Purushottama Deva

Purushottama Deva
Gajapati
Gajapati Purushottam Deva depicted according to the Odia folklore of Kanchi Abhijaan and Manika, in the traditional wall painting of the Jagannath temple
Gajapati
First reign1467 – October 1472
PredecessorKapilendra Deva
SuccessorHamvira Deva
Kalingaadhipati
Second reign1476 1497
PredecessorHamvira Deva
SuccessorPrataprudra Deva
Died1497 CE
Kataka, Kalinga, Eastern Ganga dynasty, (modern day Cuttack, Odisha)
SpousePadmavati
IssuePrataprudra Deva
HouseSuryavamsha
FatherKapilendra Deva
MotherParvati Devi
ReligionHinduism

Vira Pratapa Purushottama Deva (Odia: ବୀରପ୍ରତାପ ପୁରୁଷୋତ୍ତମ ଦେବ) was the second ruler from the Suryavamsa Gajapati dynasty. His father Gajapati Kapilendra Deva chose him as his heir to rule the Gajapati Kingdom at the banks of river Krishna where he breathed his last. This decision infuriated his elder brother Hamvira Deva who was a battle hardened and successful warrior fulfilling the task of conquering the southern territories and expeditions against the Vijayanagara Empire as wished by his father.

There is a legend that when, under divine guidance, Kapilendra Deva announced that he was naming Purushottama as heir apparent, the eighteen older sons in anger threw spears at Purushottama, all of which missed. Purushottama Deva is also the lead character of the legend of Kanchi Kaveri Upakhyana (poem) written by the poet Purushottama Dasa in sixteenth century and later adapted to Bengali by the Bengali poet Rangalal Bandyopadhyay. This legend is also popular among the Hindu devotees of the Jagannath worship tradition of Odisha.