Mpu Sindok

Sindok is
reported to have had two wives, one of whom, Sri Parameswari Dyah Kbi, may have
been the daughter of Dyah Wawa, the last known ruler of ancient Mataram in
Central Java. Since it is known that Sindok had formerly held a high
ministerial position in the Mataram government, it seems likely that he was
recognized as the successor to Dyah Wawa on the strength of this marriage.
Despite
the discovery of quite a number of stone inscriptions dating from Sindok's
reign, the information which they reveal has not helped to shed very much light
on this historical period. Our most informative source, in fact, dates from the
following century, when East Java was ruled by King Airlangga. An inscription
known as the 'Calcutta Stone', so named because it is preserved in the Indian
Museum of Calcutta, traces the genealogy of Airlangga back to King Sindok. Thus
we are informed that, following Sindok's death in A.D.947/8, the throne was
taken over by his daughter, Sri Isana Tunggawijaya, who was married to a Sri
Lokapala. Their son and successor, Sri Makutawangsawardhana, was known as the
'Sun of the Isana Dynasty'. It was from the union of his daughter,
Mahendradatta, with the Balinese ruler Udayana, that Airlangga was born.
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