Dharma Pala
Dharma Pala was ruler of Pala dynasty of Kamarupa Kingdom. He was the son and the successor of Harsha Pala.
Inscriptions
Three copper plates are found from Dharma's reign:- Khonamukh plates
- Subhankarapataka grant
- Pushpabhadra plates
''Kamarupanagar''
The introduction of the first two prashastis is exception in the sense that it has the name of its composer, Prasthanakalsa, unlike the earlier inscription in Assam, excepting the Gachtal copper plate inscription of Gopala, composed by Balabhadra. The mention of Dharmapala as "flourishing in a city called Kamarupanagar" in Aniruddha's prashati has created controversy, for the capital of Brahma Pala line is named Hadappaka in some records and Durjaya in others. It is also accepted that Ratna Pala transferred his capital to Durjaya and Gopala restored it to Hadappaka. It is thus difficult to determine if Kamarupanagar is same as Hadappaka or it is different and new city altogether.According to Bhattacharya, Dharma Pala's capital has to be identified with the city that later was known as Kamatapur on the Dharla River, a tributary of the Brahmaputra River. Since the ruins of Kamatapur lie south-west of Cooch Behar and from Dhubri on the Brahmaputra, observations of Bhattacharya lacks credence, more so because of the evidence later revealed by the Gachtal plates.
In 1809, Francis Buchanan-Hamilton spoke of the ruins of Dharma Pala's city near Dimla in Rangpur district of Bangladesh, about from the Teesta River and regarded the King as belonging to Pala Dynasty of Kamarupa. There is a belief that Dharmapala did build a city in the western fringe of his domain. There is no satisfactory evidence to identify Dharma Pala's capital Kamarupanagar with Kamatapur, particularly as the two names have no resemblance. But tradition associated Dharma Pala not with Kamatapur but with a city about away.