Phani Mukut Rai

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Reignc. 94 - 162 CE (according to legend)
4th or 10th century (according to scholars)
PredecessorMadra Munda
SuccessorMukut Rai
IssueMukut Rai
Phani Mukut Rai
Raja
1st Nagvanshi king
Reignc. 94 - 162 CE (according to legend)
4th or 10th century (according to scholars)
PredecessorMadra Munda
SuccessorMukut Rai
IssueMukut Rai
DynastyNagvanshi
FatherPundarika Naga
MotherParvati
ReligionHinduism

Phani Mukut Rai was the king of the Nagvanshi Gond dynasty in Nagvanshi origin myth and is considered its founder in the first century CE.[1][2][3] However, the story of Phani Mukut Rai is regarded as a myth by historians, who date the establishment of the Nagvanshi dynasty to around the fourth or tenth century CE.[4]

According to the Nagvanshavali (1876), Phani Mukut Rai was the son of Pundarika Naga and his wife parvati, a Brahmin girl from Varanasi.[5] Due to his forked tongue, he always slept with his back to his wife, as his poisonous breath regularly emanated from his mouth. His wife became curious about this secret, but Pundarika Naga never revealed it. They traveled to the Jagannath Temple in Puri for a pilgrimage. On their return, his wife went into labor and was near death. She wished to know his secret, so Pundarika Naga transformed into a cobra, revealed his secret, and then plunged into a pond.

His wife, Parvati, committed sati out of grief after giving birth to a child. Pundarika Naga shielded the child with his hood. A woodcutter saw this and informed a Sakaldwipiya Brahmin named Janardan, who was holding a sun idol. The Brahmin witnessed the incident. Pundarika Naga told the Brahmin his story, stating that the boy would become the king of Nagpur and that the Brahmin would become his priest. The Brahmin named the child Phani Mukut Rai, as he had been protected by the cobra's hood, and raised him. The Brahmin, who held the sun idol, made it the tutelary deity of the Nagvanshi dynasty as suggested by Pundarika Naga.[6]

According to a report by Webster, Phani Mukut Rai was raised by the Kanyabuja Brahmin. However, according to a story collected by Sarat Chandra Roy, the child was adopted by Madura Munda, the Parha chief of Sutiambe village.[7]

Chieftaincy

Historicity

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