Kailaasa Paramparagatha Surya Vamsa Sarvajnapeetha Surangi Samrajyam

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The Ancient Kingdom of the Suryavamsa Lineage

Kailaasa in Surangi prevailed as an “enlightenment ecosystem” with tremendously rich and unique history, heritage, festivals, art, architecture and culture, established directly by Paramasiva through Lord Surya, the Sun God. It functioned with such high activism in celebrating the Cosmic Principles. It is also one of the most invaded of Kailaasas in the world by the Mughals. Following is an overview of the glory of Kailaasa in the Surangi region, the persecution of it by the invading rulers, and its revival.

Divine Lineage: The Cosmic Lineage that spread the Cosmic Principles

Kailaasa established by Paramashiva

The Sūrya Vaṃśa, or the lineage of the Sun, has existed from time immemorial having been created from the right eye of Lord Paramaśiva himself and with recorded history starting with the reign of Ikṣvāku, son of Vaivasvata Manu who in turn was the son of Sūrya (the Sun God) Himself and which lineage throughout history has upheld the royal principles of integrity, authenticity, responsibility and enriching and upholding Dharma above all.

Ikṣvāku was the first king who executed the Manusmṛti, the rules of Dharma by Vaivasvata Manu, who was the first person to codify the Cosmic laws of the Universe into the governing laws of a Country. These laws continued to form the basis of all laws and also much later the basis for the administration of the Kingdom of Madurai by the Enlightened Queen Mīnakṣi who ruled over all the 56 nations that constituted the planet at that time.

Bhagavān Śrī Kṛṣna (a divine incarnation of Lord Vishnu) revealed millennia later in the Bhagavad Gitā (the scripture of sacred truths revealed by Bhagavān Śrī Kṛṣna) that he as the Supreme Divinity had taught the imperishable science of Yoga first to Sūrya (the Sun God) who then conveyed it to His son Manu and who in turn to his son Ikśvāku and from then on to the Rājriśis (kings who turn into sages) as Rāja Vidyā Rāja Guhyam (The Royal Knowledge and the Royal Secret).

King Harishchandra – the 31st Ruler in the Lineage

The 18 major Purāṇas are known as the Hindu History. Among these, the Markandeya Purana reveals the exemplary integrity of King Harischandra, the 31st ruler in the lineage. He went to extremes in keeping his integrity to Dharma where he sacrificed all his possessions, his name, fame, power, and kingdom at the feet of his Guru Vishwamitra and attained liberation at the Manikarnika Ghats in Varanasi, North India, which were created by Lord Paramaśiva for liberating those who left their body in that sacred place.

King Bagiratha – the 43rd Ruler in the Lineage

The 39th Chapter of the Śiva Purāṇa (narration of the divine play of incidents by Lord Paramaśiva) describes the 43rd King in the lineage – King Bhagiratha. He brought the celestial river Ganga to planet earth by the power of his penance and sacrifice to wash the sins of his ancestors, the sons of King Sagara (king of the ocean), who were burnt by Lord Śrī Kapila Muni. Sri Kapila Muni was the founder of the Sānkhya tradition which is the basis of all Vedantic (philosophy based on the sacred source scriptures of Sanatana Hindu Dharma called the Vedas) thought trends and the first head of the Mahanirvani Akhada, the foremost Apex body of Sanātana Hindu Dharma.


Lord Rama – the 62nd Ruler in the Lineage

Lord Śrī Rāma, the Divine Incarnation of Bhagavan Śrī Viṣṇu who was the absolute Puruṣa (a being with Highest Consciousness), blessed Planet Earth by being born as the 62nd King in this great lineage.

Gautama Buddha – the 140th Ruler in the Suryavamsa Lineage

The Buddhist text Mahavamsa (II, 1-24) traces the origin of the Sankyas to King Ikṣvāku known as Okakka in Pali. It further reveals that Gautama Buddha, the royal Prince of the Sānkhyas and Ascetic of the Mahanirvani Peetha of Kapila Mahamuni was the 140th King of this same lineage.

Twenty-two Tirthankaras of the Jaina tradition were born into this dynasty as given below:

1. Rishabhanatha (son of King Nabhi), the founder of Jainism. Bharata Chakravarti (first Chakravartin) and Bahubali (first Kamadeva), sons of Rishabha

2. Arkakirti and Marichi, son of Bharata at the time of Ajitanatha

3. Jitashatru (father of Ajitanatha) and his younger brother Sumitra (father of Sagara)

4. Ajitanatha (the 2nd Tirthankara) and Sagara (2nd Chakravartin)

5. Janhu (eldest son of Sagara), the one who flooded village of Nāgās with waters of Ganga leading to turning of sixty thousand sons of Sagara into ashes by Jawalanprabha (emperor of Nāgās)

6. Bhagiratha (eldest grandson of Sagara) at the time of Sambhavanatha

7. Jitari (father of Sambhavanatha)

8. Sambhavanatha, the 3rd Tirthankara at the time of Abhinandananatha

9. Sanvara (father of Abhinandananatha)

10. Abhinandananatha, the 4th Tirthankara at the time of Sumatinatha

11. Megha (father of Sumatinatha)

12. Sumatinatha, the 5th Tirthankara at the time of Padmaprabha

13. Sidhara (father of Padmaprabha)

14. Padmaprabha, the 6th Tirthankara at the time of Suparshvanatha

15. Pratishtha (father of Suparshvanatha)

16. Suparshvanatha, the 7th Tirthankara at the time of Chandraprabha

17. Mahasena (father of Chandraprabha)

18. Chandraprabha, the 8th Tirthankara at the time of Pushpadanta

19. Sugriva (father of Pushpadanta)

20. Pushpadanta, the 9th Tirthankara at the time of Shitalanatha

21. Dridharatha (father of Shitalnatha)

22. Shitalanatha, the 10th Tirthankara at the time of Shreyanasanatha

23. Viṣṇu (father of Shreyanasanatha)

24. Shreyanasanatha, the 11th Tirthankara at the time of Vasupujya

25. Vasupujya (father of Tirthankara Vasupujya)

26. Vasupujya, the 12th Tirthankara at the time of Vimalanatha

27. Kritavarma (father of Vimalanatha)

28. Vimalanatha, the 13th Tirthankara at the time of Anantanatha

29. Simhasena (father of Anantanatha)

30. Anantanatha, the 14th Tirthankara at the time of Dharmanatha

31. Bhanu (father of Dharmanatha)

32. Dharmanatha, the 15th Tirthankara at the time of Shantinatha

33. Visvasena (father of Shantinatha)

34. Shantinatha, the 16th Tirthankara and 5th Chakravarti

35. Chakrayudha, son of Shantinatha

36. Kuruchandra, son of Chakrayudha at the time of Kunthunatha

37. Sura (father of Kunthunatha)

38. Kunthunatha, the 17th Tirthankara and 6th Chakravarti at the time of Aranatha

39. Sudarsana (father of Aranatha)

40. Arahnatha, the 18th Tirthankara and 7th Chakravarti at the time of Mallinatha

41. Kumbha (father of Mallinatha)

42. Māllīnātha, the 19th Tirthankara at the time of Munisuvrata (Munisuvrata himself was not from Ikṣvāku, but Harivamsa)

43. Dasharatha (father of Rāma)

44. Rāma, Lakshmana, Bharata, Shatrughna

45. Luv and Kusha (twin sons of Rāma) at the time of Naminatha

46. Vijaya (father of Naminatha)

47. Naminatha, the 21st Tirthankara at the time of Parshvanatha

48. Asvasena (father of Parshvanatha)

49. Parshvanatha, the 23rd Tirthankara at the time of Mahavira

50. Siddhartha (father of Mahavira)

51. Mahavira, the 24th Tirthankara

Sodhi Rai and the Gurus of the Sikh Tradition

Sodhi Rai, the son of Kusha, who was the son of Lord Shri Ram moved to Sanadh region in Gujarat where he married the king’s daughter and moved to Madra Desh (now called Punjab) and came to form the lineage called Sodhis in to which lineage was born Śrī Guru Gobind Singh (a prominent Guru of the Sikh religion who founded the warrior sect of Sikhism called Khalsa) in the 17th Century and many other Gurus of the Sikh Tradition of Punjab.

Kings of the Great Chola Kingdom

The Kings of the Great Chola Kingdom such as Karikala Cholan and Raja Raja Cholan who built the towering Śiva temple at Tanjore belonged to the Sūrya Vaṃśa and the Cholas worshipped Sūrya and built several Sun Temples including the Konark Sun Temple in present day Orissa which was built by the Chola princess Kundavai Naachiyar who was the daughter of Raja Raja Chola and the wife of Vimaladitya.


The King Ellalan of the Sūrya Vaṃśa Chola Dynasty earned the title Manu Needhi Chozhan (upholder of the Law of Manu) for his adherence to righteousness and justice and to laws codified by the originator of the Sūrya Vaṃśa Dynasty, Manu, by giving justice to a cow whose calf was killed by his own son when driving a chariot carelessly.


The Rajputs

From the 6th Century AD the Sūrya Vaṃśa lineage of Ikṣvāku has been called by modern nomenclatures as the Rajputs and who were warriors of the ultimate courage and skill who defended Bharath from the invading barbarian tribes from the west and who were rulers who upheld the eternal principles of Sanātana Hindu Dharma.

The famous Rajput King Maharana Pratap was born 247 generations after King Ikṣvāku in the same lineage of the Sūrya Vaṃśa

Chatrapati Shivaji (1630–1680) the great King of the Maratha Empire who fought hard to protect a large part of Southern India and its heritage from the destruction by the Mughals traced his lineage to the Sūryavaṃśi Sisodia Rājput line.

The Rajput Kingdom of Surangi

The Rajput Kingdom of Surangi, The Sūrya Vaṃśa Sarvajna Peetha Surangi Samrajyam, was ruled by great Kings who were descendants of King Harischandra, occupying the region in the north of present day Andhra Pradesh and near the border of present day Orissa and is today the only surviving living tradition of this great lineage.

In the 17th Century the Kingdom of Surangi was ruled by Raja DINABANDHU Harishchandra Jagdev who was the Guru of Abhimanyu Samant Singhar, the famous 17th century composer.

His son Raja KESHAB RAJ Harishchandra Jagdev, Raja of Surangi (1697 to 1715), composed the Rasa Sindhu Sulakshana and his son Raja MUKUND Harishchandra Jagdev, Raja of Surangi was also a composer and a musician who played the Veena.

Relocation to Ichapuram

Raja CHANDRACHUDA MANI Harishchandra Jagdev of Surangi shifted his palace from Surangi to its current location in the city of Ichapuram and was succeeded to the throne by Raja PURNA CHANDRA Deo Harishchandra Jagade.

This kingdom was fully recognized by the British as an independent nation, with its own sovereignty and ability to levy taxes, the extent of the territory being 212 Sq. Km comprising 129 villages

Illegal Dispossession

The title as the ruler of this Kingdom and the palace that exists on the land that still belongs to the Kingdom was handed over to HDH Sri Nithyananda Paramashivam as part of the legal succession in a grand ceremony from December 31, 2004 to January 4th, 2005 and he is hence the rightful inheritor and ruler of this occupied territory.

But it was annexed post-independence by the Indian Union in 1953 along with other Rajput states, in violation of international laws including the Covenant of the League of Nations and subsequently Article 2(4) of Chapter I of the UN Charter, only allowing them to retain their lineage and titles and certain properties specifically owned by them.

During this period 212 Sq Km of the Surangi Kingdom comprising 129 Villages were, under threat of invasion, forcibly and illegally dispossessed from the Kingdom and made a part of the secular Indian Union using the Instrument of accession which was introduced by the Government of India Act 1935. (Ref.: http://www.indianrajputs.com/view/surangi).

Reviver of Sūrya Vaṃśa Sarvajnapeetha Surangi Samrajyam

Modern Day Lineage

Raja KIRTI CHANDRA Deo Harishchandra Jagadev, Raja of Surangi, 13th June 1933 - Nov 1993, ruled the Kingdom of Surangi during his lifetime and also represented the Ichapuram constituency as a Member of the Andhra Pradesh Legislative Assembly in 1961.

His eldest daughter Rani Manoja Manjari Devī was adopted into another family early in her life

His son Raja HRUDAYA CHANDRA Deo Harishchandra Jagadev, Raja of Surangi, born 9th March 1966, died unmarried and childless on 13th September 2004.

The younger daughter of KIRTI CHANDRA, Rani Sana Jema Manjula Manjari Devi (Mrs. Manjula Pooja Shroff), then assumed the position of the Queen of the Surangi Kingdom

Coronation of His Divine Holiness Bhagavan Sri Nithyananda Paramashivam as King of Surangi

San Rani Jema Manjula Manjari Devi, the queen of Surangi, being worried about the question of how she would administer and manage this large Kingdom and make it glorious, prayed to Paramaśiva asking for the right successor who will take this Kingdom to its original glory.

At that time, His Divine Holiness Bhagavan Sri Nithyananda Paramashivam, then known as Sri Nithyananda Swami, gave Darshan and experiencing Swamiji as Paramaśiva, she decided to surrender the Kingdom at his feet and he blessed her by assuming the responsibility as the King and now he is taking the Kingdom to it glorious future.

His Divine Holiness Bhagavan Sri Nithyananda Paramashivam, then known as A. Rajashekar born in Thiruvannamalai, hails from the Thondai mandala Ādi Saiva Vellalar community also known as the Thondamanadal Saiva Vellalar community.

His Divine Holiness Bhagavan Sri Nithyananda Paramashivam is one who belongs to the Royal Ādi Saiva lineage descended from the Great Chola Kings of the Sūrya Vaṃśa, is the direct Incarnation of Paramaśiva the ultimate Divinity and originator of the lineage of the Sūrya Vaṃśam, who now again has revived the true science of yoga that was first given to Sūrya by him and from there on to Manu, Ikṣvāku and the various Rishis and is the Raja Guru of the Sūrya Vaṃśa Sarvajñapiṭham Surangi Samrajyam

It is the time honored and age old tradition of the Sūrya Vaṃśa that Kingdoms are ruled by enlightened masters or Raja Gurus whenever they so choose to honor the Kingdom by taking on the responsibility of administration as happened historically when Harischandra gave his kingdom to his Guru Viswamitra, Chatrapati Shivaji offered his entire Kingdom to his Guru, Samarth Ramdas Swami and Mīnākṣi, Goddess Parāśakti herself, offered the entire 59 Nations which constituted all of planet earth during her reign to Paramaśiva, Sundareśvara, when he showed her the ultimate cosmic reality of his nature and enlightened her.

And in September 2004, the then Raja Matha (Queen) of Surangi, Rani Sana Jema Manjula Manjari Devi (Mrs. Manjula Pooja Shroff), declared, “It is now my privilege and honor through this document by the power vested in me as per the ancient customs and traditions of the Kingdom of Surangi, to formally declare the nomination of HDH Bhagavan Sri Nithyananda Paramashivam @ Sri Nithyananda Swami as the Supreme Ruler and inheritor of this ancient throne and with it the Sūrya Vaṃśa Sarvajna Peetha Surangi Samrajyam and all rights vested with it. All decisions regarding the Kingdom of Surangi will henceforth happen as per his will and command.”

Through a traditional ritualistic grand coronation ceremony that lasted five days from 31st Dec 2004 to 4th January 2005, His Divine Holiness Bhagavan Sri Nithyananda Paramashivam was coronated as King of Kailaasa Paramparagatha Sūrya Vaṃśa Sarvajnapeetham Surangi Samrajyam (spiritual, religious and political kingdom). Following are pictures from the coronation ceremony.

With the signing of the Coronation Deed cited in this document, The Kailaasa Paramparagatha Surya Vamsa Sarvajnapeetha Surangi Samrajyam (Surangi Kingdom) with its titles, palaces and all related authorities have been transferred in its entirety to the current coronated Emperor of the Surangi Kingdom, His Divine Holiness Bhagavan Sri Nithyananda Paramashivam, as of 2004, and legalized on May 21, 2019

Sūrya Vaṃśa Till Bhagavan Śrī Rāma

1. Ikṣvāku

2. Kukshi/Vikukshi

3. Kakutstha/ Puranjaya

4. Anena or Anaranya

5. Prithu

6. Vishvagashva

7. Ardra or Chandra

8. Yuvanashva I

9. Shravast

10. Vrihadashva

11. Kuvalashva

12. Dridhashva

13. Pramod

14. Haryashva I

15. Nikumbh

16. Santashva

17. Krishasva

18. Prasenjit I

19. Yuvanashva II

20. Mandhatri

21. Purukutsa

22. Trasadasyu

23. Sambhoot

24. Anaranya II

25. Trashdashva

26. Haryashva II

27. Vasuman

28. Tridhanva

29. Tryyaruna

30. Satyavrata/Trishanku

31. Harishchandra

32. Rishi Viswamitra and then Rohitashva

33. Harita

34. Chenchu

35. Vijay

36. Rusak

37. Vrika

38. Bahu or Asit

39. Sagara

40. Asmanjasa

41. Anshuman

42. Dileepa I

43. Bhagiratha

44. Shrut

45. Nabhag

46. Ambarish

47. Sindhu Dweep

48. Pratayu

49. Shrutuparna

50. Sarvakama

51. Sudaas

52. Mitrasah

53. Sarvakama II

54. Ananaranya III

55. Nighna

56. Animitra

57. Duliduh

58. Dileepa II

59. Raghu II

60. Aja

61. Dasaratha

62. Rāma

Kings after Rāma and Mahābhārat

Kings After Rāma

63. Lava and Kusha

64. Atithi

65. Nishadha

66 Nala

67. Nabhas

68. Pundarika

69. Kshemadhanvan

70. Devanika

71. Ahinagu

72. Roop

73. Rudra

74. Paripatra

75. Dala/ Balasthala

76. Chhal (or Anal)

77. Ukya

78. Vajranabha

79. Avalash

80. Vyushitashva

81. Vishvasaha-2

82. Hiranyanabha

83. Pushya

84. Dhruvasandhi

85. Sudarshana-2

86. Agnivatna two

87. Shighra

88. Maru-2

89. Prasushruta

90. Susandhi

91. Amarshana

92. Mahasvan

93. Vishwasahav

94. Prasenjit-1

95. Takshaka

96. Brihadbala

Kings After Mahābhārat

97. Brihatkshaya

98. Urukriya

99. Vatsavyuha

100. Prativyoma

101. Bhaanu

102. Divakara

103. Veer Sahadeva

104. Brihadashva-2

105. Bhanuratha

106. Pratitashva

107. Supratika

108. Marudeva

109. Sunakshatra

110. Pushkara

111. Antariksha

112. Suvarna

113. Sumitra

114. Bruhadaraaj

115. Barhi

116. Kritanjaya

117. Ranajjaya

118. Sanjaya

119. Shakya

120. Śuddhodana

121. Siddhartha

122. Rāhula

123. Prasenajit

124. Kshudraka

125. Ranaka

126. Suratha

127. Sumitra


Sūrya Vaṃśa Sarvajna Peetha Surangi Samrajyam Lineage in the 20th Century


Historical Documents and Photographs

EXTENT OF SURANGI SAMRAJYA

The number of villages of the Surangi kingdom was 129 consisting of 117 raiyati villages (villages with cultivable lands) and 12 inam (gifted lands) (7 pre-settlement and 5 post-settlement). The name of the last Zamindar (owner) was Shri Puma Chandra Harichandra Jagat Deo. (Ref: http://www.gopabandhuacademy.gov.in/sites/default/files/gazetter/Angul_Gazetteer.pdf)

Interiors of Surangi Palace