Sri Indravarman
Sri Indravarman was an 8th-century king of the Srivijaya Kingdom who sent three emissaries to the Chinese Tang dynasty, first in 702 CE, second in 716 CE, and third in 724 CE. His name was recorded in the Chinese sources as Che-li-t'o-lo-pa-mo.{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=IBPVAAAAMAAJ&q=Che-li-t'o-lo-pa-mo+Indravarman|title=Journal of the Greater India Society|date=1956|publisher=The Society|language=en|pages=73}} He was also recorded to have sent two letters to the Arabian Umayyad caliphs, first in c. 680 CE and second in 718 CE.{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=EiVyAwAAQBAJ&q=Sri+Indravarman&pg=PA140|title=Ebbs and Flows of Medieval Empires, AD 900?1400|last=Slatyer|first=Will|date=2014|publisher=Partridge India|isbn=9781482896831|language=en|pages=140–141}} Listed among the Srivijayan gifts to the Chinese emperor was a ts'engchi (from Arabic: zanji, black people) slave, presumably received from its Arabic connection.{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ePSkf-DHu5YC&q=Indravarman+724+China&pg=PA157|title=Islam in the Indonesian World: An Account of Institutional Formation|authorlink=Azyumardi Azra|last=Azra|first=Azyumardi|date=2006|publisher=Mizan Pustaka|isbn=9789794334300|language=en|pages=155–158}}
These relationships suggested that Srivijaya during his reign already had good international trades with the outside world, both from West and East Asia.
Indravarman was succeeded by his son Rudra Vikrama, who continued sending embassies to China.{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=D5nWAAAAMAAJ&q=rudra+vikrama|title=Memoirs of the Research Department|first=(Japan)|last=Tōyō Bunko|date=1972|language=en|page=5}}
References
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Category:Maharajas of Srivijaya
Category:Indonesian Buddhist monarchs
Category:8th-century monarchs in Asia
Category:8th-century Indonesian people
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