Rural Violence and Warfare in Medieval South India

The Evidence of Hero-Stones

Authors

  • Daud Ali University of Pennsylvania, US

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.12797/CIS.27.2025.01.01

Keywords:

violence, warfare, hero-stones, rural society, Ganga, Hoysala, medieval South India

Abstract

This paper explores the problem of rural violence in medieval South India through a study of hero-stones collected from the districts of lower Karnataka between the 9th and 13th centuries. These documents reveal a world of everyday violence in which the countryside emerges as a space of potentially open-ended belligerence, and the peasant an armed agent. Furthermore, hero-stone inscriptions suggest that localized rural violence was continuous with, and only partly distinct from, what historians often characterized separately as ‘state violence,’ and in fact existed in a heuristically ‘intermediate realm,’ a point that has serious implications for understanding the nature of state, society and conflict in medieval South India more generally.

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Published

2025-07-07 — Updated on 2025-09-24

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How to Cite

“Rural Violence and Warfare in Medieval South India: The Evidence of Hero-Stones”. (2025) 2025. Cracow Indological Studies 27 (1): 1-42. https://doi.org/10.12797/CIS.27.2025.01.01.

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