'' of Amoghapāśa from the Singhasari period Singhasari, and its successor kingdom, Majapahit, were among the few kingdoms in Asia that were able to thwart an invasion by the
Mongol horde by repelling a Mongol force in 1293. As the centre of the Malayan peninsula
trade winds, the rising power, influence, and wealth of the Javanese Singhasari empire came to the attention of
Kublai Khan of the Mongol
Yuan dynasty based in
China. Moreover, Singhasari had allied with
Champa, another powerful state in the region. Both Java (Singhasari) and Champa were worried about Mongol expansion and raids against neighbouring states, such as
their raid of Bagan in Burma. Kublai Khan then sent emissaries demanding submission and tribute from Java. In 1280, Kublai Khan sent the first emissary to King
Kertanegara, demanding Singhasari's submission and tribute to the great Khan. The demand was refused. The next year in 1281, the Khan sent another envoy, demanding the same, which was refused again. Eight years later, in 1289, the last envoy was sent to demand the same, and King Kertanegara refused to pay tribute. statue found near Singhasari temple is believed to be the portrayal statue of Queen
Ken Dedes, wife of
Ken Arok (the collection of
National Museum of Indonesia).In the audition throne room of the Singhasari court, King Kertanegara humiliated the Khan's envoy by cutting and scarring the face of Meng Ki, one of the Mongols' envoys (some sources even state that the king cut the envoy's ear himself). The envoy returned to China with the answer – the scar – of the Javan king written on his face. Enraged by this humiliation and the disgrace committed against his envoy and his patience, in late 1292 Kublai Khan sent 1,000 war
junks for a
punitive expedition that arrived off the coast of
Tuban, Java in early 1293. King Kertanegara, whose troops were now spread thin and located elsewhere, did not realize that a coup was being prepared by the former Kediri royal lineage. ==Fall of Singhasari==