Due to the Kalabhra invasion and the growing power of Pallavas, the
Cholas migrated from their native country to Telugu lands and ruled from there as chieftains of Pallavas at least since 470 CE. The Cholas who were ruling the Telugu lands are called as
Telugu Chodas or Telugu Cholas. The Cholas had to wait for another three centuries until the accession of Vijayalaya Chola. The Anbil plates of
Parantaka Chola II and Velanjeri plates of
Parantaka Chola I mention the name Sri Kantha whose name precedes that of Vijayalaya Chola in the ancestral lineage, however, it is unknown if the Srikantha of Anbil plates is the
Srikantha of Pottapi Cholas. The Velanjeri inscription also refers to father of Vijayalaya Chola as Ottriyuran, a name which some scholars interpret as a title meaning "lord of Thiruottriyur," a prominent Shaivite centre near modern Chennai. Similarly, the Dalavayapuram copper plate of the Pandyan king Parantaka Viranarayana refers to Srikantha Chola of Pottapi as Mayilayarkon, meaning "Lord of Mylapore." Given that Thiruottriyur and Mylapore are geographically proximate—located just 17 kilometers apart in present-day Chennai—it is plausible that Srikantha Chola held sway over both these sacred and strategic locales. This strengthens the argument that
Srikantha Chola, identified as both Ottriyuran and Mayilayarkon, could be the same individual, and adds weight to the scholarly view that he was the father of Vijayalaya Chola. ==Rise of Vijayalaya Chola==