Satrubhanja
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| Satrubhanja | |
|---|---|
| Ranaslaghin | |
| Reign | fl. c. 261 CE – c. 340 CE |
| Successor | Disabhanja |
| House | Naga Clan of Vindhyatabi |
| Father | Maharaja Manabhanja |
| Mother | Mahadevi Damayanti |
Satrubhanja (Odia : ଶତ୍ରୁଭଞ୍ଜ) was a king who belonged to the Vindhyatabi branch of Nagavanshi rulers that ruled from Keonjhar district of Odisha in the early 4th century CE (possibly between 261 CE to 340 CE).[1] The era of Satrubhanja belongs to the pre Gupta rise as an imperial power in India when the other ruling of India joined hands with his leadership to overthrow the ruling Devaputras of Pataliputra, also otherwise known as Kushan rulers to the modern historians.[2] The Asanapat village dancing Nataraja Shiva inscription in Sanskrit Language with Post Brahmi or early Kalinga script of Satrubhanja provides a great deal of details about his achievements as a conqueror and spiritual man.[3] The inscription is of thirteen lines which is written partly in verse and partly in prose.[4]

The Naga clan ruled most of central and northern India during the 2nd Century A.D to 4th Century A.D. From the Asanpat inscription we know that Satrubhanja belonged to the part of this clan which ruled northern and western Odisha from Vindhyatabi which is identified as Keonjhar. The Nagas were a prevalent force in this part of Odisha while the kusana ruled as a prevailing power of the north india region. Successively the Murundas were overthrown by the Nagas in the same era as the Kushan power was also brought down.[5]