Sri Kesari Warmadewa


Sri Kesari Warmadewa was the first king of Bali whose name is recorded in a written inscription. He was the issuing authority for four inscriptions, including the famous 914 CE inscription on the Belanjong pillar in southern Sanur.

Reign

Sri Kesari is the first Balinese king whose name appears in inscriptions. The Belanjong pillar gives his name as Śrī Kesarī Varma. The -deva part of the name does not appear clearly on the stone, but is a conjecture based on the common use of the title Varmadeva in later Balinese inscriptions. In the other inscriptions, his name is abbreviated to Śri Kesari, alternatively spelled Śri Khesari and Śri Kaisari. Sri Kesari's title in the Blanjong pillar is samasta-samanta-adhipatiḥ, which is best translated as "universal sovereign", rather than its later meanings of "governor" or "vizier".
Sri Kesari is the first Balinese king to use the Warmadewa title, and so he is often considered the founder as the Warmadewa dynasty. Several generations of later Balinese kings used this title, including the famous king Udayana Warmadewa. However, there is little explicit information about how the various monarchs called Warmadewa were related to each other. The term "dynasty", in this context, therefore refers generally to a group of monarchs who share a common element in their titles, rather than a hereditary lineage.
All inscriptions from Sri Kesari's reign were issued in the month Phalguna of the Śaka year 835, which is roughly equivalent to February 914 CE. There are no named kings in earlier Balinese inscriptions, so it is not possible to set a limit on how early Sri Kesari's reign began. The earliest inscription of the next Balinese king Ugrasena is dated 12 July 915, so it can be inferred that Sri Kesari's reign ended sometime between February 914 and July 915 CE.
In the Belanjong pillar, there are geographical references to the "island of Bali" and to a palace called Siṁhadvāla, though Damais read it Siṁhārccala. This may be the name of Sri Kesari's palace mentioned in the other inscriptions. Some historians often identify Siṁhadvāla with the Siṁhamandava mentioned in earlier inscriptions, which is believed to be somewhere in central Bali. The National History of Indonesia, Revised Edition states that "it is not yet clear how Singhadwāla and Singhamandawa were connected".
It has been speculated that Sri Kesari was a Buddhist king of the Sailendra Dynasty leading a military expedition, to establishing a Mahayana Buddhist government in Bali. However, this theory is not supported by explicit evidence from Sri Kesari's own inscriptions.