Madra (Sanskrit: ) was an ancient Indo-Aryan tribe of north-western India whose existence is attested since the Iron Age (c.1100âÂÂ500 BCE). The members of the Madra tribe were called the Madrakas.
The Madras were divided into -Madra ("northern Madra"), -Madra ("southern Madra"), and Madra proper:
The Madrakas, as well as the neighbouring Kekaya and Uà Âënara tribes, were descended from the á¹Âgvedic Anu tribe which lived near the Paruá¹£á¹Âë river in the central Punjab region, in the same area where the Madrakas were later located.
Several Vedic scholars from the period were from Madra proper, including à ÂÃÂkalya, who was a member of the court of the Vaideha king Janaka, as well as MadragÃÂra à Âauá¹ gÃÂyani, and UddÃÂlaka ÃÂruá¹Âi's teacher Patañchala KÃÂpya.
During the 6th century BCE, the Madrakas, along with the Kekayas, Uà Âënaras, and Sibis, fell under the suzerainty of the GandhÃÂra kingdom, which was the principal imperial power in north-west Iron Age India.
During the 5th century BCE, Ká¹£emÃÂ, the daughter of the Madraka king, was married to the MÃÂgadhë king BimbisÃÂra, who himself engaged in diplomatic relations with the Madrakas' suzerain, the Gandhari king PukkusÃÂti.
The Madrakas appear in epic Hindu literature, especially in the and the . In the latter, the wife of the Kuru king PÃÂá¹Âá¸Âu was a Madraka princess eponymously named MÃÂdrë, after the kingdom which she hailed from.
Another famous Madra princess mentioned in the is Savitri, whose father is Ashvapati, the king of Madra.