Ancestry The
Harsola copper plates issued by the Paramara king
Siyaka II in 949 mentions a king called Akalavarsha, followed by the expression
tasmin kule ("in that family"), and then followed by the name "Vappairaja" (identified with the Paramara king Vakpati I). Based on the identification of "Akalavarsha" (which was a
Rashtrakuta title) with the Rashtrakuta king
Krishna III, historian as D.C. Ganguly theorized that the Paramaras were descended from the
Rashtrakutas. Ganguly tried to find support for his theory in
Ain-i-Akbari, whose variation of the Agnikula myth (see below) states that a predecessor of the Paramaras came to Malwa from
Deccan. According to
Ain-i-Akbari, Dhanji - a man born from a fire sacrifice - came from Deccan to establish a kingdom in Malwa; when his descendant Putraj died heirless, the nobles established Aditya Ponwar - the ancestor of the Paramaras - as the new king. Ganguly also noted Siyaka's successor
Munja (Vakpati II) assumed titles such as
Amoghavarsha, Sri-vallabha and
Prithvi-vallabha: these are distinctively Rashtrakuta titles. However, there is a gap before the words
tasmin kule ("in that family") in the Harsola inscription, and therefore, Ganguly's suggestion is a pure guess in absence of any concrete evidence. Moreover, even if the
Ain-i-Akbari legend is historically accurate, Aditya Ponwar was not a descendant of Dhanji: he was most probably a local magnate rather than a native of Deccan. Critics of Ganguly's theory also argue that the Rashtrakuta titles in these inscriptions refer to Paramara rulers, who had assumed these titles to portray themselves as the legitimate successors of the Rashtrakutas in the Malwa region. The Rashtrakutas had similarly adopted the titles such as
Prithvi-vallabha, which had been used by the preceding
Chalukya rulers. Historian
Dasharatha Sharma points out that the Paramaras claimed the mythical
Agnikula origin by the 10th century; if they had truly been descendants of the Rashtrakutas, they would not have forgotten their prestigious royal origin within a generation. , Paramaras, 12th century,
Madhya Pradesh. The later Paramara kings claimed to be members of the
Agnikula or Agnivansha ("fire clan"). The Agnikula myth of origin, which appears in several of their inscriptions and literary works, goes like this: The sage
Vishvamitra forcibly took a
wish-granting cow from another sage
Vashistha on the Arbuda mountain (
Mount Abu). Vashistha then conjured a hero from a sacrificial fire pit (
agni-kunda), who defeated Vishvamitra's enemies and brought back the cow. Vashistha then gave the hero the title Paramara ("enemy killer"). The earliest known source to mention this story is the
Nava-sahasanka-charita of Padmagupta Parimala, who was a court-poet of the Paramara king
Sindhuraja (–1010). The legend is not mentioned in earlier Paramara-era inscriptions or literary works. By this time, all the neighbouring dynasties claimed divine or heroic origin, which might have motivated the Paramaras to invent a legend of their own. A legend mentioned in a recension of
Prithviraj Raso extended their Agnikula legend to describe other dynasties as fire-born Rajputs. The earliest extant copies of
Prithviraj Raso do not contain this legend; this version might have been invented by the 16th-century poets who wanted to foster Rajput unity against the
Mughal emperor
Akbar. Some
colonial-era historians interpreted this mythical account to suggest a foreign origin for the Paramaras. According to this theory, the ancestors of the Paramaras and other Agnivanshi Rajputs came to India after the decline of the
Gupta Empire around the 5th century CE. They were admitted in the
Hindu caste system after performing a fire ritual. However, this theory is weakened by the fact that the legend is not mentioned in the earliest of the Paramara records, and even the earliest Paramara-era account does not mention the other dynasties as Agnivanshi. Some historians, such as Dasharatha Sharma and
Pratipal Bhatia, have argued that the Paramaras were originally
Brahmins from the Vashistha
gotra. This theory is based on the fact that
Halayudha, who was patronized by Munja, describes the king as "Brahma-Kshtra" in
Pingala-Sutra-Vritti. According to Bhatia this expression means that Munja came from a family of
Brahmins who became
Kshatriyas. In addition, the Patanarayana temple inscription states that the Paramaras were of Vashistha
gotra, which is a gotra among Brahmins claiming descent from the sage Vashistha. However, historian Arvind K. Singh points out that several other sources point to a
Kshatriya ancestry of the dynasty. For example, the 1211 Piplianagar inscription states that the ancestors of the Paramaras were "crest-jewel of the Kshatriyas", and the
Prabha-vakara-charita mentions that Vakpati was born in the dynasty of a Kshatriya. According to Singh, the expression "Brahma-Kshatriya" refers to a learned Kshatriya.
D. C. Sircar theorized that the dynasty descended from the
Malavas. However, there is no evidence of the early Paramara rulers being called Malava; the Paramaras began to be called Malavas only after they began ruling the Malwa region. Chaulukya-Paramara coin circa AD 950-1050.jpg | A
Chaulukya-Paramara coin, -1050 CE. Stylized rendition of
Chavda dynasty coins:
Indo-Sassanian style bust right; pellets and ornaments around / Stylised fire altar; pellets around. Paramaras of Malwa King Naravarman Circa 1094-1133.jpg | Coin of the Paramara king
Naravarman, –1133. Goddess
Lakshmi seated facing / Devanagari legend. Paramaras of Vidarbha King Jagaddeva 12th-13th centuries.jpg | Coin of the Paramara prince
Jagadeva, 12th-13th centuries CE.
Original homeland Based on the Agnikula legend, some scholars such as
C. V. Vaidya and
V. A. Smith speculated that Mount Abu was the original home of the Paramaras. Based on the Harsola copper plates and
Ain-i-Akbari, D. C. Ganguly believed they came from the Deccan region. The earliest of the Paramara inscriptions (that of Siyaka II) have all been discovered in Gujarat, and concern land grants in that region. Based on this, D. B. Diskalkar and H. V. Trivedi theorized that the Paramaras were associated with Gujarat during their early days. Another possibility is that the early Paramara rulers temporarily left their capital city of Dhara in Malwa for Gujarat because of a Gurjara-Pratihara invasion. This theory is based on the combined analysis of two sources: the
Nava-sahasanka-charita, which states that the Paramara king Vairisimha cleared the Dhara city in Malwa of enemies; and the 945-946 CE Pratapgah inscription of the Gurjara-Prathiara king Mahendrapala, which states that he recaptured Malwa. == Early rulers ==