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Habung

Habung is a historical region in between Pachim Dhemaji and Dhakuakhana under undivided Dhemaji district. According to Wade(1800), the region where the Subansiri and the Brahmaputra rivers met was known as Habung.[1] Habung (Ha-vrnga-Vishaya) was a place where Brahmins brought from other parts were settled by Ratna Pala of the Pala dynasty of Kamarupa in the 10th century.[2]

Etymology

According to some authors like Sydney Endle and PRT Gurdon, the word Habung is of Bodo-Kachari origin and is a combination of two words Ha which means "land" as in Ha-lali (Golden land), Hasao (Elevated land), Hasong (Fertile land) and Subung which means "people", forming the word Habung (similar to Ha-gwjo: Hajo, Di-gwlao: Dilao).[3][4] It could also be derived from the Bodo-Kachari word Habrun meaning Bog/Swamp considering the word Havranga to be an older form. According to writer Nagen Hazarika, the name originates in Ha-Bong, the fifth capital of Ahom kingdom. It means Fifth Swamp in Ahom language. There was another settlement near Habung which was known as Khubung.

History

Early history

The earliest reference to Habung comes in the 10th century copper plate grant of Ratnapala of the Pala dynasty, when it was a principality of the Kamarupa Kingdom settled by Brahmins.[5][6] After the downfall of the Kamarupa Kingdom it became a part of the Chutiya kingdom.

Chutia dynasty period

The copper plate of Chutia king Dharmanarayan dated 1428 A.D. mentions Sri Vrihat-patra as Habung-aadhipati (lord of Habung). The plate records land grants of 400 puti given to a Brahmin named Purandar Vipra. This shows that Vrihat-patra was a Chutia chief under whose presence a plot of land was donated to the Brahmin in Habung proving Habung to be a Chutia principality.[7] Besides this, several other copper plates have been found in the region, the last recording a grant made by Dhirnarayan in 1520 A.D. after which the region was finally annexed by the Ahom king Suhungmung in 1523 A.D.[8]

The land grant reads,

“Purandharai Viprai Bhuputinang Saturkhatam
Nripadeshata Samagatya Dadadi-Sashana Dadou-Habung-adhipati”

— Copper plate found in Chapakhowa, Sadiya(Scribe: Swarnakara Krishna Sadhu(1428 A.D.)

A list of other inscriptions found in the region are:

Name Kind Ruler Date Find spot
1 Barmurtia Beel Inscription Copper plate Satyanarayan 1392 CE Ghilamora
2 Ghilamora Inscription Copper plate Lakshminaryan 1401 CE Ghilamora
3 Dhenukhana Inscription Copper plate Satyanarayan 1392 CE Dhenukhana
4 Naharani Inscription Copper plate Pratap Narayan/Nandeswar 1375 CE Dhemaji
5 Dhakuakhana Inscription Copper plate Dhir Narayan 1522 CE Dhakuakhana

Ahom dynasty period

Although Sukaphaa spent around four years at a place in Habung, he had to later shift along with all his followers to the south bank due to floods. He finally settled at Charaideo and set up the first capital of Ahom kingdom. In around 1240 A.D., the Chutia king Ratnadhwajpal annexed the state of another Chutia king Bhadrasen and carved out a capital in Ratnapur, Majuli. This indicates that the Habung region also xam under his rule during that period. King Suhungmung annexed the Habung region from Chutias in the year 1523 A.D.

Notes

  1. ^ Wade, J.P, An Account of Assam: Rivers of Assam,p.16.
  2. ^ " Habung was an ancient Brahmin settlement (Havrnga-Vishaya) situated near the mouth of the Dihing river." (Guha 1983:11) "According to tradition, Habung was a petty medieval principality governed by its Brahmin settlers themselves. It now appears from a recently found copper plate inscription that it was the same as the Ha-Vrnga Visaya where a Brahmin was given land by King Ratnapala. (c 10th century) (Guha 1983:33)
  3. ^ S.Endle, The Kacharis, p. 88, Habung-iya, perhaps from Ha earth, Bung for Su-bung men ; hence ha-bung-iya, autochthones
  4. ^ PRT Gurdon, The Morans, p.43 In Moran language Habung meant Men/Settlement
  5. ^ Habung was a Chutiya dependency; that still earlier it was an autonomous principality of Brahmins; and that the latter's origins could be traced back to a circa 10th-century copper-plate and grant issued by king Ratnapala (Guha 1984:73)
  6. ^ The mention of Dibbaisa river forming southern boundary and Saica the south-western boundary led P.C. Choudhury to identify the Havranga visaya with Habung country lying to east of the river Suvansiri during the 10th-11th century A.D. Habung, comprising present Dhakuakhana region was for centuries a centre of Aryan culture
  7. ^ Dr. Swarnalata Baruah(2004), Chutiya Jaatir Buranji, Page 585
  8. ^ Ved, Prakash, "Encyclopaedia of North-East India, Volume 1", pg. 170

References

  • Saikia, Yasmin (2004). Fragmented Memories: Struggling to be Tai-Ahom in India. Duke University Press. ISBN 9780822333739.
  • Barua, Raj Sahib Golap Chandra (1930). Ahom Buranji (Reprinted ed.). Spectrum Publications , 1985. pp. 45–47.
  • Acharyya, N.N (1987). A Brief History of Assam. Omsons Publications. pp. 71–73.
  • Gogoi, Padmeswar (1968). The Tai and the Tai kingdoms: with a fuller treatment of the Tai-Ahom kingdom in the Brahmaputra Valley (First ed.). Dept. Of publication , Gauhati University. pp. 259–265.
  • Guha, Amalendu (1983), "The Ahom Political System: An Enquiry into the State Formation Process in Medieval Assam (1228-1714)" (PDF), Social Scientist, 11 (12): 3–34, doi:10.2307/3516963, JSTOR 3516963
  • Gait, Edward Albert (1906), A history of Assam, Calcutta, Thacker, Spink & co.
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