Kambojaric
MODERATOR
- Joined
- Apr 6, 2010
- Messages
- 5,480
- Reaction score
- 16
- Country
- Location
Well, you seem to be well up on this! A pleasant surprise; thank you very much!
Oh I love history, and like studying it without bias to the greatest extent possible.
The Kamboh/Kamboja migration to the east is of course tenuous; it is thought that they passed through Tibet in their journey. Very slim, especially as there are no traces, physical or cultural, of their passage. On the other hand, the story of the Ahoms makes us pause and step back from rejecting this theory about the Kambohs outright.
Well the Pala Kambojas are well attested to. We do know from ancient sources that Kamboja cavalry was highly prized, with Sudakshina being mentioned in the Mahabharata as leading the Kamboja cavalry. Groups of mercencary Kamboja cavalrymen had been settling in Bengal (in a similar fashion to how Afghan soldiers were used as mercenaries in later periods). One such mercenary (Rajyapala or Dharmapala, cant remember which one now) was able to amass enough influence and power to actually oust the Palas from NW Bengal, establishing his own dynasty.
However the further east (Cambodia theory) is as you mention quite dubious, although I have never made the effort to properly study this chapter of history. Given that cavalry was the mainstay of the Kambojas however, dense jungle regions like Cambodia was probably not their first choice of destination.
....not to forget the Janissaries.
And even the mighty Ottoman sultans had to try several times before they got rid of this slave-soldier faction.