Kamapitha
Kamapitha is one of the four Kamarupa Pithas, the geographical divisions of ancient Kamarupa. Dineshchandra Sircar points out that these divisions are not found in the Kamarupa inscriptions and that they might be fabrications from late medieval sources, such as 16th-century work Yogini Tantra gives the boundaries of Kamapitha and other three pithas, the same work which gives boundaries of ancient Kamrup kingdom as well. The eastern border of Kamarupa was the temple of the goddess Tamreshvari near present-day Sadiya
Boundaries
Traditional sources defines boundaries of Kamapitha as area between Manas river and Silghat, Sankosh and Kapili river, based on ancient work Yogini Tantra, areas comprising western boundary of current Kamrup and part of Nagaon district as eastern boundary, in first case, while in second case, Undivided Kamrup plus small part of Undivided Goalpara District.Modern scholarship, considering change in course of rivers, gives Kamapitha area as Guwahati area up to the Manas River, which is Kamrup, as Kamapitha. Pratap Chandra Choudhury, has no difficulty in accepting that Kamapitha of Tantras, is nothing else than Kamrup and Kamakhya area of Guwahati itself. Kamarupa Anusandhan Samiti, also presses that it is rather absurd, to exclude Kamakhya from the region called Kamapitha.
Source | Western | Eastern | Current regions | Reference |
Yogini-tantra | Karatoya | Sankosh | North Bengal | Gait 1906, pp10–11, Sircar 1990, p68 |
- | Manas | Silghat | Kamrup, parts of Darrang | Sircar 1990, p68 |
Kamrupar Buranji | Sankosh | Duimunisila | Parts of Goalpara, Kamrup and parts of Nagaon | Bhuyan 1930, p1 |
Hara-gauri-samvada | Sankosh | Kapili | Parts of Goalpara, Kamrup and parts of Nagaon | Kakati 1967, p7 |
Vrihadgavakashtantra | Manas | Biswanath | Kamrup and Darrang | KAS 1985, p100 |
R M Nath | Manas | Guwahati | Kamrup | Goswami 1998, p25 |
R M Nath | Manas | Rupahi | Kamrup | Nath 1978, p4 |