The existence of this king has not yet been scientifically confirmed and is only evident from religious literature such as Periyapuranam, semi-biographical poems of the later Chola period, and temple and cave inscriptions.
Description
Two names stand out prominently from among those of the Cōḷa kings known to the Sāngam literature; and their memory is cherished in song and legend by a loving posterity; they are those of Karikāla and Kōccengaṇān.
The life of Kōccengaṇān, like that of Karikāla, came to gather a haze of legend round itself; and it is necessary to avoid mixing up facts drawn from contemporary sources with the beliefs of later times. A song in the Puṟanānūṟu and the forty verses that contitute the poem Kaḷavaḷi by Poygaiyār frome the earliest evidence on this king’s life.
The references to him in the hymns of Tiruñānasambandar and Tirumangai Āḷvār as well as Sundaramūrti take us to the next stage in which the emphasis falls on the religious side of the king’s life.
He figures also in the legendary genealogy of the Cōḷa copper-plates of the tenth and eleventh centuries though his place in the list is not the same in all.
Informations
Preamble: no preamble of the Chola ruler available
Title: no ruler title available
Year of birth: no date available
Place of birth: no location available
Year of death: no date available
Place of death: no location available
Reign: no information about his reign
Seat of government: no location available
Predecessor: no name available
Successor: no name available
Father: no information about his father
Mother: no information about his mother
Wives: no information about his wives
Children: no information about his children
Era: Sangam period
Time period: Early Cholas
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