Yaudheya (Brahmi script: š¬š š„šš¬) or Yoddheya Gana (Yoddheya Republic) was an ancient military ganasangha (republic) based in the Eastern region of the Sapta Sindhu, in modern day Haryana. The word Yaudheya is a derivative of the word from yodha meaning warriorsāYaudheyas.ā Modern day Lodha / Lodheyas are descendants of Yaudheya's .Ancient Communities of the Himalaya, by Dinesh Prasad. Saklani, Indus Pub. Co., 1998, pp. 112ā115.Smith, V. (1897). Art. XXIX.āThe Conquests of Samudra Gupta. Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, 29(4), 859-910. doi:10.1017/S0035869X0002503X and according to PÄį¹ini, the suffix '-ya', was significant of warrior tribes, which is supported by their resistance to invading empires such as the Kushan Empire and the Indo-Scythians. Rudradaman I of the Western Satraps notes in his Junagadh rock inscription that the Yaudheyas were 'heroes among all Kshatriya' and 'were loath to surrender'. They were noted as having a republic form of government, unique from other which instead maintained Monarchy
The Bijayagarh pillar inscription of the Yaudheyas, discovered in the Bharatpur district, also serves as further evidence that reinforces the Yaudheyas establishing and maintaining territory within Northern Rajasthan. According to Alexander Cunningham the Yaudheyas likely had a significant presence in southern Rajasthan during the Western Satraps invasion, suggesting that contact between the two would not have been possible otherwise.
The earliest references of the existence of the Yaudheyas is in PÄį¹ini's Ashtadhyayi (V.3.116-17 and IV.1.178) of (c.500 BCE) and the Ganapatha. In his works the Yaudheyas are mentioned as ayudha-jivin sanghas i.e., a community living by the profession of arms.
As recorded in the Bijoygarh inscription commissioned around Ashoka's reign, the Yaudheya-gana-puraskrta appointed a chief who held the title of Maharaja-Senapati. This chief of the Yaudheya republic was appointed the Senapati (Field Marshal) for the Mauryan Army. The Arthashastra written by Chanakya described the field marshal as adept in all modes of warfare (sarvayudha), all weapons (praharana), possessing modesty and restraint (vidyavinita), and capable of controlling all four wings of the army (chaturangini sena).
Alexander Cunningham proposes that Rudradaman I victory over the Yaudheyas was likely plundering expedition rather than a claim of political control, as he does not assert their territory as part of his own kingdom.
In Kanishka rock Rabatak inscription, he describes campaigning into "the realm of the kshatriyas", which correlates with the Scythian epitaph for the Yaudheyas. Furthermore, Kanishka refers to commissioning statue of various local Iranian and Indian deities, including the deity Mahasena or Mahaseno (Kartikeya) which was the chief deity of the Yaudheyas and was often depicted in their coinage.
According to R. C. Majumdar, in approximately 180 CE, the Yaudheyas in conjunction with other situated in the Cis-Sutlej region (Arjunayanas and Kunindas), played a crucial role in dealing a significant blow to the Kushans. As a result, the Kushans ceased to have a presence in the Eastern Punjab. Numismatic evidence further supports this claim, as Yaudheyan coins proudly commemorate this victorious event. Notably, these coins exhibit a distinctive feature wherein the Kushan Kharosthi is replaced by the Brahmi script, emphasising the significance of the triumph. Yaudheya coinage from the post Kushan Empire period extend to modern day Himachal Pradesh with a large hoard excavated in Kangra, indicating their rule over the region. Yaudheyas would later be mentioned by the Gupta Empire during their expansion and conquest of the Kushan Empire, as mentioned in the Allahabad Pillar inscription.
This particular period marked the gradual disintegration of the Yaudheya republic.
There are other references to them namely in the Mahabharata, Mahamayuri, Brihat-Samhita, Puranas, Chandravyakarana and Kashika.
In the Mahabharata, the land Bahudhanyaka is stated to be among the countries subjugated by Nakula, the fourth Pandava. Bahudhanyaka was the first to fall to Nakulas conquest in of the western direction toward Sakastan, which agrees with the Rohtak-Hisar area.
Varahamihira in his Brihatsamhita (XIV.28 and XVI.22) placed them in the northern division of India.
They are mentioned in PÄį¹ini's Ashtadhyayi and Ganapatha.
Alexander Cunningham divided the Yaudheya coins into two distinctive kinds; the older and smaller class A coins dating from before the 1st century BCE, and the larger Class B coins from the 3rd century CE during the decline of the Indo-Scythians power. Cunningham states that the later coins evidently copied from the Indo-Scythians money.
John Allan classified Yaudheya coins into six classes, while Vincent Arthur Smith previously gave three types. The classification used by Allen has been mostly followed by scholars till today.
Yaudheya coins were found in the ancient capital of Khokrakot (modern Rohtak), and Naurangabad.
Based on the early coins produced by the Yaudheyas, it can be safely said that Karttikeya was considered their Iį¹£į¹a-devatÄ.
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