Ahom Kingdom (1228 to 1826)
The Glorious Years
In early 13th century, Sukaphaa, a Shan (Mong Mao) prince began his journey with about 9000 (Edward Gait) followers, mostly men. He crossed the Patkai hills, fought and defeated the Nagas and reached the Brahmaputra valley in 1228. He moved from place to place, searching for a seat. He decided not to attack the Morans and Borahis but befriend them instead. His followers, much depleted from the original 9000, married into the Borahi and the Moran ethnic groups. The Borahis, a Tibeto-Burman ethnic group, were subsumed into the Ahom fold, though the Moran maintained their independent ethnicity. Sukaphaa finally established his capital at Charaideo near present-day Sivasagar in 1253 and began the task of state formation.
The Kingdom
The kings were called Chao-Pha in the Ahom language and Swargadeo in the Assamese language. Succession was by agnatic primogeniture. Nevertheless, following Rudra Singha's deathbed injunction four of his five sons became the king one after the other.
The Ahom kings were given divine origin. According to Ahom tradition, Sukaphaa was a descendant of Khunlung, who had come down from the heavens and ruled Mong-Ri-Mong-Ram. During the reign of Suhungmung (1497-1539) which saw the composition of the first Assamese Buranji and increased Hindu influence, the Ahom kings were traced to the union of Indra (identified with Khunlung) and Syama (a low-caste woman), and were declared Indravamsa kshatriyas, a lineage created for the Ahoms. Suhungmung adopted the title Swarganarayan, and the later kings were called Swargadeos (Lord of the heavens).
The position of Swargadeo was reserved for the descendants of Sukaphaa and they were not eligible for ministerial positions, a division of power that was followed till the end of the dynasty and the kingdom. When the nobles asked Atan Burhagohain to became the king, the Tai priests rejected the idea and he desisted from ascending the throne.
The king could be appointed only with the concurrence of the patra matris (council of ministers viz., Burhagohain, Borgohain, Borpatrogohain, Borbarua and Borphukan). The ministers could remove unacceptable kings, and resorted to executing several erstwhile king.
During three periods in the 14th century (1364-1369; 1376-1380; 1389-1397), the kingdom had no kings when acceptable candidates were not found.
In the 17th century power struggle, the increasing number of claimants to the throne resulted in kings being deposed in quick successions, and executed after the new king was instated.
To avoid this bloody end and safeguard his rule, Sulikphaa 'Lora Roja' (1679-1681) introduced a new rule that claimants to the throne had to be physically unblemished, which meant that threats to the throne could be removed by merely slitting the ear of an ambitious prince. Exploting this rule Rudra Singha (1696-1714), suspecting his brother Lechai's intention, mutilated and banished him. On his deathbed Rudra Singha, however, instructed that all his sons were to become kings. One of his sons, Mohanmala, was superseded, who went on to lead a rebel group during the Moamoria rebellion. T
The later kings and officers exploited the unblemished rule, leading to weak kings being instated. Kamaleswar Singha, son of Kadam Dighala (1795-1811) and Purandar Singha, son of Brajanath and one of the last kings of this dynasty (1818-1819) came into office because their fathers were mutilated.
Coronation
The Swargadeo's coronation was called singari-ghar-utha, a ceremony that was performed first by Sudangphaa Bamuni Konwar (1397-1407). This was the occasion when the first coins in the new king's name were minted. Kamaleshwar Singha (1795-1811) and Chandrakanta Singha's (1811-1818) coronations were not performed on the instructions of Purnananda Burhagohain. Kings who died in office were buried in vaults called Moidam, at Charaideo. Some of the earlier Moidams were looted by Mir Jumla in the 17th century, and are lost. Some later kings, especially with Siba Singha (1714-1744), who were cremated had their ashes buried.
Royal offices
Sukhramphaa (1332-1364) established the position of Charing Raja which came to be reserved for the heir apparent. The first Charing Raja was Sukhramphaa's half-brother, Chao Pulai, the son of the Kamata princess Rajani, but who did not ultimately become the Swargadeo. Suhungmung Dihingia Raja (1497-1539) settled the descendants of past kings in different regions that gave rise to seven royal houses - Saringiya, Tipamiya, Dihingiya, Samuguriya, Tungkhungiya, Parvatiya and Namrupiya - and periods of Ahom rule came to be known after these families. The rule of the last such house, Tungkhungiya, was established by Gadadhar Singha (1681-1696) and his descendants ruled the kingdom till the end of the Ahom kingdom.
Queens
Ahom queens (Kunworis) played important roles in the matter of state. They were officially designated in a gradation of positions, called the Bor Kuwori (Chief Queen), Parvatia Kuwori, Raidangia Kuwori, Tamuli Kuwori etc. who were generally daughters of Ahom noblemen and high officials. Lesser wives of the Swargadeo were called chamua kunworis. Some of the queens were given separate estates that were looked after by state officials (Phukans or Baruas) (Gogoi). During the reign of Siba Singha (1714-1744), the king gave his royal umbrella and royal insignia to his queens - Phuleshwari Kunwori, Ambika Kunwori and Anadari Kunwori in succession - to rule the kingdom. They were called Bor-Rojaa.
Court influences
Sukaphaa's ruling deity was Chomdeo a non-Hindu, non-Buddhist god, and he was accompanied by classes of priests called Deodhai, Bailung etc. But the Ahom kings let themselves be influenced by the religion and customs of those they ruled over. The first Hindu influence was cast during the reign of Sudaangphaa 'Bamuni Konwar' (1397-1407), who had grown up in a Brahmin household. Suhungmung 'Dihingia Rojaa' was the first Ahom king to expand the kingdom and the polity, allow Assamese influence in his court and accept a non-Ahom title - Swarganarayan. Assamese coexisted with Tai till the reign of Pratap Singha (1552-1603), during whose rule Assamese became dominant. Sutamla (1648-1663) was the first Ahom king to be initiated into the Mahapuruxiya Dharma. Later Tunkgkhungia kings were suspicious of the Sattras and tried to decrease their influence by supporting a section while suppressing another, and by supporting sakta worship.
Expansion
The Ahom kingdom then consolidated its powers for the next 300 years or so. The first major expansion was at the cost of the Chutiya kingdom, which was annexed in 1522 under Suhungmung. The expansion was not just a success of Ahom military prowess, but also a result of changes in the Ahom social and political outlook. For example, Suhungmung was the first Ahom king to adopt a Hindu name: Swarga Narayan. The Chutiya region was placed under the Sadiyakhowa Gohain a new position that was created. In 1536 the Kacharis were uprooted from their capital at Dimapur. Thus by the middle of the 16th century, the Ahoms were in control over eastern Assam. In 17th century, after the Battle of Itakhuli in 1682 that marked the end of the Ahom-Mughal conflicts, much of the control of Koch Hajo fell into the hands of the Ahoms.
End of Ahom rule
Their power declined in latter half of the 18th century. The capital city was taken for a short period during the Moamoria rebellion. In the first part of the 19th century, the Burmese army invaded their kingdom who set up a puppet Ahom king. The Burmese were defeated by the British in the First Anglo-Burmese War resulting in the Treaty of Yandaboo in 1826, which paved the way for the British to convert the Ahom kingdom into a principality and which marked the end of the Ahom rule.
The Ahom people
The Tai Ahoms who came into Assam followed their traditional religion and spoke the Tai language. They were a very small group numerically and after the first generation, the group was a mixture of the Tai and the local population. Over time the Ahom state adopted the Assamese language and kings and other high officials converted to Hinduism. Except for some special offices (the king and the raj mantris), other positions are open to members of all tribes and religion. They kept good records, and are known for their chronicles, called Buranjis.
One of its greatest achievements was the stemming of Mughal expansionism. In the celebrated battle of Saraighat, the Ahom general Lachit Borphukan defeated the Mughal forces on the outskirts of present day Guwahati in 1671.
Ahom people today
Further reading
- Fragment Histories:Struggling to be Tai-Ahom. Duke University Press,2004
- Gogoi, N. K. (2006). Continuity and change among the Ahom. Concept Pub. Co. ISBN 8180692817
- Phukon, G. (1998). State of Tai culture among the Ahoms

