Siron Khurd

(Redirected from Siyadoni)

Siron Khurd is a village in Jakhaura block of Lalitpur district, Uttar Pradesh, India. It is identified with the early medieval city of Sīyaḍoṇi, which was a major commercial and political centre during the 10th century under the Gurjara-Pratihāra empire. As of 2011, Siron Khurd had a population of 1,437, in 238 households.

Siron Khurd
Sīyaḍoṇi
Village
Siron Khurd is located in Uttar Pradesh
Siron Khurd
Siron Khurd
Location in Uttar Pradesh, India
Coordinates: 24°49′36″N 78°19′10″E / 24.82667°N 78.31939°E / 24.82667; 78.31939
CountryIndia
StateUttar Pradesh
DistrictLalitpur
TehsilLalitpur
Area
 • Total4.389 km2 (1.695 sq mi)
Population
 (2011)[1]
 • Total1,437
 • Density330/km2 (850/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+5:30 (IST)
PIN
284124

Geography edit

Siron Khurd is located about 15 km northwest of Lalitpur, the district headquarters.[2]: 134 

According to the 2011 census, Siron Khurd has a total area of 438.9 hectares, of which 266.6 were currently farmland and 58.6 were under non-agricultural use. 59.0 hectares were classified as cultivable but not currently under any agricultural use, and 10.1 were classified as non-cultivable. No forests, orchards, or pastures existed on village lands.[1]: 114 

History: the early medieval city of Sīyaḍoṇi edit

Siron Khurd is identified with the early medieval city of Sīyaḍoṇi. The primary source for the medieval city is a single inscription found at Siron Khurd in the late 1800s. This inscription contains two separate parts: the first part is a copy of 27 different deeds recording donations made on separate occasions between 907 and 968; the second part is a poem recounting the exploits of a brahmin family called Rayakabhatta.[2]: 134 [3]: 136  These inscriptions provide historians a source of information

Commerce edit

Sīyaḍoṇi was first and foremost a commercial centre.[3]: 137  According to Aman Mishra, Sīyaḍoṇi's growth as a city was because of its location on an important trade route. Mishra writes that the city's economy was primarily based on long-distance trade, and locals also engaged in rent-seeking behaviour such as charging rent on land or interest on loans.[4]: abstract 

At least five different marketplaces (haṭṭas) are attested at Sīyaḍoṇi: Dosihaṭṭa, Prasannahaṭṭa, Caturhaṭṭa (possibly identical with the "Catuṣkahaṭṭa" mentioned elsewhere in the text), Kallapālānāmsatkahaṭṭa (which was owned by the Kallapālas), and Vasantamahattakahaṭṭa (which was possibly named after a guild leader). Sīyaḍoṇi also had a customs house (the Sīyaḍoṇi satka maṇḍapikā) and apparently a mint as well.[3]: 136–7 

Various types of artisans are mentioned in the Sīyaḍoṇi inscription: potters, stonecutters, sugar boilers, oil millers, and liquor distillers. Only two merchant specialties are mentioned: those mainly dealing in salt and those dealing in betel. Sīyaḍoṇi's salt merchants seem to have been especially prominent – of the 27 donation deeds in the Sīyaḍoṇi inscription, 17 were by salt merchants. Salt was a highly prized commodity in early medieval India, and Sīyaḍoṇi's salt merchants likely gained their wealth from importing salt and then shipping it off to various destinations, where they sold it for a large profit.[2]: 134, 136–7 

Governance edit

Sīyaḍoṇi was a sub-capital of the Gurjara-Pratihāra empire, ruled by local feudatories subject to the main Gurjara-Pratihāra kings. The exact nature of this arrangement is unclear; the feudatories may have been assigned to govern the city on a temporary basis. Four different rulers of Sīyaḍoṇi are mentioned in the Sīyaḍoṇi inscription, over a period of about 60 years:[3]: 138, 140–1  Bhoja, Mahendrapāla, Kṣitipāla, and finally Devapāla. They are mentioned with various titles, such as mahāpratihāra, samādhigataśeṣamahāśabda, and mahāsāmantādhipati.[2]: 134 

The feudatory rulers of Sīyaḍoṇi appointed pañcakulas to serve as the city's administrative body. The names of some pañcakula's members are recorded, but their backgrounds are not. Other officials, such as karaṇikas and kauptikas, are also attested at Sīyaḍoṇi.[3]: 138, 143 

While Sīyaḍoṇi was under the rule of these feudatories, the city itself seems to have had at least some autonomy. For example, the first donation mentioned is one where the whole town, as a corporate body, granted a field to the temple of Nārāyaṇabhattāraka.[2]: 134–5 

Layout of the city edit

The Sīyaḍoṇi inscription calls the city a paṭṭana, indicating it was a relatively large city. Brajadulal Chattopadhyaya wrote that Sīyaḍoṇi was probably physically larger than the contemporary city of Tattānandapura (present-day Ahar, Uttar Pradesh) because of Sīyaḍoṇi's many marketplaces. Multiple types of streets are mentioned in the Sīyaḍoṇi inscription; there was probably some functional distinction between them. One street is mentioned as belonging to merchants (vaṇijonijarathyā).[3]: 134, 136 

Several different terms for residences are encountered: aparasaraka (houses with a porch or vestibule), āvāsanikā (dwellings in general), and gṛhabhitti (house sites). There does not seem to have been any segregation of castes into different neighbourhoods.[3]: 136, 139 

Temples and temple donations edit

Several different temples are attested in the Sīyaḍoṇi inscription: those of Nārāyaṇabhattāraka, Śivabhattāraka, Bhaillasvāmī, and Sīgākīyadeva. These were all built by merchants. The donations recorded in the inscription include merchants assigning various houses and shops to these temples, so that their rent would go to the temple. This rent was mostly paid in cash. Besides the dramma, which is the most commonly attested coin from early medieval India, many different forms of currency are mentioned in the Sīyaḍoṇi inscription (not all of which are necessarily local in origin, or even coins). [3]: 137, 143–5 

[3]: 137, 143 

Demographics edit

As of 2011, Siron Khurd had a population of 1,437, in 238 households.[1]: 108  This population was 53.0% male (761) and 47.0% female (676). The 0-6 age group numbered 246 (134 male and 112 female), or 17.1% of the total population. 267 residents were members of Scheduled Castes, or 18.6% of the total.[5]: 68–9 

Infrastructure edit

As of 2011, Siron Khurd had 1 primary school; it did not have any kind of healthcare facilities. Drinking water was provided by well and hand pump; there were no public toilets. The village had no post office or public library; there was at least some access to electricity for residential and agricultural purposes. Streets were made of both kachcha and pakka materials.[1]: 108–13 

See also edit

  • Ahar, Uttar Pradesh: Site of the contemporary city of Tattānandapura
  • Gwalior: Another major political centre under the Gurjara-Pratiharas during the 10th century

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e "Census of India 2011: Uttar Pradesh District Census Handbook - Lalitpur, Part A (Village and Town Directory)" (PDF). Census of India. Retrieved 19 June 2023.
  2. ^ a b c d e Shah, K. K. (1988). "Salt Merchants of Siyadoni". Proceedings of the Indian History Congress. 49: 134–7. JSTOR 44148363. Retrieved 20 July 2023.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i Chattopadhyaya, Brajadulal (1994). The Making of Early Medieval India (PDF). New Delhi: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-564076-4. Retrieved 17 July 2023.
  4. ^ Mishra, Aman (2022). "Sīyaḍoṇi: an unplanned town of the Gurjara-Pratīhāra times". Urban History: 1–18. doi:10.1017/S096392682200030X. S2CID 250401937. Retrieved 22 July 2023.
  5. ^ "Census of India 2011: Uttar Pradesh District Census Handbook - Lalitpur, Part B (Village and Town Wise Primary Census Abstract)" (PDF). Census of India. Retrieved 19 June 2023.