The Imperial Cholas
Rise, Expansion &
Legacy of a Maritime Empire
The Imperial Cholas built a vast empire across South India, Sri Lanka, and the Malay Peninsula, excelling in administration, trade, and culture. From Vijayalaya's capture of Thanjavur (c. 850 CE) to Rajendra I's astonishing naval campaign against Srivijaya, theirs is one of the great stories of Indian statecraft and seafaring.
Emergence of the Imperial Cholas
The Cholas belonged to one of the three mighty dynasties that ruled the Tamil country in the early Sangam period. Described as the Muvendhar in the Sangam literature, they were known for their valour and patronage of the Tamil language.
They became prominent in the ninth century and established an empire comprising a significant portion of South India. They also extended their sway in Sri Lanka and the Malay Peninsula — and therefore they are called the Imperial Cholas.
The Cholas are a perennial GS-I favourite — spanning polity (the Uttaramerur village-assembly system), economy (land surveys, irrigation, guild trade), art (Dravidian temple architecture, Nataraja bronzes) and maritime history (the Srivijaya campaign). The 2025 Prelims question on Rajendra I's Srivijaya campaign, reproduced at the end, shows how directly this is tested.
While preparing this post we cross-checked the dates against standard sources and corrected three errors carried in widely circulated notes:
- Vijayalaya's capture of Thanjavur: corrected from "815 AD" to c. 848–850 CE (the original itself elsewhere said 850; 815 was inconsistent).
- Battle of Takkolam: corrected from "1948" to c. 949 CE (a clear typo). Crown prince Rajaditya was killed here.
- Rajendra I's Srivijaya campaign: the stray "16" in "16 military campaign" was an OCR slip — it was a naval/maritime campaign, with no numerical significance.
Chola Rulers and Their Contributions
Period: 850–1279 AD · Capital: Tanjore (Thanjavur). The Cholas remained subordinate to the Pallavas in the Kaveri region after the Sangam period, then re-emerged with Vijayalaya, conquering the Kaveri delta from the Muttaraiyar. Sources: inscriptions engraved on copper and stone form the primary sources for studying Chola history.
| Ruler (Reign) | Contributions & Conquests |
|---|---|
| Vijayalaya (c. 848–871 CE) |
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| Aditya I (871–907 CE) |
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| Parantaka I (907–955 CE) |
|
| Period of rapid ascension (955–987 CE) |
|
| Rajaraja I (985–1014 CE) |
|
| Rajendra I (1012/1014–1044 CE) |
|
| Rajadhiraja (1044–1052 CE) |
|
| Rajendra II (1052–1063 CE) |
|
| Virarajendra Chola (1063–1067 CE) |
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| Kulottunga I (1070–1122 CE) |
|
| Later Rulers |
|
Chola Administration
Central Government
- Hereditary monarchy: the emperor or king was at the head of the administration, assisted by a council of ministers.
- Perundanam and sirudanam: the administrative machinery comprising various officials.
- Brahmins were appointed as spiritual preceptors or rajagurus.
- Chola kings added the suffix deva to the names of crowned kings at coronation.
- Extensive grants were made to temples to project the king's authority.
Provincial Administration
- Feudatory system: the Chola rulers followed a system of feudatories.
- Administrative hierarchy: the empire was divided into mandalams (under royal princes or officers) → valanadus (under periyanattar) → nadus (under nattar).
- Each nadu contained a number of autonomous villages.
- Town: known as nagaram, administered by a council called nagarattar.
- Naattukanakku and nattuviyavan: functionaries who recorded the proceedings of the Nattar.
Village Assemblies
- Village autonomy: the system of village self-government with sabhas and committees developed over the ages and reached its peak under the Cholas.
- Sources: the Uttaramerur inscription details the formation and functions of village councils.
- Ur: the general assembly of the village.
- Urar: landholders entrusted with the upkeep of temples and maintenance of tanks.
- Agraharams: the gathering of adult men in Brahmin villages.
- Village council: each village was divided into thirty wards, each nominating members to the council.
Qualifications to become a ward member:
- Ownership of at least one-fourth veli of land.
- An own residence.
- Above thirty and below seventy years of age.
- Knowledge of the Vedas.
Grounds of disqualification (as mentioned in the inscriptions):
- Having been a committee member in the past three years.
- Having failed to submit accounts as a committee member.
- Having committed sins.
- Having stolen the property of others.
- Kudavolai system: the system of nominating persons for each ward for a year (selection by lot using palm-leaf tickets in a pot).
- Six variyams (committees): samvatsara-variyam, eri-variyam, thotta-variyam, pancha-variyam, pon-variyam and puravuvari-variyam.
- Variyapperumakkal: committee members who usually met in the temple or under a tree and passed resolutions.
Military Administration
- Cavalry: kudirai sevagar · Elephant corps: anaiyatka · Bowmen: villaligal · Sword-bearers: valilar · Spearmen: konduvar.
- Nilaipadai: military outposts in conquered territory.
- Nayagam: the captain of a regiment, who later assumed the title padaimudali.
- Senapati and dandanayagam: the commander-in-chief.
- Kaikkolaperumdai: royal troops.
- Velaikkarar: a personal troop to defend the king.
- Kadagams and padaividu: the army and military cantonments.
Chola Economy
Agriculture
- Expansion of agriculture led to the production of a food-grain surplus.
- Valangai: a group of agricultural castes.
- Kudi neekki: the local peasants.
Revenue
- Revenue collection: extensive land surveys and revenue settlements; land tax collected from the agrarian surplus.
- Tax rates were fixed by the soil's fertility and the landholder's status.
- Exemption: temples and Brahmins were exempt from taxes.
- Various taxes: irai, kanikadan, iraikattina-kanikadan and kadami.
- Kudimai: a tax paid by cultivating tenants to the government and to landlords bearing honorific titles such as udaiyan, araiyan and kilavar.
- Opati: levied and collected by the king and local chiefs.
- Iraikattina-nellu: tax paid in kind.
- Puravuvari-tinaikkalam: the department of land revenue (chief — puravuvari-tinaikkalanayagam).
- Naduvagaiseykira: land surveyors from the landholding communities.
- Units of land measurement: kuli, ma, veli, patti, padagam, etc.
- Kalam: the unit for collecting paddy as tax (28 kg).
Irrigation
- The Cholas improved the existing irrigation system and practised a turn system for distributing water.
- Vativaykkal: a criss-cross channel for harnessing rainwater in the Kaveri delta — vati being a drainage channel (north–south) and vaykkal a supply channel (east–west).
- Canals named after kings, queens and gods: Uttamacholavaykkal, Panca-vanamadevi-vaykkal and Ganavathy-vaykkal.
- Ur-vaykkal: a canal owned jointly by landowners. Nattu-vaykkal: nadu-level canals.
- Irrigation tanks: Cholavaridhi, Kaliyaneri, Vairamegatataka and Rajendra Cholaperiyaeri.
- Ainutruvapperari: an irrigation tank constructed by the Valanciyar, a group of traders in Pudukottai.
Water Management
- Water rights: the Cholas assigned different kinds of water rights; land donations and endowments were accompanied by water rights.
- Free labour: periodic and seasonal maintenance of tanks relied on free labour — Vetti and Amanji were forms of free labour for village public works.
- Nirkkiintavaru: the allotment of water. Kumizh and talaivay: channels and gateways for releasing water.
- Talaivayar, Talaivay-chanrar and Eri-araiyarkal: groups responsible for releasing water through the head channel and sluice.
- Kulattar: a group in charge of the kulam. Ernakulam: the commonly owned village tank.
- Eriayam: a tax collected by village assemblies and used for repairing irrigation tanks.
Artisanal Activities
- Weaving industry: particularly silk weaving at Kanchi, flourished.
- Idangai: artisanal and trading caste groupings.
- Metalwork developed owing to the great demand for temple images and utensils.
Trade
- Increased agricultural and artisanal production fuelled the growth of trade.
- Garveras and Gaudas/Gavundas: trading castes.
- Anjuvannattar: maritime traders — West Asians including Jews, Christians and Muslims — settled along the west-coast port towns.
- Manigramattar: hinterland traders settled in interior towns like Kodumbalur, Uraiyur, Kovilpatti and Piranmalai.
- Ainutruvar, disai-ayirattu-ainutruvar and valanciyar: the common banner for Anjuvannattar and Manigramattar after they merged.
- Maritime trade centres: Munai-santai (Pudukkottai), Mylapore and Tiruvotriyur (Chennai), Nagapattinam, Vishakapattinam and Krishnapattinam (south Nellore).
- Peruvazhis: trunk roads.
- Exports: sandalwood, ebony, condiments, precious gems, pepper, oil, paddy, grains and salt.
- Imports: camphor, copper, tin, mercury, etc.
Society and Religion
Society
- Varnashrama system prevailed: Brahmins, Kshatriyas, Vaisyas and Shudras.
- Valangai and Idangai were the two major divisions among the castes.
- Landholding was the prime determinant of social status — hierarchy ran: Brahmadeya-kilavars > landholders of vellanvagai villages > Ulukudi.
- Brahmadeya-kilavars: Brahmin landholders at the top of brahmadeya settlements, enjoying tax exemption and displacing local peasants.
- Ulukudi: tenants who could not own land but cultivated the lands of Brahmins and vellanvagai holders.
- Melvaram (the significant harvest share retained by landholders) and kizh varam (the lower share retained by Ulukudi).
- Paniceymakkal (labourers) and adimaigal (slaves) stayed at the bottom of the hierarchy.
- Women: there was no improvement in their position; sati was prevalent among royal families, and the devadasi system (dancing girls attached to temples) emerged during this period.
Religion
- The Cholas were ardent followers of Shaivism — the iconic form of Siva was Lingodbhava, and the Nataraja idol was the human form.
- Both Saivism and Vaishnavism flourished; the Nayanars (Shaiva) and Alvars (Vaishnava) saints flourished in this period.
- Parantaka I and Uttama Chola (907–970) made provisions and gifted lands to promote religion.
The genius of the Chola state lay not in conquest alone but in its paperwork — the land surveys, the lot-drawn village committees of Uttaramerur, and the inscriptions that turned governance into a permanent record on stone. — Legacy IAS Faculty
Imperial Cholas — UPSC PYQ
Q1. Who among the following led a successful naval campaign against the kingdom of Srivijaya, the powerful maritime state which ruled the Malay Peninsula, Sumatra, Java and the neighbouring islands? (UPSC Prelims 2025)
- a) Amoghavarsha (Rashtrakuta)
- b) Prataparudra (Kakatiya)
- c) Rajendra I (Chola)
- d) Vishnuvardhana (Hoysala)
Answer: (c) Rajendra I (Chola). Rajendra I's overseas naval expedition against Srivijaya (Kadaram) was unique in Indian history — no other Indian ruler launched a comparable transoceanic military campaign. His victory earned him the title Kadaramkondan, and he is also remembered as Gangaikondan for his Gangetic campaign against Mahipala I of Bengal.
Key Takeaways
- Vijayalaya (c. 848–871 CE) founded the Imperial Chola line by capturing Thanjavur from the Muttaraiyar around 850 CE — not 815 CE, a common error in circulating notes.
- Parantaka I gave us the priceless Uttaramerur inscriptions on village self-government, but lost crown prince Rajaditya at the Battle of Takkolam (c. 949 CE) against the Rashtrakutas.
- Rajaraja I (985–1014) — "Mummudi-Chola" — peaked Chola power with conquests across South India, Sri Lanka and the Maldives, shifting the Lankan capital to Polonnaruwa.
- Rajendra I ("Gangaikondan", "Kadaramkondan") launched the landmark naval campaign against Srivijaya and founded Gangaikondacholapuram — the answer to the 2025 Prelims question.
- Local self-government under the Kudavolai lot system, with ward qualifications and six variyam committees, is the Cholas' most exam-relevant administrative legacy.
- Economically, the Cholas combined land surveys, graded irrigation channels (vativaykkal), and powerful merchant guilds (Ainutruvar, Manigramattar, Anjuvannattar) driving Indian Ocean trade.
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