Sri Mara (
Cham: ꨦꨴꨫ ꨠꨩꨣ,
Khmer: ឝ្រី មារ,
Thai: ศรีมาระ fl. 137 or 192 AD), also known as Khu Liên or Ou Lian (
Chinese: 甌連), was the founder of the kingdom of
Champa.[1][2]: 43 He was originally a local official of
Xianglin (Tượng Lâm), then under the rule of the Chinese
Eastern Han dynasty.
Biography
He is known in Chinese records as Ōu Lián (
甌連), or Zhulian, which in Vietnamese pronunciation is Khu Liên (
chữ Hán: 區連). Attempts have also been made to identify Sri Mara with
Fan Shiman (范師蔓) of
Funan (circa 230 CE).[3][4][5] on
a stele recorded as Sri Mara (Chinese 释利摩罗).[6]
He was born in
Tượng Lâm (Vietnamese pronunciation of Chinese 象林, in what is today
Thừa Thiên Huế province in
Central Vietnam) an area of tension between the
Han dynasty and the natives of
Lâm Ấp (Vietnamese pronunciation of Chinese Lin Yi 林邑, the precursor to
Champa). In 137 or 192 AD,[7] he defeated the Chinese prefect and declared himself king of Lin-yi.[8]: 323 This is considered the official founding of Champa, though Cham legend dates the founding to be much earlier.[9]
In 248, he led the Cham in looting and razing
Jiaozhi and
Jiuzhen. The Cham then defeated the fleet sent to repulse them, at Bay of the Battle.[10]: 26–27
^Milton Walter Meyer Asia: A Concise History 1997 Page 63 "around the beginning of the third century a Hindu ruler named Sri Mara founded the kingdom of Champa and conquered ..."
^Coedès, George (1968). Walter F. Vella (ed.). The Indianized States of Southeast Asia. trans.Susan Brown Cowing. University of Hawaii Press.
ISBN978-0-8248-0368-1.
^Dougald J. W. O'Reilly Early Civilizations of Southeast Asia - 2007 -Page 131 "preferred to identify Sri Mara with Fan Shi-man of Funan (circa 230 C.E.). This view is indirectly supported by Filliozat (1968) and Jacques (1969, 123).
^H. R. Chakrabartty Vietnam, Kampuchea, Laos, bound in comradeship: a panoramic study 1988 - Volume 2 - Page 423 "Maintaining his tempo of triumphs, Fan Shih-man, or Sri Mara, conquered most of Siam, central Burma and northern Malaya.5 According to Chinese sources, the Great King died in action while campaigning in Chin-lin, meaning 'Frontier of ."
^邱新民, 东南亚文化交通史 Singapore Society of Asian Studies - 1984- Page 184 "晋书卷九十七林邑国传说: "后汉末,县功曹姓区,有子日连,杀令自立为王,子孙相承"。其详细情形,据水经注卷三十六引林邑记说: "国无文史,失其籌代,世数难详"。但据一般的研究,以为林邑王统的始祖,是碑文中所载的释利摩罗"
^Higham, C., 2014, Early Mainland Southeast Asia, Bangkok: River Books Co., Ltd.,
ISBN9786167339443
^Nguyễn Khắc ViệnVietnam, a Long History reprint 2002 Page 107 "... Cù Mông Pass (present-day Quảng Nam and Nghĩa Bình provinces) which Chinese historians called Lin Yi, or Lâm Ấp in ... Under the Gangaraja Dynasty (6[th] to 8[th] century) which comprised nine successive kings, the capital was transferred to "
^Maspero, G., 2002, The Champa Kingdom, Bangkok: White Lotus Co., Ltd.,
ISBN9747534991