Palas and Sovereignty: The Buddhist Empire of Eastern India
MTA
A political, religious, and artistic study of the Pala dynasty and its regional influence from the 8th to 12th centuries
2nd Edition
*Palas and Sovereignty: The Buddhist Empire of Eastern India* provides a comprehensive historical analysis of the Pala dynasty, which ruled Bengal and Bihar from the 8th to the 12th centuries. The book argues that the Palas established a unique form of "monastic sovereignty," where Buddhism was not merely a personal religion of the monarchs but a foundational pillar of statecraft, fiscal policy, and international diplomacy. By integrating epigraphic evidence, art history, and environmental studies, the author illustrates how the empire navigated the volatile deltaic landscape of the Ganges-Brahmaputra river systems to create a durable, agrarian-based imperial power.
A central theme of the work is the role of the *mahaviharas*—great monastic universities like Nalanda, Vikramashila, and Somapura—as essential state infrastructure. These institutions functioned as bureaucratic training grounds, centers for land management, and hubs of economic activity that stabilized the agrarian frontier through royal land grants. The book details how the Palas leveraged Vajrayana (Tantric) rituals to legitimize royal authority, performing public ceremonies that synthesized spiritual and temporal power. This religious framework allowed the dynasty to project an image of the "universal monarch" (*chakravartin*) while managing a pluralistic society that included significant Brahmanical influence.
The study further examines the Palas' position as a global intellectual powerhouse, tracing the maritime and Himalayan corridors that linked eastern India to Tibet, Nepal, and Southeast Asia. Through the exchange of palm-leaf manuscripts and the dissemination of the distinctive "Pala-Sena" artistic style, the empire shaped the religious and visual cultures of the broader Buddhist world. The author highlights the pivotal role of translation networks, such as those involving the scholar Atisha, in preserving Indian Buddhist thought after its eventual decline in the subcontinent.
The final chapters address the transition to the Sena dynasty and the environmental factors, such as shifting river courses and monsoon resilience, that impacted the empire’s longevity. The book concludes by reassessing the Pala polity not as a "golden age" myth, but as a pragmatic and sophisticated political system that successfully synthesized religious ideology with imperial administration. By documenting the contributions of queens, artisans, and village devotees alongside royal achievements, the work offers a multi-layered portrait of an empire whose cultural and intellectual afterlives continue to influence Asian history and identity.
This book is intended for scholars and advanced students of South Asian history, Buddhist studies, and imperial systems, particularly those interested in the intersection of religion and state formation. It will benefit researchers focusing on medieval Indian dynasties, monastic economies, art historical analyses of Pala-Sena aesthetics, and scholars examining how religious institutions functioned as administrative and economic nodes in premodern polities. Readers seeking a nuanced, interdisciplinary approach that moves beyond dynastic chronicles to analyze ecological adaptation, international Buddhist networks, and gendered patronage will find this work especially valuable.
April 6, 2026
38,656 words
2 hours 42 minutes
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