Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 February 2009
Architectural treatises and inscriptional evidence from buildings, artefacts and monuments are used to identify the different terms ascribed to urban settlements in medieval India. These sources reveal the diversity of terms used to describe towns and cities, and accordingly the diversity of functions associated with them. The linguistic variations employed indicate how urban functions changed over time, and convey contemporary perceptions of an urban hierarchy based on a functional classification or typology of towns.
I would like to thank Dr Laxman Singh Thakur and Dr Chetan Singh for their comments on an eariier draft.
1 Acharya, P.K. (trans.), Architecture of Munnsara, Manasara series: vol. IV (rpt. New Delhi, 1980).Google Scholar
2 ibid., ch. x, 93–8, and ch. XL, 423–31.
3 Bhattacharyya, T., The Canons of Indian Art (Calcutta, 1963), 183–95Google Scholar; Dagens, B. (trans.), Mayamata: An Indian Treatise on Housing Architecture and Iconography (New Delhi, 1985), VIII.Google Scholar
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5 ibid., vol. 1, 106–81.
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7 Mankad, P.A. (ed.), Aprajitaprccha of Bhuvandeva (Baroda, 1950), xii.Google Scholar
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9 Nagarams mainly represented the market centres in south India.
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12 Pattana is a town where products from other countries are found, there are shops and an abundance of merchandise such as precious stones, grains, fine doth and perfumes; it is situated on the sea and extends along the coast, see Mayamata, ch. x, 28.Google Scholar Inscriptions also refer to such towns situated on the sea coast and conducting commerce across the seas; Ramesh, K.V. and Murthy, S.S. Ramchandra, ‘The Ahadanakaram plates: a critical study’, Studies in Indian Epigraphy 1, (1975), 126.Google Scholar
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17 Sthaniya is a town founded by the king and situated beside a river or near a mountain; it has a royal palace and a large garrison, see Mayamata, ch. x; 31b–32aGoogle Scholar; Manasara, ch. x, 72–4Google Scholar refers to it as a fort.
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21 Nagara is represented as a centre of administration, though not a centre of the highest ruling authority. See Aparajitaprccha, ch. LXX, 1, 3, 16Google Scholar, whereas Manasara, ch. x, 56Google Scholar refers to nagari as the same as pura with only a royal palace inside it; the Mayamata, ch. x, 21b–26aGoogle Scholar refers to it as a centre of administration situated in a forested country with houses for all classes and shops.
22 Rajadhani is a heavily populated place, with a royal palace situated in the middle of the kingdom. See Mayamata, ch. x, 19, 21–6.Google Scholar The Manasara also refers to rajadhani as having the king's palace in the centre inhabited by the wealthy people and laid out on the banks of the river, ch. x, 44–7. However, the Aparajitaprccha does not refer to rajadhani. In this text pura served as 3 capital town (ch. II, 17) and nagara as residence (nivesa) of small rulers (nrpa), ch. LXX, 1. The Samaranganasutradhara refers to rajadhani as the chief seat of a king, see ch. XVIII, 2.
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56 This term is frequently used in the context of south Indian cities from the tenth century onwards. In the earlier texts we do not find any reference to rajadhani-pattana.
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60 ibid., vol. II, 170.
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63 Epigraphia Indica, vol. XIX, 52ffGoogle Scholar; Tattanandapura was an important urban settlement of early medieval period and is confirmed by archæology as well, Archæological Survey of India, Annual Report, 1925–26, 56–8. The mound at Ahar covers a total area of 3,800 acres.
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81 Champaklakshmi, , ‘Urbanization in medieval Tamil Nadu’, pp. 39–43Google Scholar; see also Heitzman, J., ‘4’, Journal of Asian Studies, XVLI (1987), 791–826.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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93 Manigrama was one such settlement on the Konkan coast where flourishing commerce was carried on with foreign countries, see Epigraphia, Indica, vol. I, 44.Google Scholar Also see Epigraphia Indica, vol. XIII, 15–36Google Scholar for Venugrama which was also an important trade centre in north Karnataka. Groups of traders and manufacturers actively carried on their business here with the neighbouring countries.