladesh.[1] He also conquered the Undivided Kamrup and Darrang districts of Assam and the eastern parts of Dinajpur.

Nilambar was interested in communication across the kingdom and invested in a road building program.[2] One of the roads later formed part of the trunk route between Cooch Behar, Rangpur and Bogra.

Defeat

Nilambar was defeated by the Sultan of Bengal, Alauddin Husain Shah, in 1498. Husain Shah invaded the Kamata kingdom with 24,000 infantry, cavalry and a war flotilla, defeated the Kamata forces and captured Kamatapur after a long siege.[3] In the traditional account, the invasion was instigated by Sachipatra, a disgruntled Brahmin minister whose son had been killed by the king for licentious behavior.[4] It is said that he escaped the battlefield alive and was never heard of again.[2]

Cultural references

The fall of Nilambar is the subject of an epic poem written by Hitesvar Barbaruva. It is regarded as the most powerful and easy-flowing blank verse in Assamese.[5]

References

  1. Mukherjee, Rila (2011). Pelagic Passageways: The Northern Bay of Bengal Before Colonialism. Delhi: Primus Books. p. 148. ISBN 9380607202.
  2. 1 2 Barmā, Sukhabilāsa (2004). Bhāwāiyā: Ethnomusicological Study. New Delhi: Global Vision Publishing House. p. 70.
  3. Sarkar, J N (1992). "Chapter IV: Early Rulers of Koch Bihar". In Barpujari, H. K. (ed.). The Comprehensive History of Assam. Vol. 2. Guwahati: Assam Publication Board. p. 46.
  4. Nath, D. (1989). History of the Koch Kingdom, C. 1515-1615. Delhi: Mittal Publications. p. 70. ISBN 8170991099.
  5. Datta, Amaresh; Akademi, Sahitya (2006). The Encyclopaedia of Indian Literature. Vol. 2. New Delhi: Sahitya Akademi. pp. 1174–1175. ISBN 9788126011940.
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