- Know about the life and struggles of Queen Yashovati of Kashmir.
History
narrates the proven valour, gallantry, vigour and steadfastness of many Indian
women who have distinguished themselves as powerful rulers, as regents of
princes, commanders of militias, frugal landlords, diplomats in peace and war,
and stood side by side with the menfolk with pride and glory.
There is sufficient information in Kalhana’s Rajatarangini about the most laudable women of Kashmir, viz. Sugandha Devi, Rani Didda, Ishan Devi, Vakpushta, and one another name being that of Rani Yashovati, probably the first woman leader of the world who achieved an enviable position that enabled her to exercise enormous influence to the extent that, at times, even her foes had to bow to her decree. She ascended the throne at a time of great turmoil in Kashmir.
In the words of Dr. Sengupta: “Kashmir has been very much in the news since 1947 as if it is just a piece of terrain, over the possession of which warring forces are at bay .... We want the world to know a bit of the bubbling fountain of life that has been flowing through her arteries, since the Aryan immigrants settled first in this snow-capped valley, which constitutes a diadem of diamond on the head of India.”
India
has thus a spiritual and an emotional connect to Kashmir. The relationship
between Kashmir and the rest of the nation is the culmination of thousands of
years of a deep living association.
Also read Remembering
Lal Ded, the Yogini of Kashmir
This article was first published in the Bhavan’s Journal.
Kalhana's
Rajatarangini begins just before the great Mahabharata war, and the first King
mentioned therein is Gonanda I, whose initial year of reign is placed in 653
Kali era, the traditional date of the coronation of King Yudhishthira, the
eldest brother of the Pandavas. Gonanda I was a very powerful king who ruled
Kashmir just about 20 years before the Mahabharata war. Historians identify the
period of the rule of Gonanda I as taking place in 3238-3188 BCE; Damodara, in
3188-3140 BCE and Yashovati, after 3140 BCE.
King Gonanda was a powerful monarch with a big army whose amity was fondly desired by other rulers, one of them being King Jarasandh of Mathura. Jarasandh approached King Gonanda for help while fighting Shri Krishna’s army at Mathura. Gonanda’s army laid siege to Mathura and fought staunchly, but was killed by Balabhadra, the brother of Krishna. When the vanquished troops returned and reported the tragic death of the king, Gonanda’s son, Damodara, was crowned king.
The new ruler, however, felt aggrieved at the death of his father, and right from the day of his coronation, he constantly thought of avenging his father’s death. To quote Rajatarangini: “Although he obtained the kingdom furnished in plenitude with life’s enjoyment, the proud king brooding over the death of his father had not yet been at peace.”
Impelled
by the desire for revenge, King Damodara attacked Krishna at the swayamvara which was held by the King of Gandhara. But Damodara’s action was ill-fated and he was slaughtered. Damodara was young and did not have a child at the time. Hence
his wife, Yashovati, who was then enceinte, was made the queen of Kashmir. The demise of the two successive emperors and the demolition of vast battalions of armed forces had nearly thrown the government in a state of disorder. Nevertheless, the prudent, resolute empress brought back the land known to “be furnished in plenitude with life’s enjoyments’ to a state of normalcy and restored its strength.
After the death of Damodara, the ruling elite was timid enough to surrender to the victorious Sri Krishna. They were shocked to hear Sri Krishna’s command that Yashovati would occupy the throne. To make her rule acceptable to the subjects, Krishna adopted an unusual procedure by reciting this verse from the Nilmata Purana: ‘Kashmir land is Parvati; know that its king is a portion of Shiva. Though he be wicked, a wise man who desires his own prosperity will not despise him’. Kalhana confirms that Krishna appeased the advisers by reciting the above verse.
How did Yashovati rule?
Although
Yashovati was pregnant at the time (she was carrying the child of the deceased
king in her womb), she ruled the kingdom with a stern hand, identifying the
corrupt and unjust officials and punishing them severely. She thus ensured
prompt delivery of justice to her subjects. She also exposed those members of
the council who were plotting to overthrow her.
In due course, Yashovati gave birth to the male heir to the kingdom. History informs us that Sri Krishna named the child ‘Gonanda’ too. However, the council of ministers, in league with the royal priest, hatched a conspiracy to enthrone the infant in order to force the queen to abdicate the throne. But they failed miserably in their designs. Being brave, wise and a master strategist, Yashovati understood the game plan of the conspirators and inflicted a crushing blow on them. Eventually, she became the first woman ruler of Kashmir.
Yashovati
was acutely aware of her duties and discharged them with elan and a high sense
of responsibility. Efficiently running the administration, she carved a niche
for herself and created a highly regarded position for herself among her
subjects who viewed her as an embodiment of Shiva. She became very popular
among the people, whose hearts she had won through her benign rule.
Rani Yashovati rule
Rani Yashovati is a unique symbol of women’s empowerment. She effectively shut down the criticism of those who scoff at womankind and believe that they can live only under the tutelage of men. Kalhana comments that several nobles and ambassadors who were full of vice would murmur that a woman must not be crowned but Krishna hushed them. Subsequently she was viewed as someone who was sacred and inviolable.
To quote Kalhana: “The eyes of men that viewed womankind with scanty courtesy, regarding them as objects of pleasure, looked upon this mother of her subjects as if she were their goddess.”
A detailed description of Yashovati’s reign is not available. It is not known how long the queen ruled over Kashmir i.e., how long as a regent and how long as a queen, even as her de facto rule over the valley is confirmed. Even the exact date of her accession to the throne has not been recorded by any historian, so much so that even Stein neglected to mention her while describing the chronology of the kings of Kashmir. The height of the negligence of this queen is clearly reflected in the way Kalhana treated her in his Rajatarangini, wherein he devoted just five verses to her. He neither mentioned the time period of her rule, nor did he mention for what length of time she remained the regent to her son Gonanda II.
But her role in the history of Kashmir, especially in helping the women to live a good standard of life cannot be denied. After her, society’s resistance to a woman’s rule almost vanished as can be clearly seen in the emergence of women rulers like Queen Sugandha, Didda and Kota Rani. Yashovati became the forerunner of other queens of Kashmir. Her reign,
though short, made the path of women rulership easier and more acceptable.
After Kalhana, it was Prem Nath Bazaz who made mention of the queen, while a majority of the scholars neglected her role in legitimising women rule in Kashmir. Writes Bazaz, “Whether as the sovereign queen ruling in her own right or as a regent administering the country on behalf of her son, Yashovati proved a successful and popular ruler who fully understood her duties and efficiently discharged the responsibilities entrusted to her care.” (Bazaz 1959 p, 23). The queen ruler justified women’s rule and challenged the tradition of naming only a male as a successor to the throne.
Yashovati
did not ignore her duty as a single parent and as a mother. She gave proper
education to her son, befitting a prince. She raised him to become a brave,
just and kind ruler. Eventually he came to be known as Gonanda II, who
succeeded his mother and continued to rule on the guidelines laid down by his
illustrious mother. Though history may not have been kind to her, as it has not
been to so many of our social and cultural icons; nevertheless, it is time that
we at least remember her for all that she did for Kashmir and India as a whole.
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This article was first published in the Bhavan’s Journal, 15 December 2022 issue. This article is courtesy and copyright Bhavan’s Journal, Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, Mumbai-400007. eSamskriti has obtained permission from Bhavan’s Journal to share. Do subscribe to the Bhavan’s Journal – it is very good.