Vikrampur
(Munshigonj) the political and cultural centre of
ancient Bengal survives only in the name of an area in the
Munshigonj district of Bangladesh. The remains of the city
of Vikramapur, the capital of the ancient kingdoms of southeastern
Bengal, are lost and its location can only be guessed on the
basis of available data. Bangla, Old
History
The
name of Vikramapur survived in the name of a pargana in the Mughal
period. It appears in Todarmal's settlement in the 16th century
yielding revenue of Rs 83,376. By 1728 the revenue had increased
to Rs 1,03,001, and to decrease again in 1763 to Rs 24,568, partly
due to creation of two new parganas, Rajnagar and Baikunthapur,
out of it and partly due to the destructive activity of the Padma.
Today the name does not exist even officially; but the inhabitants
of a vast tract of land in the Munshigonj district still feel pride
in saying that they belong to Vikramapur, which, of course, emanates
from the past glory of the area.
In
the ancient period Vikramapur was undoubtedly the most important
political centre in the vanga janapada. Indeed, it was the capital
city of the Chandra, Varman, Sena, rulers, from the beginning of
the 10th century AD to the beginning of the 13th century AD. Vikramapur
appears for the first time in the copperplates of Shrichandra as
sa Khalu Shrivikramapura Samavasita Shrimajjayaskandhavarat (from
the royal camp of victory or capital situated at Vikramapur) and
it held that position through the rule of the subsequent Varman
and Sena dynasties.
Even
during the rule of the Senas, who held sway over practically the
whole of Bengal, Vikramapur continued to be their capital, and
laksmanasena came to this place after his defeat at Nadia at the
hands of the Muslim invader bakhtiyar khalji, where his two sons,
Vishvarupasena and Keshavasena ruled for a short period. Though
the copperplates of Vishvarupasena and Keshavasena do not mention
Vikramapur as the capital, but the land granted by them lay in
Vikramapur bhage, indicating their hold over the area. Vikramapur's
eminence continued till the early 1280s, when Danujamadhava Dasharathadeva
or danuj rai of Ziauddin Barani transferred his capital to nearby
Suvarnagrama (sonargaon). From then onwards, throughout the Sultanate
period, it remained in oblivion, only to make a comeback as the
name of a pargana in the Mughal revenue roll. The heroic resistance
to Mughal aggression put up by chand rai and kedar rai, the zamindars
of Vikramapur (two of the illustrious bara-bhuiyans of Bengal)
added short-lived glory to Vikramapur.
Today
Vikramapur is an extensive region of the Munshigonj district, and
at some point of time it extended over some parts of Faridpur across
the Padma.
However, it must be said that it is difficult to ascertain the
exact boundary of the territorial unit of that name. On the basis
of the geophysical characteristics of the area an attempt can be
made without any claim for exactitude. In the Thakbast Surveys
map (1845-1877) there is no mention of the Kirtinasha (the Padma just
before meeting the Meghna).
Vikramapur comprised the area with the Padma on
the west, the Dhaleswari on
the north and east, and the confluence of the Arial river and the Meghna on
the south. A local poet Lala Ramgati in his Mayatimirachandrika
mentions that Brahmin Pundits abound in the beautiful rajya named
Vikramapur, which lies between the Brahmaputra mahatirtha on the
east and the Padmavati on the west.
The
small river Kaliganga (shown in James Rennel's map of 1781) flowed
through the middle of the tract, and on its either bank grew the
prosperous villages of Idrakpur (Munshigonj),
Firingibazar, Abdullapur, Mirganj, Serajdi, Sekernagar, Hasara,
Sholaghar, Baraikhali, Thaodiya, Baligaon, Rajabadi etc on the
north and Mulfatganj, Karatikal, Japsa, Kandapada, Shyamsundar,
Khilgaon, Sarenga, Chikandi, Ganganagar, Radhanagar, Rajnagar,
Ghagariya, Larikul etc on the south. The Padma, however, played
havoc in the area in the 17th century and by devouring the glorious
deeds of Chand
Ray and Kedar
Ray earned the epithet of Kirtinasha, the destroyer of relics.
The Kaliganga cut through the middle of the tract dividing it into
two parts: Uttara Vikramapur and Daksina Vikramapur. About 200
years ago Vikramapur was about 30 to 40 miles from east to west
and about 8 to 10 miles from north to south.
The
site of the city of Virampur has been identified with the Rampal
area not far from the modern town of Munshigonj. It has been estimated
on the basis of the archaeological exploration of the area that
the ancient capital covered about 15 square miles, on which are
situated some 17 or 18 villages. To the north is the Ichhamati river,
and there still stand the remains of a very high parapet running
east to west, parallel with the ancient course of the river. To
the east is the ancient stream of the Brahmaputra.
There are two wide moats, one on the west and one on the south,
which in present times are known respectively as the Mirkadim canal
and the Makuhati canal. The royal palace, known as the Vallalbadi,
on high ground within the mud-fort citadel, with a 200 feet wide
ditch around it, is now in ruins.
A
large number of tanks, mostly dating from pre-Muslim period, can
be seen around Rampal, but hardly any building of that period except
the derelict ruins of temples; NK Bhattashali identified in 1929
the remains of as many as 30. Dhipur and Sonarang are the two important
temple sites mentioned by him. RD Banerji also noticed structures
in nearby Raghurampur. Vajrayogini, a nearby village, was the birthplace
of famous Buddhist scholar atish Dipankar
Srijnan. The whole area yielded highly valuable antiquities:
sculptures of exquisite quality (both Hindu and Buddhist), objects
of precious metals. A silver Visnu image from this area (Churain)
is now preserved in the Indian Museum. An eleventh century divine
nymph (surasundari) hewn out of a long wooden pillar and forming
a part of a column (now preserved in the Bangladesh
National Museum) is considered to be a unique find in the whole
subcontinent. Two other wooden pillars with sculptural decorations
were found from the famous Rampal Dighi (2200 ft x 840 ft). Though
the present landscape around Rampal would not give any indication
of the existence of a metropolis in the distant past, the find
of the antiquities and the legends around speak of the past glory
of the ancient city. The river system around might have also contributed
to the extinction of the once prosperous city. However, the medieval
ruins of a mosque and tomb of baba adam shahid at Rampal now stand
as the only visible historical monuments in the area.
Whether
the name of the village Rampal has any connection with the famous
Pala king of that name is difficult to ascertain. It is known from
epigraphical records that the Varman king Bhojavarman or Samalavarman
propitiated the friendship of the Pala king, Ramapala by offering
him elephants and chariots. It may be that Ramapala visited Vikramapur
and the area near the palace where he was ceremoniously received
was developed and named after him. It is unlikely that Ramapala
had Vikramapur area under his control. There is a local tradition
that the area was named Rampal after a local merchant. Ramananda
Pal, popularly called Ramapala, was the grocer to the royal family
during Vallalasena's rule, and he amassed wealth, settled down
in the neighbourhood of the royal palace and came to be recognised
as a respectable person. When Vallalasena dug his dighi, it stretched
up to Ramapala's house. A local proverb goes like this: Vallal
katay dighi name Rampal (the tank was excavated by Vallal, but
it got the name of Rampal).
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Page added 13-06-2005 @ 2129 GMT