Goda Ravi

Goda Ravi
Ruler of the Chera Kingdom
Reign905/06–c. 943/44 AD
PredecessorGoda Goda (or) Kerala Kesari
SuccessorIndu/Indesvaran Goda
HouseMedieval Cheras of Kerala
ReligionHinduism

Goda Ravi (fl. 905/06–c. 943/44 AD) was a Chera Perumal king of medieval Kerala, southern India. The reign of Goda Ravi witnessed strengthened Chera ties with the Cholas, as numerous Kerala military personnel served under the Chola prince Rajaditya in the Tamil country.

Temple inscriptions mentioning Goda Ravi have been discovered in central Kerala and north-central Kerala. These records refer, among other things, to several Chera royals (princes titled Koyil or Ala-Koyil and queens/princesses called Cheraman Maha Devi or Ravi Piratti), the chieftains of Vembanadu (Alappuzha) and Valluvanadu (the latter with the title "Rayira Ravar"), and the so-called "Agreement of Muzhikkulam". It is also known that the deposed Pandya ruler, Rajasimha II, took refuge with the Cheras or Keralas around 920 AD.

Goda Ravi was formerly identified with king Vijayaraga (c. 883/84 — c. 895 AD) of the medieval Chera dynasty of Kerala. He was also initially identified as the brother-in-law of Pandya ruler Jatavarman Kulasekhara Deva I.