Kesariraja
Kesariraja was a 12th-century mixed Tai-Mon monarch mentioned in the. He was the son of King Shridhammatripitaka of Chiang Saen and Padumdevi, a Mon princess, the daughter of King Suvacanaraja of Si Satchanalai. Following the successful capture of Lavapura of the Lavo by his father in 1106, Kesariraja was installed as the new sovereign.
Kesariraja had one younger brother, Jatisagara, who ruled Wiang Chai Narai and subsequently succeeded their father at Yonok's Chiang Saen. Kesariraja married Suladevi, a princess of Si Satchanalai under the successor of King Suvachanaraja, and they had one son, Duangkrian Krishnaraja. Duangkrian Krishnaraja married Rajadevi, a Xiān princess under Phra Chao Luang, and later ruled Kishkindha, a polity under the authority of Lavo in the present-day Ban Mo district.
Kesariraja was succeeded by Sri Dharmasokaraja I. The precise date of this succession, as well as the nature of their familial relationship, remains unknown. Sri Dhammasokaraja ruled Lavapura until 1117, when he was deposed by the Angkorian monarch Sri Jayasinghavarman, identified with Suryavarman II.