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Devagupta

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Devagupta
King of Malwa
Reign601–606
PredecessorMahasenagupta
SuccessorKingdom abolished
Conquered by Rajyavardhana of Kannauj
Died606
HouseLater Gupta dynasty
FatherMahasenagupta

Devagupta was the king of Malwa from 601 to 606 AD. He ruled the territories which had initially been the western part of the erstwhile Kingdom of Magadha prior to the conquest of its eastern part by the Kingdom of Kannauj. He was the eldest son of Mahasenagupta and a member of the Later Gupta dynasty.[1] Devagupta is known for having engineered a Malwa–Gauda alliance with Shashanka of Gauda to counter the Thanesar–Kannauj alliance.[2] The alliance was initially successful, and Devagupta's forces reached Kannauj and killed the king of Kannauj. However, the king of Thanesar defeated Malwa and killed Devagupta, but was himself killed in the war with Gauda.[3] Harsha succeeded him and repelled the Gauda invasion.

Following the defeat of Devagupta, the other two sons of Mahasenagupta were sent to Kannauj and Harsha restored Madhavagupta to the throne of the Kingdom of Kannauj as a vassal.

Background

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The Magadhan Empire had greatly reduced in power in the sixth century. The Kingdom of Kannauj, initially a vassal of the empire, had declared its independence and frequently warred with the empire. In 575 AD, Sharvavarman of Kannauj conquered the eastern half of the empire that comprised the core of the empire. Mahasenagupta escaped to the eastern remaining portion of the empire in Malwa and established the rump state of the Kingdom of Malwa.[2]

He was succeeded by his Devagupta in 601 AD. Devagupta was warry of the new Thanesar–Kannauj alliance to the north of kingdom and sought to destroy it. He allied with Shashanka of Gauda and created the Malwa–Gauda alliance to counter the Thanesar–Kannauj alliance.[2]

Fall of Malwa

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The alliance was initially successful, and Devagupta's forces reached Kannauj and killed King Grahavarman of Kannauj. However, the king of Thanesar Rajyavardhana defeated Malwa and killed Devagupta, but was himself killed in the war with Gauda. Harsha succeeded him and repelled the invasion by Gauda, finally winning the war.[3]

References

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  1. ^ Nagendra Nath Ghosh (1960). Early History of India. p. 315.
  2. ^ a b c George E. Somers (1977). Dynastic History Of Magadha. Abhinav Publications. p. 140. ISBN 978-81-7017-059-4. This Mālava king has been taken to be Devagupta who may have succeeded Mahasenagupta's kingdom in Malwa or certainly East Malwa. 56 The Maukhari-Vardhana entente may have contributed to Malwa-Gauda alliance;
  3. ^ a b Bak, Kun (1992). Nāgānanda of Harṣa: The Sanskrit Text with Annotated English Translation. Motilal Banarsidass Publishe. p. V. ISBN 978-81-208-1075-4. His elder son, Rājyavardhana succeeded him and soon plunged into a warfare of vengeance against Devagupta of Malwa who had slain Grahavarmă the young king of Kanauj (Kanyakubja) the husband of Harsa's elder sister, Rājyashri, who was then taken prisoner at Kanauj. Rājyavardhana's operation against Devagupta of Malwa proved successful, but he fell a prey to Shashāngka, King of Central Bengal, who was tied in close alliance with the Devaguptas of Malwa.