Comments
ElectricFlesh t1_ixiw2g2 wrote
I'd have to see the color of its skin before I can vouch for its historical accuracy.
absolutelyshafted t1_ixjdldj wrote
The Chola Empire is one of the most severely underrated pieces of history imo
Basically a South Indian dynasty which started off pretty small but managed to conquer and rule some significant parts of South east Asia around 900-1100 AD. They had one of the best navies in the world at the time.
But overall they were really big on trading and exploring. Thanks to them, western Asia and Europe could have access to Chinese goods, and vice versa.
Something about sea based empires is so cool to me
BrokenEye3 t1_ixjdoml wrote
But does it still roar?
c4nchyscksforlife t1_ixjdq0o wrote
Sinha no Singh lol
ksdkjlf t1_ixjh6h3 wrote
What the link actually says (emphasis mine):
"Rajendra may have named the city Singapura (“Lion City”), later corrupted to Singapore, or the name may have been bestowed in the 14th century by Buddhist monks, to whom the lion was a symbolic character. According to the Sejarah Melayu, a Malay chronicle, the city was founded by the Srīvijayan prince Sri Tri Buana; he is said to have glimpsed a tiger, mistaken it for a lion, and thus called the settlement Singapura."
I don't see any other sources attributing the naming to Rajendra Chola I. The name change from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Temasek to Singapura is generally noted as occuring in the 1300s, centuries after his forays into the area. Most attribute it to [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sang_Nila_Utama](Sang Nila Utama), though some scholars contend he didn't even exist. There seems to be general agreement that "lion city" is indeed the meaning, though there are several other proposed etymologies, and how it came to have that name is far from settled.
GobindDev OP t1_ixjw2w6 wrote
Singh/Singha comes from the root word Simha. Simha/Sinha--->Sinh/Singh and other cognates of those names. The original Malay word is actually Singapura.
Nickthenuker t1_ixkf2yp wrote
It's historical accuracy is that our national tourism board made it the fuck up 56 years ago (which, for context, was one year after we because independent so it is actually historical)
Spiritual_Donkey7585 t1_ixlkfac wrote
Also simba in lionking has the same root word.
TheSadCheetah t1_ixmeywc wrote
Thalassocracy! there was also Majapahit in Indonesia
[deleted] t1_iy06565 wrote
[deleted]
AudibleNod t1_ixirn2k wrote
They have a merlion as a mascot.
A fukkin merlion!