Jaya Simhavarman II

{{Infobox royalty

| name = Jaya Simhavarman II

| title = raja-di-raja

| image=

| caption =

| succession = King of Champa

| reign = 1041-1044

| coronation = 1041

| full name = Yāṅ poṅ ku Śrī Simhavarmadeva

| predecessor = Vikrantavarman IV

| successor = Jaya Paramesvaravarman I

| queen =

| issue =

| royal house =

| dynasty =

| father = Vikrantavarman IV

| mother = ?

| birth_date = ?

| birth_place = Champa

| death_date = 1044

| death_place = Northern Champa

| date of burial =

| place of burial =

| religion =

|}}

Jaya Simhavarman II ({{zh|c=刑卜施離值星霞弗|p=Xíng Bǔ Shīlí Zhíxīngxiáfú}}{{efn|group=lower-roman|1=The first character may be a scribal error for "Yang"}}), was a king of Champa, supposedly reigning from 1041 to 1044. He succeeded his father Shīlí Pílándéjiābámádié, perhaps Vikrantavarman IV (r. 1030–1041). In late 1042 he sent an envoy with tribute to the court of the Song dynasty.{{cite book|last1=Wade|first1=Geoff|title=Champa in the Song hui-yao: A draft translation |year=2005|publisher=Asia Research Institute, Singapore}}

Simhavarman II might have met with serious trouble during his short-lived reign. From the north, king Ly Thai Tong of Dai Viet accused Cham king's alleging raid in Dai Viet territory, henceforth he provoked war against Champa. In January 1044, the Dai Viet made a landfall in the coastal Huế-Da Nang region from the sea. The northern raiders plundered cities, ravaging the region, then battled against a counter Cham army led by the Cham king (he may be known as king Sạ Đẩu in the 14th-century Vietnamese chronicle Đại Việt sử lược).{{cite book|last1=Vickery|first1=Michael Theodore|title=Champa revised|year=2005|publisher=Asia Research Institute, Singapore|pages=48–49}} Unprepared, Simhavarman's army had been routed and himself was supposedly decapitated by the Dai Viet.{{sfn|Lafont|2007|p=156}}

Then in July, Ly Thai Tong took his soldiers and entered the city of Phật Thệ (Indrapura/Đồng Dương).{{cite book|last1=Vickery|first1=Michael Theodore|title=Champa revised|year=2005|publisher=Asia Research Institute, Singapore}} The raiders sacked the city, took away the royal harem including a Cham princess named Mi E and 5,000 women, artisans, laborers, to the north.{{sfn|Coedès|1975|p=140}}

After much surprise and chaos, a new Cham ruler came to power, with regnal name Jaya Paramesvaravarman I–who was a warrior born from a noble family.{{sfn|Coedès|1975|p=140}}

Notes

{{notelist | group=lower-roman | close}}

References

{{reflist}}

Bibliography

  • {{citation|last=Coedès|first=George|editor-last=Vella|editor-first=Walter F.|year=1975|title=The Indianized States of Southeast Asia|publisher=University of Hawaii Press|isbn=978-0-824-80368-1}}
  • {{citation|last=Lafont|first=Pierre-Bernard|year=2007|title=Le Campā: Géographie, population, histoire|publisher=Indes savantes|isbn=978-2-84654-162-6}}

{{s-start}}

{{succession box|

title=King of Champa|

before=Vikrantavarman IV 1030?–1041?|

after= Jaya Paramesvaravarman I 1044?–1060

|years=1041?–1044?}}

{{s-end}}

{{Kings of Champa|state=collapsed}}

{{Authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Jaya Simhavarman II}}

Category:Kings of Champa

Category:11th-century Vietnamese monarchs

Category:1044 deaths