Book Title: Tribes In Ancient India
Author(s): Bimla Charn Law
Publisher: Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute

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Page 194
________________ CHAPTER XXXVIII THE KUNTALAS The Kuntalas are twice mentioned in the Mārkandeya Purāna list of tribes, once in connection with the peoples of Kāšī and Kośala (LVII, 33), which means that they were a Madhyadeśa tribe, and elsewhere (LVII, 48) along with the Asmakas, Bhogavardhanas, Naişikas, Andhras, etc., which suggests that they were a people of the Deccan. The Bhīşmaparvan of the Mahābhārata, however, seems to locate the people in three different regions. One verse (IX, 347) seems to locate them in the Madhyadeśa, while another (IX, 367) in the Deccan which is also upheld by a reference apparently to the same people in the Karnaparvan (XX, 779). A third reference in the Bhīşmaparvan (IX, 359) suggests location of the tribe somewhere in the western region. Cunningham points out (A.S.R., XI, 123) that the country of the Kuntalas of the Madhyadeśa should be identified with the region near Chunar which he calls Kuntila. Whatever be the merit of the identification, the Kuntalas of the Madhyadeśa do not seem to have attained to any historical eminence. The Kuntalas of the west also have hardly any place in history. But the Kuntalas of the Deccan appear to have risen to considerable importance in historical times as will be evident from subsequent details. Literary and epigraphic references have now proved beyond doubt that there were several families of the Sātakarnis of the Deccan, and one or more of these families ruled over Kuntala of the Kanarese districts before the Kadambas (Ray Chaudhuri, P.H.A.I., 4th Ed., 339-40). One member mentioned in the Matsyapurāna list is actually called Kuntala śātakarni, a name that is commented upon by the commentator of Vātsyāyana's Kāmasūtra. He takes the word 'Kuntala' in the name Kuntala Sātakarni to mean'Kuntalavişaye jātatvāt tatsamākhyah'. A Šātavahana of Kuntala is also referred to in the Kāvyamīmāmsā of Rajasekhara. This king ordered the use of Prākrit to the exclusion of every other language by the ladies of his inner apartments. He has often been identified with king Hāla who hailed from Kuntala (Kāvyamīmāmsā notes, p. 9). According to certain Mysore Inscriptions, the Kuntala region included the southern part of the Bombay Presidency and the 1 Rice, Mysore and Coorg from Inscriptions, p. 3; Fleet, Dynasties of the Kanarese Districts, p. 284, f.n. 2.

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