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Sindhu Kingdom is mentioned in Indian epics like the Mahabharata and Harivamsa Purana, often alongside the Sauvira kingdom, to be located on the banks of river Sindhu (Indus). It is believed that Sindhu kingdom was founded by Vrishadarbha, one of sons of Sivi. Its inhabitants of the kingdoms were called Sindhus or Saindhavas.
Sindhu-Sauvīra (Sanskrit: Sindhu-Sauvīra; Pāli: Sindhu-Sovīra) was an ancient Indo-Aryan kingdom of western South Asia whose existence is attested during the Iron Age. The inhabitants of Sindu were called the Saindhavas , and the inhabitants of Sauvīra were called Sauvīrakas .
Sindhu-Sauvīra (Sanskrit: Sindhu-Sauvīra; Pāli: Sindhu-Sovīra) was an ancient Indo-Aryan kingdom of western South Asia whose existence is attested during the Iron Age. The inhabitants of Sindhu were called the Saindhavas , and the inhabitants of Sauvīra were called Sauvīrakas .
In book 5, section 133 of the Mahabharata, the character Kunti tells the story of Vidula.Vidula persuaded her son, who was the king of Sauvira but banished by the Sindhu king, to fight against the Sindhus and take back his kingdom from them: "And the princess Vidula, one day, rebuked her own son, who, after his defeat by the king of the Sindhus, lay prostrate with heart depressed by despair."
The Rai dynasty (c. 489 –632 CE) was a Buddhist [3] [4] [5] dynasty that ruled the Sindh region preceded by Ror Dynasty. All that is known about the dynasty comes from the Chachnama, a 13th-century Persian work about Sindhi history.
Jayadratha (Sanskrit: जयद्रथ, romanized: Jayadratha) is the king of the Sindhu kingdom featured in the Mahabharata. He was married to Dushala, the only sister of the hundred Kaurava brothers. The son of the king Vriddhakshatra, he is killed by Arjuna. He has a son named Suratha. [1]
The only extant source is the Diwan-i Farruhi, a Persian chronicle by Abul-Hasan Ali describing Mahmud of Ghazni's invasion (1025 AD) of Mansura, the erstwhile capital of Sindh. [6]
Kingdom of Sindh (c. 632– 712 CE) Kingdom of Valabhi (c.475–c.776 CE) The Brahmin dynasty ( c. 632–712 ), [ 2 ] also known as the Chacha dynasty [ 3 ] or Silaij dynasty , [ 4 ] was a Hindu [ 5 ] dynasty that ruled the Sindh region, succeeding the Rai dynasty .