Kalingga (; p=Hēlíng; Middle Chinese: hɑ.lɨŋ) or She-po or She-bo (p=Shépó; Middle Chinese: d͡ʑia.buɑ) in Chinese sources,Chang Chi-yun. "Eastern Asia in the Sui and T'and Period" (map). Historical Atlas of China. Vol. 1. Taipei: Chinese Culture University Press, 1980. p. 49 or Ho-ling in Arabic scriptures of Umayyad Caliphate era; was a 6th-century Indianized kingdom on the north coast of Central Java, Indonesia.
It was the earliest Hindu-Buddhist kingdom in Central Java, and together with Kutai and Tarumanagara are the oldest kingdoms in Indonesian history.
The theory regarding contact between Caliph Mu'awiyah with Queen Shima of Kalingga has become a basis for further analysis about the history of Islam in the Minangkabau Conference in 2011 and an earlier conference about the History of Islam in Indonesia in 1963, which researches suggested that the earliest contact of Nusantara civilizations with Islam occurred in the 7th AD century between Arabian peoples with southeast Asia, contrary to most popular beliefs that Islam were brought to Nusantara, particularly to Java Island, by Indian merchants and preachers.
Azyumardi Azra, an Indonesian culture expert, accepted this Arab theory regarding the earliest contact of Islam in Java, although he also noted that the spread of Islam during the Queen Shima and Mu'awiyah era was not as vigorous as in the later era in 15th AD century. The denomination of Arab theory which introduced by Hamka were supported by researcher who linked the founding of Islamic tomb in Barus, Sumatra island which traced in 7th AD century, thus establishing the theory regarding the existence of trade route between Kalingga kingdom, Srivijaya empire, and Umayyad caliphate.
A Japanese scholar, Tatsuo Hoshino, argues that the Heling mentioned in the Chinese texts was probably two different kingdoms; the first one, which was previously identified with Kalingga or Ho-ling on Java, should be on the region from west of Chantaburi of Thailand, extending east to the Phú Quốc of Vietnam. Whereas another Heling Kingdom was probably in the present-day Xishuangbanna in the upper Mekong Valley, as mentioned in the biography of Wei Gao.
Ka-ling (訶陵) is also called Djava (阇婆), it is situated in the southern ocean, at the east of Sumatra and at the west of Bali. At its south it has the sea and towards the north lies Cambodia (真臘, Chenla).It is stated that the king lives in a town called Djava, Djapa, or Djapo (闍婆 Shépó). There is also a district called Lang-pi-ya (郎卑野州 Lángbēiyě-zhōu) on the mountains, identified by Groeneveldt as Dieng Plateau. Groeneveldt argues that Djapa may be referring to Japara, but he does not hold a firm belief in that.The people make fortifications of wood and even the largest houses are covered with palm leaves. They have couches of ivory and mats of the outer skin of bamboo.
The land produces tortoise-shell, gold and silver, rhinoceros-horns and ivory. The country is very rich; there is a cavern from which salt water bubbles up spontaneously. They make Palm wine of the hanging flowers of the Arenga pinnata, when they drink of it, they become rapidly drunk. They have letters and are acquainted with astronomy. In eating they do not use spoons or chopsticks.Groeneveldt, Willem Pieter (1876). " Notes on the Malay Archipelago and Malacca, Compiled from Chinese Sources". Batavia: W. Bruining.訶陵,亦曰社婆,曰阇婆,在南海中。東距婆利,西墮婆登,南瀕海,北真臘。木為城,雖大屋亦覆以栟櫚。象牙為床若席。出玳瑁、黃白金、犀、象,國最富。有穴自湧鹽。以柳花、椰子為酒,飲之輒醉,宿昔壞。有文字,知星歷。食無匕筋。有毒女,與接輒苦瘡,人死屍不腐。王居阇婆城。其祖吉延東遷於婆露伽斯城,旁小國二十八,莫不臣服。其官有三十二大夫,而大坐敢兄為最貴。山上有郎卑野州,王常登以望海。夏至立八尺表,景在表南二尺四寸。貞觀中,與墮和羅、墮婆登皆遣使者入貢,太宗以璽詔優答。墮和羅丐良馬,帝與之。至上元間,國人推女子為王,號「悉莫」,威令整肅,道不舉遺。大食君聞之,賫金一囊置其郊,行者輒避,如是三年。太子過,以足躪金,悉莫怒,將斬之,群臣固請。悉莫曰:「而罪實本於足,可斷趾。」群臣復為請,乃斬指以徇。大食聞而畏之,不敢加兵。大歷中,訶陵使者三至。元和八年,獻僧只奴四、五色鸚鵡、頻伽鳥等。憲宗拜內四門府左果毅。使者讓其弟,帝嘉美,並官之。訖大和,再朝貢。咸通中,遣使獻女樂
According to the Chinese Buddhist monk Yijing, in 664 a Chinese Buddhist monk named Huining (會寧 Huìníng) had arrived in Heling and stayed there for about three years. During his stay, and with the assistance of Jnanabhadra, a Kalinga Buddhist monk migrated from Kalinga Kingdom of Ancient India,he translated numerous Buddhist Hinayana scriptures.
In 674, the kingdom was ruled by Queen Shima, famous for her fair yet harsh rule. According to tradition, one day a foreign king placed a bag filled with gold at the intersection in Kalingga to test the fame truthfulness and honesty of the Kalingga people. Nobody dared to touch the bag that did not belong to them until 3 years later when Shima's son, the crown prince, accidentally touched the bag with his foot. The queen issued a death sentence to her own son but was overruled by a minister who appealed to the queen to spare the prince's life. Since it was the prince's foot that touched the bag of gold, it was decided that the foot must be punished through mutilation.
According to Indonesian historians seminar which organized by Aceh, and Hamka, queen Shima has managed to establish contact with Mu'awiya I ibn Abi Sufyan the first Umayyad caliph and fifth Quraysh. According to Reuben Levy, queen Shima regards Mu'awiyah as king of Ta-cheh (大食君 Dàshí-jūn) in regards of Arab caliphate. Both Hamka, and Levy though that the envoys of Umayyad managed to reach Kalingga kingdom due to the improvements of caliphate maritime navigation, as Mu'awiyah were focusing the Early Caliphate navy at that time. Levy also gave figure that the Mu'awiyah possession of as many as around 5,000 ships in 655, were the reason why the caliphate envoys manage to safely reach Kalingga during queen Shima reign, despite the length of distance between two nations.
According to Carita Parahyangan, a book composed in later period, Shima's great-grandson is Sri Sanjaya, who is the king of Sunda Kingdom and Galuh Kingdom, and also the founder of Mataram Kingdom.
Between 742 and 755, the kingdom had moved further east from the Dieng Plateau, presumably in response to the expansion of the Buddhist Sailendra dynasty.
Another inscription dated from around the same period is the Sojomerto inscription, discovered in Sojomerto village, Kecamatan Reban, Batang Regency, Central Java. It is written in the Kavi script in Old Malay language and is estimated to be from the 7th century. The inscription tells about a ruler named Dapunta Selendra, the son of Santanu and Bhadrawati, and the husband of Sampula. Indonesian historian Prof. Drs. Boechari suggested that Dapunta Selendra was the ancestor of the Sailendras who later ruled in the Mataram Kingdom.
Both inscriptions suggest that in the 7th century, a Hindu Shivaist kingdom flourished on the northern coast of Central Java, now identified as the Kalingga Kingdom. Some of the oldest Javanese candis can also be found in the mountainous surrounding areas of northern Central Java, such as the Hindu temples of Dieng Plateau and the Gedong Songo temples, but they were probably built in a later period, during the early Mataram Kingdom. Historians suggest that there was a link between this old kingdom and the later kingdom that flourished in the southern part of Central Java, specifically the Kedu Plain, known as the Sailendra of the Mataram Kingdom.
Inscriptions
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