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Pravarasena I (

(2025). 9788120800434, Motilal Banarsi Dass.
) was the successor of , the founder of the . He was the first and only Vakataka ruler to be called Samrāṭ, meaning emperor or universal ruler.
(2025). 9788131716779, Pearson India Education Services.
Under his reign, the Vakatakas were established as a major power in the , where they would rule for almost two centuries after Pravarasena's death.


Reign
No inscription or record from Pravarasena's reign has been discovered. Information on his reign and accomplishments is dependent on later records of the Vakataka dynasty as well as from the Puranic literary tradition. The Puranas are unanimous in giving Pravarasena (or "Pravira", as he is called in the Puranic texts) a long reign of 60 years. That Pravarasena lived to old age seems to be supported by the fact that Pravarasena's grandson was among the successors to his empire.

Although the details of Pravarasena's military campaigns are unknown, their number and significance can be gauged from the many Vedic sacrifices that he is said to have performed. Pravarasena performed no less than four horse sacrifices during his reign, and each one may have marked the termination of a successful campaign.Altekar (2007), p.91 As an orthodox Hindu and champion of the Brahmanical religious tradition, Pravarasena also performed many other Vedic sacrifices including the Agnishṭoma, Āptoryāma, Jyotishṭoma, Bṛihaspatisava, Sādyaskra, Ukthya, Shoḍaśin, and Atirātra sacrifices. At the end of his career, after he had achieved overlordship over the Deccan, Pravarasena celebrated the Vājapeya sacrifice and formally assumed the imperial title of Samrāṭ.Altekar (1960), p. 162

To the north of Pravarasena's empire were the powerful Bharashiva Naga kings, who were a strong force in the central regions of India. Pravarasena forged an important political alliance with King Bhavanaga of the Bharashiva dynasty by marrying his son Gautamiputra to Bhavanaga's daughter. This alliance secured the northern border of the Vakataka dominions and left Pravarasena free to expand into the south. It is also possible that Pravarasena performed his multiple ashvamedha sacrifices in imitation of the Bharashiva Nagas, for the latter are said to have performed no fewer than ten ashvamedha sacrifices.

Pravarasena's capital was called Kanchanaka and has been identified with Nachna in the of , where several early Vakataka inscriptions and contemporary structural remains have been found. This suggests that Pravarasena's original power base was in the Vindhyan region of present-day Madhya Pradesh, from which the Vakatakas spread southward into . At its greatest extent, Pravarasena's empire covered almost the whole of the Deccan between the and rivers, while his sphere of influence extended over , , , and .Altekar (1960), p. 161 Pravarasena had four sons who were appointed as viceroys over different provinces of his empire, and these provinces seem to have become independent following Pravarasena's death.Altekar (2007), p. 94


Legacy
Pravarasena's eldest son was Prince Gautamiputra, but he predeceased his father. Gautamiputra's son Rudrasena thus succeeded Pravarasena upon the latter's death, with Rudrasena and his descendants forming the "main" branch of the Vakataka dynasty ruling over northern and parts of Madhya Pradesh.Altekar (1960), pp. 163–164 Another one of Pravarasena's sons, , was likely a viceroy of southern Berar and the region of Maharashtra. Upon his father's death, Sarvasena founded a branch of the Vakataka dynasty at Vatsagulma (identified with ).Singh (2016), p. 484 Nothing is known about the branches set up by the other two sons.Mahajan V.D. (1960, reprint 2007) Ancient India, New Delhi: S. Chand, , p. 588

All of the copper plates of the Vakataka rulers begin the family genealogy with Pravarasena instead of Vindhyashakti.Altekar (1960), pp. 156–157 None of Pravarasena's successors adopted his lofty title of Samrāṭ, instead contenting themselves with the relatively modest title of Mahārāja. Pravarasena's unique imperial title, his expansive empire, and his performance of numerous Vedic sacrifices made him stand out as a particularly illustrious ruler in the eyes of posterity.

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