Bhillama II

Bhillama II (r. c. 985–1005 CE) was a ruler of the Seuna (Yadava) dynasty of Deccan region in India.

[2] An inscription of the contemporary Shilahara ruler Aparajita states that he granted protection to a king named Bhillama.

[2] Bhillama appears to have played an important role in Chalukya-Paramara war, which resulted in the defeat and death of the Paramara king Munja.

His 1000 Sangamner inscription poetically boasts that he thrashed the goddess of prosperity Lakshmi on the battlefield because she had sided with Munja, and forced her to become an obedient housewife in the palace of the Chalukya king Tailapa.

[2] The Sangamner inscription describes Bhillama as a Maha-samanta ("great feudatory"), and mentions his epithets Pancha-maha-shabada, Aratini-sudana, Kandukacharya, Sellavidega, and Vijayabharana.