| Avanisulamani | |
|---|---|
| Maravarman | |
| Reign | c.590–620 CE[1] |
| Predecessor | Kadungon |
| Successor | Seliyan Sendan (Jayantavarman) |
| Dynasty | Pandya |
| Father | Kadungon |
| Pandya dynasty |
|---|
| Early Pandya polity |
| Early Medieval Pandyas |
|
Maravarman Avanisulamani (IAST: Avaniśūlāmani; r. c. 590–620 CE)(Tamil: அவனி சூளாமணி) was a Pandya ruler of early historic south India.[2] He was the son and successor of Kadungon, who revived the Pandya dynastic power after the Kalabhra interregnum. Not much information is available about either of these kings.[2]
Velvikkudi Grant (a later copper-plate inscription) is the only source information about Avanisulamani.[3][4] The grant praises the Pandya, claiming that he removed the common ownership of the Earth (by making it his own) and married the goddess of the flower (Lakshmi).[4]
Maravarman Avanisulamani was succeeded by his son Seliyan Sendan (Jayantavarman).[2][1]