When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Balaputra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balaputra

    Balaputradewa was the maharaja of Srivijaya in the 9th century CE as well as the former head of the Sailendra dynasty. [1] He was the youngest son of the preceding Sailendran maharaja, Samaratunga , through marriage with Dewi Tara who was in turn the daughter of another maharaja, Dharmasetu of Srivijaya.

  3. Machmud Singgirei Rumagesan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Machmud_Singgirei_Rumagesan

    Singgirei was succeeded by his son, after he died, there was a conflict of succession, hence Rustuty was asked to become the king. She rejected the Raja title and instead style herself as "Ratu Petuanan Tanah Rata Kokoda". [2] After she died, PYM. Arief Rumagesan, fifth grandchild of Singgirei, succeeded her as "Raja Petuanan Pikpik Sekar". [19]

  4. Balaputradeva Museum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balaputradeva_Museum

    Balaputradeva Museum (Indonesian Museum Balaputera Dewa), officially the State Museum of South Sumatra Province "Balaputradeva", is an ethnographic museum located in Southern Sumatra's capital Palembang.

  5. History of Indonesia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Indonesia

    The Shivaist dynasty of Mataram kingdom in Java led by Rakai Pikatan and the Buddhist dynasty of Srivijaya kingdom in Sumatra led by Balaputradewa. The hostility between them didn't end until in 1006 when the Sailendran based in Srivijaya kingdom incited rebellion by Wurawari, vassal of Mataram kingdom and sacked Shivaist dynasty's capital in ...

  6. List of monarchs of Java - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_monarchs_of_Java

    This is a partial list of the identified hereditary rulers on the Indonesian island Java, and the adjacent island Madura.. Included are some states and rulers whose existence remain open to conjecture, due to inadequate historical evidence, while others are historically verifiable.

  7. Srivijaya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Srivijaya

    Map of the expansion of the Srivijaya empire, beginning in Palembang in the 7th century, then extending to most of Sumatra, then expanding to Java, Riau Islands, Bangka Belitung, Singapore, Malay Peninsula (also known as: Kra Peninsula), Thailand, Cambodia, South Vietnam, Kalimantan, Sarawak, Brunei, Sabah, and ended as the Kingdom of Dharmasraya in Jambi in the 13th century.

  8. Purnawarman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Purnawarman

    Tugu inscription now displayed in National Museum, mentioned about King Purnawarman of Tarumanagara. Purnawarman or Purnavarman was the 5th-century king of Tarumanagara, a Hindu Indianized kingdom, located in modern-day West Java, Jakarta and Banten provinces, Indonesia. [1]

  9. Mataram kingdom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mataram_kingdom

    However, according to Raja Sankhara inscription (now missing); Sanjaya's son, Panangkaran, converted to Mahāyāna Buddhism. And because of that conversion, the later series of Sailendra kings who ruled Mataram become Mahāyāna Buddhists also and gave Buddhism royal patronage in Java until the end of Samaratungga's reign. [ 100 ]