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'''Ratnadevi (रत्नदेवी)''' was queen of King of [[Kashmir]] [[Jayasimha]] (1128 - 1155 AD) of second [[Lohara dynasty]]. She founded the town [[Ratnapura]] in her name.
'''Ratnadevi (रत्नदेवी)''' was queen of King of [[Kashmir]] [[Jayasimha]] (1128 - 1155 AD) of second [[Lohara dynasty]]. She founded the town [[Ratnapura]] in her name.
== Works and death of queen [[Ratnadevi]] ==
 
[[Rajatarangini]]<ref>[[Kings of Kashmira Vol 2 (Rajatarangini of Kalhana)/Book VIII (i) ]], p.214</ref> mentions ....The matha of [[Ratnadevi]] to whom her husband the king [[Jayasimha]] was strongly attached was the best of all that were set up.
 
== Works and death of queen Ratnadevi ==
[[Rajatarangini]]<ref>[[Kings of Kashmira Vol 2 (Rajatarangini of Kalhana)/Book VIII (i) ]],pp.217-218</ref> mentions ....
[[Rajatarangini]]<ref>[[Kings of Kashmira Vol 2 (Rajatarangini of Kalhana)/Book VIII (i) ]],pp.217-218</ref> mentions ....
The queen '''[[Ratnadevi]]''' set up a religious school named Vaikuntha and mathas and other edifices, and with her own money made arrangements for their permanent maintenance.  
The queen '''[[Ratnadevi]]''' set up a religious school named Vaikuntha and mathas and other edifices, and with her own money made arrangements for their permanent maintenance.  

Revision as of 12:02, 6 April 2016

Ratnadevi (रत्नदेवी) was queen of King of Kashmir Jayasimha (1128 - 1155 AD) of second Lohara dynasty. She founded the town Ratnapura in her name.

Rajatarangini[1] mentions ....The matha of Ratnadevi to whom her husband the king Jayasimha was strongly attached was the best of all that were set up.

Works and death of queen Ratnadevi

Rajatarangini[2] mentions .... The queen Ratnadevi set up a religious school named Vaikuntha and mathas and other edifices, and with her own money made arrangements for their permanent maintenance.

At Ratnapura, a town of great value, and which had many gates, the spotless religions school was the receptacle of virtue, and looked like a large cage for a swan. Mahadeva graced by his presence her white washed houses, like a white light, to destroy the transient state of man's existence. When she built sheds for cows, Shuravarmma and the other builders were reckoned as cows. There [at Ratnapura] adorned with cowsheds, where the kine roamed unrestricted, and which was washed by the waves of the Vitasta, she parted with her diseased body (died), At Nandikshetra she had raised religious schools, and in the principal places of the Yavanas she had built delightful mathas. In Dārvvā she built a town like the city of Indra, and named it after her name. It contained a beautiful and grand house befitting a king. The queen who was kind towards her dependants built various monuments consecrated to the memory of the great, the honored and the principal men who were dead.

The world held such jewels of women who were its ornaments. (p.217-218)

References


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