'Gangga Negara' is believed to be a lost
Hindu Malay kingdom mentioned in the
Malay Annals that covered present day
Beruas,
Dinding and
Manjung in the state of
Perak,
Malaysia with Raja Gangga Shah Johan as one of its kings. Researchers believe that the kingdom was centered at Beruas and it collapsed after an attack by King
Rajendra Chola I of
Coromandel, South
India, between
1025 and
1026. Another Malay annals Hikayat Merong Mahawangsa known as Kedah Annals, Gangga Negara may have been founded by
Merong Mahawangsa's son Raja Ganjil Sarjuna of
Kedah, allegedly a descendant of
Alexander the Great or by the
Khmer royalties no later than the 2nd century.
Origin

A photo taken from the
National History Museum of Kuala Lumpur. An 8th-9th century bronze standing 8-armed Buddhist
Avalokitesvara statue found at Anglo Oriental,
Bidor, Perak tin mine in year 1936. 79cm height.
Gangga Negara means "a city on the Ganges" in
Sanskrit, the name derived from
Ganganagar in northwest India where the
Kambuja peoples inhabited. The Kambujas are Indo-Iranian Aryan clan of Indo-European family, originally localized in Pamirs and Badakshan. Commonly known as Hindu traders, they built their colonies in Southeast Asia around 2000 years ago at the Mekong valley and also at the Malay archipelago in
Funan,
Chenla,
Champa,
Khmer,
Angkor,
Langkasuka,
Sailendra,
Srivijaya, etc. Historians found the Kambuja traders travelled from Gujarat to Sri Lanka and to Ligor (Nakhon Sri Thammarat) of northern Malay peninsular, overland to Thailand and Cambodia.
Beruas
The first research into the Beruas kingdom was conducted by Colonel James Low in 1849 and a century later, by HG Qlaritch-Males. According to the Museum and Antiquities Department, both researchers agreed that the Gangga Negara kingdom existed but could not ascertain the exact site. For years, villagers had unearthed artefacts, including tombstones with inscriptions that indicated that Beruas could have been the starting point for the spread of Islam in Peninsular Malaysia. Most of the artefacts, believed to be from the ancient kingdoms, are today displayed at the Beruas Museum dated back to the 5th and the 6th century. Artefacts on display include a 128kg cannon, swords, kris, coins, tin ingots, pottery from the Ming Dynasty and various eras, and large jars. Through these artifacts, it has been postulated that
Pengkalan (
Ipoh),
Kinta Valley,
Tanjung Rambutan,
Bidor and
Sungai Siput were part of the kingdom. Artifacts also suggest that the kingdom's center might have shifted several times. Gangga Negara was renamed to Beruas after the establishment of
Islam there.
Beruas tree
The district of Beruas has found some royal Acehnese gravestones and this evidence has it linked to another historical source that a prince from
Aceh of Sumatra rested at Beruas tree (Pokok Bruas), his name was Malik. History of
Pasai did mentioned a
Malik ul Salih whom was the first local Hindu Malay king to convert to Islam in 1267. Today the beruas trees have become extinct but can still be found in the nearby villages of Pengkalan Baru and Batang Kubu.
See also
★
Bujang Valley
★
Kota Gelanggi
★
Kamboja
★
Kambojas and Kambodia
★
Champa
★
Bhagiratha Bringing the Ganga to Earth
★
Kamboja Dynasty of Bengal
★
Indian maritime history
References
★ National Library of Malaysia. ''
Sejarah Malaysia''. URL accessed April 14 2006.
★ ''
Laman Rasmi Muzium-Muzium Negeri Perak''. URL accessed April 14 2006.
External links
★ http://www.kambojsociety.com/KambojWord.asp
★ http://www.sabrizain.demon.co.uk/malaya/hindu.htm
★ http://muzium.perak.gov.my/m_br_bahan.html Beruas Museum