PANCHAL LINEAGE
http://www.mahabharata-resources.org/harivamsa/hv_1_20.html
In the lineage of puru kings bR^ihat-kShatra... his son is suhotra, whose son is hasti... the city 
of hastina-pura is built by this king hasti...
King hasti begot three sons, namely aja-mIDha… king aja-mIDha begot a son named bR^ihadiShu… bR^ihat-dhanu is the son of bR^ihay-iShu... 
Then the line of princes is: bR^ihay-iShu satya-jit vishva-jit sena-jit; then sena-jit begot four sons, 
namely: one of who was ruchira
Then the line of princes from ruchira forward is: ruchira pR^ithu-sena pAra nIpa...
And this nIpa begot hundred sons. From among those hundred sons of nIpa, the eldest one being 
the enricher of that dynasty is the king of kAmpilya kingdom, who is a true battler true to his 
name, samara - be at daggers drawn...
King samara has three highly righteous sons, one called para who begot a son called pR^ithu, who 
begot a prince called sukR^ita; then that sukR^ita begot a prince 
called vibhrAja; later vibhrAja begot aNuhu. This aNuhu is the coeval of my (Bheeshma’s) 
grandfather pratIpa...." 
Then brahmadatta, the sagely king and the honourable soul of yoga is the son of king aNuhu
Brahmadatta's son is viShvaksena...
viShvaksena's son is daNDasena whose son is bhallATa. But, the son of bhallATa became 
ignominious... oh, yudhiShThira... he became the king of nIpa lineage, i.e., the king of kAmpilya, 
only for the holocaust of nIpa descendants - because he could not resist an invading king 
called ugra-Ayudha... because of the son of bhallATa, this ugra-Ayudha has annihilated all 
the nIpa descendants..
At that time my father king shantanu breathed his last, and I was undertaking pitR^i-medha, 
postfunerary rites, with utmost sincerity like dietaries and getting forty winks on bare ground etc... at 
such a time this ugra-Ayudha sent a messenger to me when I am surrounded by my ministers, who 
conveyed a worst message to me...
Coming into my audience, oh, king dharmaja, that messenger of ugra-Ayudha parroted these words 
of his sender: "oh, bhIShma, yield your glorious stepmother, a jewel among women, as my 
makeshift-wife...
At that time, vicitravIrya was just a boy and wholly dependant on me...
When bhIShma arrived, there occurred a brute war, which bhIShma terms as unmatta vat 
yuddhaM - a maniacal war, because divine power of discus has become non-functional.
A while later king pR^iShata came back to throne of kAmpilya, viz. south pAnchAla, as he had to 
back away from his kingdom when his grandfather and the lord of nIpa-s is dead at the hand 
of ugra-Ayudha, while that ugra-Ayudha, the then ruling king of pAnchAla, is dead at my hand...
This king pR^iShata, the father of king drupada, ruled both south pAnchAla with capital kAmpilya, 
as well as the north pAnchAla with capital Ahi-chChatraM, of course, with the carte blanche given 
by me.
INTERSECTION OF NARADA AND PANCHAL LINEAGES AS WELL AS KURU 
LINEAGE
https://www.sacred-texts.com/hin/m01/m01101.htm
Let me tell you that I have even rejected the solicitations of that best of Brahmarshis--the celestial 
sage Asita--who, too, had often asked for Satyavati's hand in marriage.
http://mahabharata-resources.org/harivamsa/hv_1_23.html
brahmadatta took lady sannati as his wife, who is the daughter of the invulnerable asitadevala... she is an immaculate lady endowed with unique dedication with flexile behaviour – saM 
nata mati – all good qualities derived from the training of asita-devala.
What the above says is Anuha was the contemporary of Pratipa, Bheeshma’s grandfather. 
Brahmadatta who was Anuha’s son would’ve been Shanthanu’s contemporary. He was 
married to Sannati, Devala’s daughter. 
Since Asita asked for Satyavati’s hand, we can assume he was Shanthanu’s contemporaray. 
Ie Shanthanu in hatsinapuri, Brahmadatta in Panchal, and Asita in Narada family. But 
Brahmadatta was married to Asita’s daughter (if he was Asita-Devala or granddaughter (if 
Devala was Asita’s son). Wow, Brahmadatta married a young woman (no surprises)
Then came a quick succession of kings in Panchal – probably Bheeshma’s contemporaries 
– who possibly died. Ugrayuddha killed the last one called Bhallata. Ugrayuddha then asked 
for Satyavati’s hand in marriage as Shanthanu had just died. This caused Bheeshma to go to 
war. He killed Ugrayuddha and brought back Prishata or Drupada (see below) as king of 
Panchal. 
http://www.mahabharata-resources.org/harivamsa/hv_1_20.html
In this great lineage of paurava-s there arose a king named mahati, and from him the lineage of 
princes is like this: mahati, rukma-ratha, su-pArshva sumati, sannati, kR^ita.
This prince kR^ita is the disciple of a vedic-teacher from kosala province called hiraNyanAbha...
kArti, the son of kR^ita
This kArti or kIrti is the father of the valiant legatee of paurava-s, namely ugra-Ayudha, who 
attacked and slain the then king of pAnchAla, a legatee of nIpa and the grandsire of pR^iShata...
Other texts say that ugra-Ayudha attacked and slew pR^iShata, the grandfather of drupada; others 
say he slew daNDa-sena the father of pR^iShata; while mbTn says that pR^iShata is the father of 
drupada. For mbh even Dhrishtadyumna is the son of Prishata. Hence pR^iShata here is to be taken 
as an ancestor, grandsire, rather than a strict term grandfather.
https://www.sacred-texts.com/bud/j5/j5029.htm
Once upon a time, they say, Brahmadatta, king of Kāsi, owing to his having an army, seized on the 
kingdom of Kosala, slew its king and carried off his chief queen, who was then pregnant [426], to 
Benares and there made her his consort. By and bye she gave birth to a daughter, and as the king 
had neither son nor daughter of his own begetting, he was greatly pleased and said, "Fair lady, 
choose some boon at my hands." She accepted the boon but reserved her choice. Now they named 
the young princess Kaṇhā. So when she was grown up, her mother said, "Dear child, your father 
offered me a boon, which I accepted but put off my choice: do you now choose whatever you like." 
From the excess of her passion breaking through maidenly shame she said to her mother, "Nothing 
else is lacking to me; get him to hold an assembly 5 to choose me a husband." The mother repeated this to the king. The king said, "Let her have whatever she wishes," and he had an assembly for
choosing a husband proclaimed. In the palace yard a host of men assembled, arrayed in all their 
splendour. Kaṇhā, who with a basket of flowers in her hand stood looking out of an upper lattice 
window, approved of no single one of them. Then Ajjuna, Nakula, Bhīmasena, Yudhiṭṭhila, 
Sahadeva, of the family of king Pāṇḍu, these five sons of king Pāṇḍu,
Note that the Buddhist jatakas say King of Kasi killed the king of Kosala and married the 
pregnant queen whose daughter was Kanha/Panchali (see below). Ugrayuddha was from 
Kosala though he was ruling Panchal. When Ugrayuddha died, either Prishata or Drupada 
was installed as king. I’m tempted to think Drupada because even Dhrishtadyumna is 
called Prishata, suggesting Prishata is simply a patronym for the family. So Panchali 
could’ve been Kosala/Panchala king’s daughter whom Drupada adopted. We have to 
presume the deposed king of Panchal was in Kasi and returned to Panchal to kill Kosala 
King. There is a different Buddhist jataka which says the slain Kosala king had a son who 
was later adopted by the victorious Kasi king – Dhrishtadyumna?