The history of Orissa makes an interesting case-study
in that it's history is in many ways atypical from
that of the northern plains and many of the common
generalizations that are made about Indian history
do not seem to apply to the Oriya region.
The
word Oriya is an anglicised version of Odia which
itself is a modern name for the Odra or Udra tribes
that inhabited the central belt of modern Orissa.
Orissa has also been the home of the Kalinga and Utkal
tribes that played a particularly prominent role in
the region's history, and one of the earliest references
to the ancient Kalingas appears in the writings of
Vedic chroniclers. In the 6th C. BC, Vedic Sutrakara
Baudhayana mentions Kalinga as being beyond the Vedic
fold, indicating that Brahminical influences had not
yet touched the land. Unlike some other parts of India,
tribal customs and traditions played a significant
role in shaping political structures and cultural
practices right up to the 15th C. when Brahminical
influences triumphed over competing traditions and
caste differentiation began to inhibit social mobility
and erode what had survived of the ancient republican
tradition.
Kalinga
Very
early in Kalingan history, the Kalingas acquired a
reputation for being a fiercely independant people.
Ashoka's military campaign against Kalinga was one
of the bloodiest in Mauryan history on account of
the fearless and heroic resistance offered by the
Kalingas to the mighty armies of the expanding Mauryan
empire. Perhaps on account of their unexpected bravery,
emperor Ashoka was compelled to issue two edicts specifically
calling for a just and benign administration in Kalinga.
Unsurprisingly, Mauryan rule over Kalinga did not
last long. By the 1st C. BC, Kalinga's Jain identified
ruler Kharavela had become the pre-eminent monarch
of much of the sub-continent and Mauryan Magadha had
become a province of the Kalingan empire. The earliest
surviving monuments of Orissa (in Udaigiri near Bhubaneshwar)
date from his reign, and surviving inscriptions mention
that Prince Kharavela was trained not only in the
military arts, but also in literature, mathematics,
and the social sciences. He was also reputed to be
a great patron of the arts and was credited with encouraging
dance and theater in his capital.
Although
the bravery of the Kalingas became legendary, and
finds mention in the Sahitya Darpan, it is important
to note that a hereditary warrior caste like the Kshatriyas
did not take hold in the region. Soldiers were drawn
from the peasantry as needed and rank in the military
depended as much on fighting skills and bravery as
on hereditary factors. In this (and other) respects,
Oriya history resembles more the history of the nations
of South East Asia, and may have been one of the features
of Oriya society that allowed it to successfully fend
off 300 years of raids initiated by numerous Islamic
rulers untill the 16th century.
Metallurgy,
Crafts and Trade
Owing
to it's vast mineral resources, metallurgy developed
quite naturally in ancient Orissa and may have been
an additional factor in catapulting the region to
considerable importance during the iron age. Iron
tools were used in agricultural production, digging
irrigation canals, stone-quarrying, cave excavation
and later monumental architecture. Rice cultivation
got a particular fillip and during the iron age irrigation
works from Orissa spread to the regions of ancient
Andhra and Tamil Nadu around 300 BC (See M.S. Randhawa:
A history of agriculture in India, Vol. 1. New Delhi.)
Orissa also became a major steel producing centre
and steel beams were extensively used in the monumental
temples of Bhubaneshwar and Puri.
Being
a coastal region, maritime trade played an important
role in the development of Oriya civilization. Cultural,
commercial and political contacts with South East
Asia, particularly Southern Burma, Malaysia and Indonesia
were especially extensive and maritime enterprises
play an interesting part in Oriya folk-tales and poetry.
Historical records suggest that around the 7th C.
AD, the Kongoda dynasty from central Orissa may have
migrated to Malaysia and Indonesia. There is also
evidence of exchange of embassies with China. Records
of Oriya traders being active in the ports of South
East Asia are fairly numerous and in his descriptions
of Malacca, Portuguese merchant Tome Pires indicates
that traders from Orissa were active in the busy port
as late as the 16th C.
(There
is evidence to suggest that trade contact between
Eastern India and Thailand may date as far back as
the 3rd or 4th C BC. Himanshu Ray (The Winds of Change
- Buddhism and the Maritime Links of Early South Asia)
suggests that at least eight oceanic routes linked
the Eastern Coast of India with the Malayan pensinsula,
and after the Iron Age, metals (such as iron, copper
and tin), cotton textiles and foodstuffs comprised
the trade. She also suggests that the trade involved
both Indian and Malayo-Polynesian ships. Archealogical
evidence from Sisupalgarh (near Bhubaneshwar) in Orissa
suggests that there may also have been direct or indirect
trade contacts between ancient Orissa and Rome dating
to the 1st-2nd C AD (or possibly earlier). The chronicles
of Huen Tsang refer to Orissa's overseas contacts
in the 7th C, and by the 10th C, records of Orissa's
trade with the East begin to proliferate.)
Adequate
agricultural production combined with a flourishing
maritime trade contributed to a flowering of Orissan
arts and crafts especially textiles. Numerous communities
of weavers and dyers became active throughout the
state perfecting techniques like weaving of fine Muslins,
Ikat, Sambalpuri and Bomkai silks and cottons, applique
and embroidery. Orissa was also known for it's brass
and bell metal work, lacquered boxes and toys, intricate
ivory, wood and stone carvings, patta painting and
palm leaf engraving, basket weaving and numerous other
colorful crafts. Often, decorative techniques relied
on folk idioms as in the painted, circular playing
cards known as Ganjifas.
Later,
Cuttack became the centre for lace-like exquisite
silver filigree work, (known as Tarakashi) when Orissa
was brought under Mughal rule.
Philosophy,
Language and Idealogy
Both
Buddhism and Jainism played an important role in the
cultural and philosophical developments of early Oriya
civilization. Most Buddhist and Jain texts were written
in Pali-Prakrit and the Prakrita Sarvasva, a celebrated
Prakrit grammar text was authored by Markandeya Das,
an Oriya. Kharavela's Hatigumpha inscription is in
Pali, leading to the speculation that Pali may have
been the original language of the Oriya people.
By
the 7th C. AD, Brahminism had also become influential,
especially in the courts and Hiuen Tsang (the well-known
Chinese chronicler) observed how Buddhist Viharas
and Brahminic temples flourished side by side. And
although royal inscriptions of this time were in Sanskrit,
the most commonly spoken language was not, and according
to Hiuen Tsang appeared to be quite distinct from
the language of Central India, and may have been a
precursor of modern day Oriya.
But
even as the Bhauma Kings of the 6th-8th C issued edicts
in Sanskrit, they patronized numerous Buddhist institutions
and the art, architecture and poetry of the period
reflected the popularity of Buddhism in the region.
Later,
Orissa's Buddhism came to be modulated by strong Tantric
influences, while a more traditional Vedic and Brahminical
version of Hinduism was brought to Orissa by Brahmins
from Kannauj. Shaivism from the South was institutionalized
in Puri. In addition, the majority of Orissa's adivasis
continued to practice some form of animism and totem-worship.
Unifying all these different traditions was the Shiva-Shakti
cult which evolved from an amalgamation of Shaivism
(worship of Shiva), Shaktism (worship of the Mother
Goddess) and the Vajrayana, or Tantric form of Mahayana
Buddism.
What
made possible this fusion was that apart from the
formal distinctions that separated these different
religious and philosophical trends, in practical matters,
there was a growing similiarity between them. Whereas
early Buddhism and the Nyaya school within Hinduism
had laid considerable stress on rationalism and scientific
investigation of nature, later Buddhism and the Shaivite
schools both emphasized philosphical variants of concepts
first developed in the Upanishads, along with mysticism
and devotion. Tantrism had also developed along a
dual track - on the one hand it had laid emphasis
on gaining practical knowledge and a clear understanding
of nature - on the other, it too came steeped in mysticism
and magic.
At
the same time, the Buddhist ethos had created an environment
where compromise was preferred to confrontation. This
allowed tribal deities and gods and goddesses associated
with numerous fertility cults to be integrated into
the Hindu pantheon. Tantric constructs also met with
some degree of approval.
Since
Tantrism emphasized the erotic as a means to spiritual
salvation, the culture of austerity and sexual abstinence
that had pervaded early Buddhism was replaced with
an unapologetic embrace of all that was erotic.
Unlike
some other parts of India, Oriya society had not yet
been deeply differentiated by caste, and egalitarian
values remained well-ingrained amongst the peasant
masses. Hence, any idealogy that championed a hierarchical
division of society would have been unacceptable.
The Shiva Shakti cult was a compromise in that while
it did not exclude social inequality, it did not preclude
social mobility either. In fact, the cult became popular
precisely because it articulated the possibility of
upward mobility through the acquisition of knowledge,
skill or energetic personal effort.
Yogini
Cults
Tantric
influences were of particular import for the survival
of the Yogini cults in Orissa. The Yogini cults concentrated
on worship of the shakti (female life force), with
a belief in the efficacy of magic ritual. In ancient
texts, Yoginis are depicted as consorts of Yogis,
and like their male companions practiced yoga to gain
mastery over science and acquire magical powers. Some
tantric schools associated with the Yogini cults such
as the Kaula Marga prescribed Maithuna (sexual intercourse)
with outcast women or women of low caste as the most
consummate soul-lifting experience. Although Yogini
cults were not unique to Orissa, two out of four surviving
Yogini temples are to be found in Hirapur and Ranipur-Jharial.
The
Hirapur temple is ascribed to the Bhauma and Somavansi
rulers of Orissa (mid 8th - mid 10th C. AD) who were
known for their eclectic liberalism and noted for
their patronage of philosophy, art, architecture and
literature.
Popular
Literature
While
the literature of the court and the intelligentsia
was primarily written in Sanskrit, and included a
variety of commentaries and theoretical treatises
on religion, politics, art and literature as well
as reworks of the epics, popular literature in Oriya
initially focused on folk tales, ballades, creation
myths, devotional songs, love poetry and erotica.
But
in the 15th century, the Gangas who were patrons of
many of Orissa's monumental temples were defeated
by Kapilendra Deva, who rose from the ranks to found
the Surya dynasty. It was in his reign that Sarala
Das wrote a popular Oriya version of the Mahabharatha.
Sarala Das arose from a peasant family and took his
name from the goddess Sarala who was worshipped in
his village in the district of Cuttack. He described
himself as an unschooled 'Shudra' and became popularly
known as Shudra-muni. Although the broad themes his
Mahabharatha match other traditional versions, there
is much that was original and written with a popular
sensibility. His version knitted in local folk tales
and ballads, and incorporated the ethical and moral
values then embraced by the artisan class and peasantry.
The
Chandi Purana, also written by Sarala Das referred
to Yoginis as forms of the Devi or the Supreme Goddess
illustrating the continued popular appeal of the Yogini
cults in Orissa's coastal belt.
Thus
what emerged in Orissa from the 9th century on was
a heady cocktail of mystical and practical currents
that allowed for a certain degree of social mobility
and provided space for ordinary peasants to make contributions
to popular literature and poetry.
This
stimulated the popularity of reading and since there
were no taboos against learning Oriya, literacy spread
in the villages and such popular literature developed
a wide mass following. A network of village libraries
housed popular texts in neatly transcribed versions.
Illuminated manuscripts and illustrated epics also
became popular. By some accounts, literacy in many
villages reached 40% or more before the onslaught
of colonial rule.
Decline
of Oriya Civilization
The
first signsof decline in Oriya society came as the
administrators of the Ganga and Surya kings began
to usurp undue privileges and acquire a greater number
of hereditary rights. At the same time, religious
affairs began to be dominated by the Puri Brahmins
who were instrumental in promoting ever increasing
ritual and unprecedented ceremonial pomp during religious
festivals. Tribal deities were slowly edged out as
Brahminical gods acquired supremacy. Social mobility
declined and the first concrete appearances of a formalized
caste system began to appear. The Patnaiks, Mahapatras,
Nayakas and others who had played a major role in
the royal adminstration, along with the Brahmins comprised
the upper-caste elite as social stratification crystallized.
The
silting up of Orissa's major rivers in the 16th C.
led to a severe decline in maritime trade and may
have further aggravated socially regressive trends.
Orissa also suffered decisive defeats at the hands
of Raja Man Singh (Akbar's military general) and the
Marathas, leaving it dismembered and particularly
vulnerable against the British who colonized it soon
after the victory in Bengal.
Orissa
during Colonial Rule
Like much of India, colonial rule had a devastating
impact on the economic and social life of the Oriya
people. Numerous categories of crafts workers, especially
weavers and dyers were bankrupted and reduced to abject
poverty. The peasantry suffered under the burden of
back-breaking taxes and forced unpaid labour. But
the Oriyas did not accept subjugation without putting
up heroic resistance. Just three years after British
occupation, Jayakrishna Rajguru - hereditary priest
of the Gajapatis (or the Rajas of Khurda) organized
a revolt that ended in tragic defeat and his public
hanging at the hands of the British. In 1818 there
was another revolt when the entire state rose up under
the leadership of Bakshi Jagabandhu Vidyadhara of
Khurda. For six months the people of Southern Orissa
were practically freed from British rule but in the
end the rebellion was ruthlessly quelled and the aftermath
was to be disastrous.
The
nobility was systematically decimated, the Paikas
- the national militia were disarmed and disinherited,
and the peasantry already reduced to virtual slavery.
All administrative posts not directly handled by the
British were assigned to Bengalis who were perceived
to be more loyal to British rule. From local police
constables to assistant school teachers - Bengalis
were hired but Oriyas excluded. Bengali chauvinists
in Calcutta defended such a regime, some even going
to the extent of demanding that all Oriyas be taught
in Bengali since Oriya was nothing but a minor dialect
of Bengali.
Even
as urban Bengal received a few concessions like the
founding of universities and cultural societies -
Orissa was reduced to a minor outpost of the colonial
empire - a cultural wasteland. Orissa's future was
now inextricably linked to the growth of the national
struggle in Bengal and the rest of the country, and
any hint of growth in the national movement naturally
drew enthusiastic support from nationalist-minded
Oriyas.
Although
independence brought about dramatic improvements in
the lives of all sections of the population, two centuries
of damage wrought by colonial rule could not be easily
undone after independence. As evident from recent
census results, high levels of poverty and illiteracy
continue to dog the state.
For
Orissa to regain it's ancient vitality, it will require
not only greater sympathy from other Indians but a
conscious programme of affirmative action from the
centre that promotes mass education and employment
opportunities so that Orissa can fully join the Indian
mainstream as a vibrant and equal member of the Indian
union.