Kokalla II (IAST: , r. c. 990–1015 CE) was a ruler of the Kalachuri dynasty of Tripuri in central India.
[1] When the Turkic ruler Mahmud of Ghazni invaded India in 1015, he was opposed near the pilgrim city of Mathura by Kokalla II, whose army consisted of a large number of war elephants.
The battle was hotly contested, but Kokalla II was eventually defeated due to the mobility and speed of the Turkic cavalry.
[3][4] The Udaipur Prashasti inscription of the Paramaras claims that their king Bhoja defeated one Togglala.
[6] Kokalla was succeeded by his son Gangeyadeva, who appears to have served as Bhoja's vassal during the first few years of his reign.