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Kingdom of Mysore

The Kingdom of Mysore was a realm in southern India, traditionally believed to have been founded in 1399 in the vicinity of the modern city of Mysore. From 1799 until 1950, it was a princely state, until 1947 in a subsidiary alliance with British India. The British took direct control over the princely state in 1831.[1] Upon accession to the Dominion of India, it became Mysore State, later uniting with other Kannada speaking regions to form the state of Karnataka, with its ruler remaining as Rajapramukh until 1956, when he became the first governor of the reformed state.

Kingdom of Mysore
1399–1947
Coat of arms
Anthem: "ಕಾಯೌ ಶ್ರೀ ಗೌರಿ"
"Kayou Sri Gowri"
(1868–1947)
(English: "Great Gowri")
  The Kingdom of Mysore during the reign of Tipu Sultan, 1784 AD (at its greatest extent)
StatusKingdom (Subordinate to Vijayanagara Empire until 1565)
under a subsidiary alliance with the British Crown from 1799
Princely state under the British Crown from 1831
CapitalMysore, Srirangapatna
Official languagesKannada
Religion
Hinduism, Islam
Demonym(s)Mysoreans
GovernmentMonarchy
Maharaja 
• 1399–1423 (first)
Yaduraya Wodeyar
• 1940–1950 (last)
Jayachamaraja Wodeyar
Diwan 
• 1782–1811 (first)
Purnaiah
• 1946–1949 (last)
Arcot Ramasamy Mudaliar
History 
• Established
1399
• Earliest records
1551
1767–1799
1785–1787
• Disestablished
1947
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Today part ofIndia
Admiral Suffren meeting with ally Hyder Ali in 1783. J. B. Morret engraving, 1789

The kingdom, which was founded and ruled for most part by the Hindu Wodeyar family, initially served as feudatories under the Vijayanagara Empire.[2] The 17th century saw a steady expansion of its territory and during the rule of Narasaraja Wodeyar I and Chikka Devaraja Wodeyar, the kingdom annexed large expanses of what is now southern Karnataka and parts of Tamil Nadu to become a powerful state in the southern Deccan. During a brief Muslim rule, the kingdom shifted to a Sultanate style of administration under Hyder Ali and Tipu Sultan, and was renamed the "Sultanat-e-Khudadad", translating into "The God gifted empire".[3][4]

During this time, it came into conflict with the Marathas, the Nizam of Hyderabad, the Kingdom of Travancore and the British, which culminated in the four Anglo-Mysore Wars. Success in the First Anglo-Mysore war and stalemate in the Second was followed by defeats in the Third and the Fourth. Following Tipu Sultan's death in the fourth war in the Siege of Seringapatam (1799), large parts of his kingdom were annexed by the British, which signalled the end of a period of Mysorean hegemony over South India. The British restored the Wodeyars to their throne by way of a subsidiary alliance and the diminished Mysore was transformed into a princely state. The Wodeyars continued to rule the state until Indian independence in 1947, when Mysore acceded to the Union of India.

Even as a princely state, Mysore came to be counted among the more developed and urbanised regions of India. This period (1799–1947) also saw Mysore emerge as one of the important centres of art and culture in India. The Mysore kings were not only accomplished exponents of the fine arts and men of letters, they were enthusiastic patrons as well. Their legacies continue to influence music and the arts even today, as well as rocket science with the use of Mysorean rockets.[5]

History edit

Early history edit

 
Kingdom of Mysore (1704) during the rule of King Chikka Devaraja Wodeyar

Sources for the history of the kingdom include numerous extant lithic and copper plate inscriptions, records from the Mysore palace and contemporary literary sources in Kannada, Persian and other languages.[6][7][8] According to traditional accounts, the kingdom originated as a small state based in the modern city of Mysore and was founded by two brothers, Yaduraya (also known as Vijaya) and Krishnaraya. Their origins are mired in legend and are still a matter of debate; while some historians posit a northern origin at Dwarka,[9][10] others locate it in Karnataka.[11][12][13] Yaduraya is said to have married Chikkadevarasi, the local princess and assumed the feudal title "Wodeyar" (Kannada: ಒಡೆಯರ್, romanized: Oḍeyar, lit.'lord'), which the ensuing dynasty retained.[14] The first unambiguous mention of the Wodeyar family is in 16th century Kannada literature from the reign of the Vijayanagara king Achyuta Deva Raya (1529–1542); the earliest available inscription, issued by the Wodeyars themselves, dates to the rule of the petty chief Timmaraja II in 1551.[15]

Autonomy: advances and reversals edit

The kings who followed ruled as vassals of the Vijayanagara Empire until the decline of the latter in 1565. By this time, the kingdom had expanded to thirty-three villages protected by a force of 300 soldiers.[16] King Timmaraja II conquered some surrounding chiefdoms,[17] and King Bola Chamaraja IV (lit, "Bald"), the first ruler of any political significance among them, withheld tribute to the nominal Vijayanagara monarch Aravidu Ramaraya.[18] After the death of Aravidu Aliya Rama Raya, the Wodeyars began to assert themselves further and King Raja Wodeyar I wrested control of Srirangapatna from the Vijayanagara governor (Mahamandaleshvara) Aravidu Tirumalla – a development which elicited, if only ex post facto, the tacit approval of Venkatapati Raya, the incumbent king of the diminished Vijayanagar Empire ruling from Chandragiri.[19] Raja Wodeyar I's reign also saw territorial expansion with the annexation of Channapatna to the north from Jaggadeva Raya[19][20] – a development which made Mysore a regional political factor to reckon with.[21][22]

Consequently, by 1612–13, the Wodeyars exercised a great deal of autonomy and even though they acknowledged the nominal overlordship of the Aravidu dynasty, tributes and transfers of revenue to Chandragiri stopped. This was in marked contrast to other major chiefs, the Nayaks of Tamil country who continued to pay off Chandragiri emperors well into the 1630s.[19] Chamaraja VI and Kanthirava Narasaraja I attempted to expand further northward but were thwarted by the Bijapur Sultanate and its Maratha subordinates, though the Bijapur armies under Ranadullah Khan were effectively repelled in their 1638 siege of Srirangapatna.[22][23] Expansionist ambitions then turned southward into Tamil country where Narasaraja Wodeyar acquired Satyamangalam (in modern northern Erode district) while his successor Dodda Devaraja Wodeyar expanded further to capture western Tamil regions of Erode and Dharmapuri, after successfully repulsing the chiefs of Madurai. The invasion of the Keladi Nayakas of Malnad was also dealt with successfully. This period was followed by one of complex geo-political changes, when in the 1670s, the Marathas and the Mughals pressed into the Deccan.[22][23]

Chikka Devaraja (r. 1672–1704), the most notable of Mysore's early kings, who ruled during much of this period, managed to not only survive the exigencies but further expanded territory. He achieved this by forging strategic alliances with the Marathas and the Mughals.[24][25] The kingdom soon grew to include Salem and Bangalore to the east, Hassan to the west, Chikkamagaluru and Tumkur to the north and the rest of Coimbatore to the south.[26] Despite this expansion, the kingdom, which now accounted for a fair share of land in the southern Indian heartland, extending from the Western Ghats to the western boundaries of the Coromandel plain, remained landlocked without direct coastal access. Chikka Devaraja's attempts to remedy this brought Mysore into conflict with the Nayaka chiefs of Ikkeri and the kings (Rajas) of Kodagu (modern Coorg); who between them controlled the Kanara coast (coastal areas of modern Karnataka) and the intervening hill region respectively.[27] The conflict brought mixed results with Mysore annexing Periyapatna but suffering a reversal at Palupare.[28]

Nevertheless, from around 1704, when the kingdom passed on to "Mute king" (Mukarasu) Kanthirava Narasaraja II, the survival and expansion of the kingdom was achieved by playing a delicate game of alliance, negotiation, subordination on occasion, and annexation of territory in all directions. According to historians Sanjay Subrahmanyam and Sethu Madhava Rao, Mysore was now formally a tributary of the Mughal Empire. Mughul records claim a regular tribute (peshkash) was paid by Mysore. However, historian Suryanath U. Kamath feels the Mughals may have considered Mysore an ally, a situation brought about by Mughal–Maratha competition for supremacy in southern India.[29] By the 1720s, with the Mughal empire in decline, further complications arose with the Mughal residents at both Arcot and Sira claiming tribute.[24] The years that followed saw Krishnaraja Wodeyar I tread cautiously on the matter while keeping the Kodagu chiefs and the Marathas at bay. He was followed by Chamaraja Wodeyar VII during whose reign power fell into the hands of prime minister (Dalwai or Dalavoy) Nanjarajiah (or Nanjaraja) and chief minister (Sarvadhikari) Devarajiah (or Devaraja), the influential brothers from Kalale town near Nanjangud who would rule for the next three decades with the Wodeyars relegated to being the titular heads.[30][31] The latter part of the rule of Krishnaraja II saw the Deccan Sultanates being eclipsed by the Mughals and in the confusion that ensued, Hyder Ali, a captain in the army, rose to prominence.[22] His victory against the Marathas at Bangalore in 1758, resulting in the annexation of their territory, made him an iconic figure. In honour of his achievements, the king gave him the title "Nawab Haider Ali Khan Bahadur".[31]

Under Hyder Ali and Tipu Sultan edit

 
Admiral Suffren meeting with ally Hyder Ali in 1783. J. B. Morret engraving, 1789
 
The flag of the Sultanate of Mysore at the entrance to the fort of Bangalore
 
A portrait of Tipu Sultan, made during the Third Anglo-Mysore War
 
Mural of the famous Battle of Pollilur in Tipu Sultan's summer palace in Srirangapatna
 
Lord Cornwallis hastily retreats after his unsuccessful siege of Srirangapatna (1792).

Hyder Ali has earned an important place in the history of Karnataka for his fighting skills and administrative acumen.[32][33] The rise of Hyder came at a time of important political developments in the sub-continent. While the European powers were busy transforming themselves from trading companies to political powers, the Nizam as the subedar of the Mughals pursued his ambitions in the Deccan, and the Marathas, following their defeat at Panipat, sought safe havens in the south. The period also saw the French vie with the British for control of the Carnatic—a contest in which the British would eventually prevail as British commander Sir Eyre Coote decisively defeated the French under the Comte de Lally at the Battle of Wandiwash in 1760, a watershed in Indian history as it cemented British supremacy in South Asia.[34] Though the Wodeyars remained the nominal heads of Mysore during this period, real power lay in the hands of Hyder Ali and his son Tipu.[35]

By 1761, Maratha power had diminished and by 1763, Hyder Ali had captured the Keladi kingdom, defeated the rulers of Bilgi, Bednur and Gutti, invaded the Malabar Coast in the south and conquered the Zamorin's capital Calicut with ease in 1766 and extended the Mysore kingdom up to Dharwad and Bellary in the north.[36][37] Mysore was now a major political power in the subcontinent and Haider's meteoric rise from relative obscurity and his defiance formed one of the last remaining challenges to complete British hegemony over the Indian subcontinent—a challenge which would take them more than three decades to overcome.[38]

In a bid to stem Hyder's rise, the British formed an alliance with the Marathas and the Nizam of Golconda, culminating in the First Anglo-Mysore War in 1767. Despite numerical superiority Hyder Ali suffered defeats at the battles of Chengham and Tiruvannamalai. The British ignored his overtures for peace until Hyder Ali had strategically moved his armies to within five miles of Madras (modern Chennai) and was able to successfully sue for peace.[34][37][39] In 1770, when the Maratha armies of Madhavrao Peshwa invaded Mysore (three wars were fought between 1764 and 1772 by Madhavrao against Hyder, in which Hyder lost), Hyder expected British support as per the 1769 treaty but they betrayed him by staying out of the conflict. The British betrayal and Hyder's subsequent defeat reinforced Hyder's deep distrust of the British—a sentiment that would be shared by his son and one which would inform Anglo-Mysore rivalries of the next three decades. In 1777, Haider Ali recovered the previously lost territories of Coorg and parts of what wou;d later become Malabar District from the Marathas.[40]Haider Ali's army advanced towards the Marathas and fought them at the Battle of Saunshi and came out victorious during the same year.[40]

By 1779, Hyder Ali had captured parts of modern Tamil Nadu and Kerala in the south, extending the Kingdom's area to about 80,000 mi2 (205,000 km2).[37] In 1780, he befriended the French and made peace with the Marathas and the Nizam.[41] However, Hyder Ali was betrayed by the Marathas and the Nizam, who made treaties with the British as well. In July 1779, Hyder Ali headed an army of 80,000, mostly cavalry, descending through the passes of the Ghats amid burning villages, before laying siege to British forts in northern Arcot starting the Second Anglo-Mysore War. Hyder Ali had some initial successes against the British notably at Pollilur, the worst defeat the British suffered in India until Chillianwala, and Arcot, until the arrival of Sir Eyre Coote, when the fortunes of the British began to change.[42] On 1 June 1781 Coote struck the first heavy blow against Hyder Ali in the decisive Battle of Porto Novo. The battle was won by Coote against odds of five to one, and is regarded as one of the greatest feats of the British in India. It was followed up by another hard-fought battle at Pollilur (the scene of an earlier triumph of Hyder Ali over a British force) on 27 August, in which the British won another success, and by the rout of the Mysore troops at Sholinghur a month later. Hyder Ali died on 7 December 1782, even as fighting continued with the British. He was succeeded by his son Tipu Sultan who continued hostilities against the British by recapturing Baidanur and Mangalore.[37][43]

By 1783 neither the British nor Mysore were able to obtain a clear overall victory. The French withdrew their support of Mysore following the peace settlement in Europe.[44] Undaunted, Tipu, popularly known as the "Tiger of Mysore", continued the war against the British but lost some regions in modern coastal Karnataka to them. The Maratha–Mysore War occurred between 1785 and 1787 and consisted of a series of conflicts between the Sultanate of Mysore and the Maratha Empire.[45] Following Tipu Sultan's victory against the Marathas at the siege of Bahadur Benda, a peace agreement was signed between the two kingdoms with mutual gains and losses.[46][47] Similarly, the treaty of Mangalore was signed in 1784 bringing hostilities with the British to a temporary and uneasy halt and restoring the others' lands to the status quo ante bellum.[48][49] The treaty is an important document in the history of India, because it was the last occasion when an Indian power dictated terms to the British, who were made to play the role of humble supplicants for peace. A start of fresh hostilities between the British and French in Europe would have been sufficient reason for Tipu to abrogate his treaty and further his ambition of striking at the British.[50] His attempts to lure the Nizam, the Marathas, the French and the Sultan of Turkey failed to bring direct military aid.[50]

 
General Lord Cornwallis receiving Tipu Sultan's sons as hostages.

Tipu's successful attacks in 1790 on the Kingdom of Travancore, a later British ally, ended in defeat for him, and moreover, it resulted in greater hostilities with the British which culminated in the Third Anglo-Mysore War.[51] In the beginning, the British made gains, taking the Coimbatore district, but Tipu's counterattack reversed many of these gains. By 1792, with aid from the Marathas who attacked from the north-west and the Nizam who moved in from the north-east, the British under Lord Cornwallis successfully besieged Srirangapatna, resulting in Tipu's defeat and the Treaty of Srirangapatna. Half of Mysore was distributed among the allies, and two of his sons were held to ransom.[48] A humiliated but indomitable Tipu went about re-building his economic and military power. He attempted to covertly win over support from Revolutionary France, the Amir of Afghanistan, the Ottoman Empire and Arabia. However, these attempts to involve the French soon became known to the British, who were at the time fighting the French in Egypt, were backed by the Marathas and the Nizam. In 1799, Tipu died defending Srirangapatna in the Fourth Anglo-Mysore War, heralding the end of the Kingdom's independence.[52] Modern Indian historians consider Tipu Sultan an inveterate enemy of the British, an able administrator and an innovator.[53]

Princely state edit

 
"Palace of the Maharajah of Mysore, India," from the Illustrated London News, 1881 (with modern hand coloring)

Following Tipu's fall, a part of the kingdom of Mysore was annexed and divided between the Madras Presidency and the Nizam. The remaining territory was transformed into a Princely State; the five-year-old scion of the Wodeyar family, Krishnaraja III, was installed on the throne with chief minister (Diwan) Purnaiah, who had earlier served under Tipu, handling the reins as regent and Lt. Col. Barry Close taking charge as the British Resident. The British then took control of Mysore's foreign policy and also exacted an annual tribute and a subsidy for maintaining a standing British army at Mysore.[54][55][56] As Diwan, Purnaiah distinguished himself with his progressive and innovative administration until he retired from service in 1811 (and died shortly thereafter) following the 16th birthday of the boy king.[57][58]

 
Mysore Palace built between 1897 and 1912

The years that followed witnessed cordial relations between Mysore and the British until things began to sour in the 1820s. Even though the Governor of Madras, Thomas Munro, determined after a personal investigation in 1825 that there was no substance to the allegations of financial impropriety made by A. H. Cole, the incumbent Resident of Mysore, the Nagar revolt (a civil insurrection) which broke out towards the end of the decade changed things considerably. In 1831, close on the heels of the insurrection and citing mal-administration, the British took direct control of the princely state, placing it under a commission rule.[59][60] For the next fifty years, Mysore passed under the rule of successive British Commissioners; Sir Mark Cubbon, renowned for his statesmanship, served from 1834 until 1861 and put into place an efficient and successful administrative system which left Mysore a well-developed state.[61]

 
Jayachamrajendra Wadiyar with Elizabeth II

In 1876–77, however, towards the end of the period of direct British rule, Mysore was struck by a devastating famine with estimated mortality figures ranging between 700,000 and 1,100,000, or nearly a fifth of the population.[62] Shortly thereafter, Maharaja Chamaraja X, educated in the British system, took over the rule of Mysore in 1881, following the success of a lobby set up by the Wodeyar dynasty that was in favour of rendition. Accordingly, a resident British officer was appointed at the Mysore court and a Diwan to handle the Maharaja's administration.[63] From then onwards, until Indian independence in 1947, Mysore remained a Princely State within the British Indian Empire, with the Wodeyars continuing their rule.[63]

After the demise of Maharaja Chamaraja X, Krishnaraja IV, still a boy of eleven, ascended the throne in 1895. His mother Maharani Kemparajammanniyavaru ruled as regent until Krishnaraja took over the reins on 8 February 1902.[64] Under his rule, with Sir M. Vishweshwariah as his Diwan, the Maharaja set about transforming Mysore into a progressive and modern state, particularly in industry, education, agriculture and art. Such were the strides that Mysore made that Mahatma Gandhi called the Maharaja a "saintly king" (Rajarishi).[65] Paul Brunton, the British philosopher and orientalist, John Gunther, the American author, and British statesman Lord Samuel praised the ruler's efforts. Much of the pioneering work in educational infrastructure that took place during this period would serve Karnataka invaluably in the coming decades.[66] The Maharaja was an accomplished musician, and like his predecessors, avidly patronised the development of the fine arts.[67] He was followed by his nephew Jayachamarajendra whose rule continued for some years after he signed the instrument of accession and Mysore joined the Indian Union on 9 August 1947.[68] Jayachamarajendra continued to rule as Rajapramukh of Mysore until 1956, when as a result of the States Reorganisation Act, 1956, his position was converted into Governor of Mysore State. From 1963 until 1966, he was the first Governor of Madras State.[69]

Administration edit

Mysore Kings
(1399–present)
Feudatory Monarchy
(As vassals of Vijayanagara Empire)
(1399–1553)
Yaduraya Wodeyar (1399–1423)
Chamaraja Wodeyar I (1423–1459)
Timmaraja Wodeyar I (1459–1478)
Chamaraja Wodeyar II (1478–1513)
Chamaraja Wodeyar III (1513–1553)
Absolute Monarchy
(Independent Wodeyar Kings)
(1553–1761)
Timmaraja Wodeyar II (1553–1572)
Chamaraja Wodeyar IV (1572–1576)
Chamaraja Wodeyar V (1576–1578)
Raja Wodeyar I (1578–1617)
Chamaraja Wodeyar VI (1617–1637)
Raja Wodeyar II (1637–1638)
Narasaraja Wodeyar I (1638–1659)
Dodda Devaraja Wodeyar (1659–1673)
Chikka Devaraja Wodeyar (1673–1704)
Narasaraja Wodeyar II (1704–1714)
Krishnaraja Wodeyar I (1714–1732)
Chamaraja Wodeyar VII (1732–1734)
Krishnaraja Wodeyar II (1734–1761)
Puppet Monarchy
(Under Haider Ali and Tipu Sultan)
(1761–1799)
Krishnaraja Wodeyar II (1761–1766)
Nanjaraja Wodeyar (1766–1770)
Chamaraja Wodeyar VIII (1770–1776)
Chamaraja Wodeyar IX (1776–1796)
Puppet Monarchy
(Under British Rule)
(1799–1831)
Krishnaraja Wodeyar III (1799–1831)
Titular Monarchy
(Monarchy abolished)
(1831–1881)
Krishnaraja Wodeyar III (1831–1868)
Chamarajendra Wadiyar X (1868–1881)
Constitutional Monarchy
Monarchy restored by Rendition Act 1881
(under British Crown)
(1881–1947)
Chamarajendra Wadiyar X (1881–1894)
Krishnaraja Wadiyar IV (1894–1940)
Jayachamaraja Wadiyar (1940–1947)
Constitutional Monarchy
(Mysore State, Dominion of India)
(1947–1956)
Jayachamaraja Wadiyar (as Rajpramukh) (1947–1956)
Titular Monarchy
(Monarchy abolished)
(1956–present)
Jayachamaraja Wadiyar (1956–1974)
Srikantadatta Wadiyar (1974–2013)
Yaduveera Chamaraja Wadiyar (2015–present)

There are no records relating to the administration of the Mysore territory during the Vijayanagara Empire's reign (1399–1565). Signs of a well-organised and independent administration appear from the time of Raja Wodeyar I who is believed to have been sympathetic towards peasants (raiyats) who were exempted from any increases in taxation during his time.[22] The first sign that the kingdom had established itself in the area was the issuing of gold coins (Kanthirayi phanam) resembling those of the erstwhile Vijayanagara Empire during Narasaraja Wodeyar's rule.[70]

The rule of Chikka Devaraja saw several reforms effected. Internal administration was remodeled to suit the kingdom's growing needs and became more efficient. A postal system came into being. Far reaching financial reforms were also introduced. A number of petty taxes were imposed in place of direct taxes, as a result of which the peasants were compelled to pay more by way of land tax.[71] The king is said to have taken a personal interest in the regular collection of revenues the treasury burgeoned to 90,000,000 Pagoda (a unit of currency) – earning him the epithet "Nine crore Narayana" (Navakoti Narayana). In 1700, he sent an embassy to Aurangazeb's court who bestowed upon him the title Jug Deo Raja and awarded permission to sit on the ivory throne. Following this, he founded the district offices (Attara Kacheri), the central secretariat comprising eighteen departments, and his administration was modelled on Mughal lines.[72]

During Hyder Ali's rule, the kingdom was divided into five provinces (Asofis) of unequal size, comprising 171 taluks (Paraganas) in total.[73] When Tipu Sultan became the de facto ruler, the kingdom, which encompassed 160,000 km2 (61,776 sq mi) (62,000 mi2), was divided into 37 provinces and a total of 124 taluks (Amil). Each province had a governor (Asof), and one deputy governor. Each taluk had a headman called Amildar and a group of villages were in charge of a Patel.[55] The central administration comprised six departments headed by ministers, each aided by an advisory council of up to four members.[74]

When the princely state came under direct British rule in 1831, early commissioners Lushington, Briggs and Morrison were followed by Mark Cubbon, who took charge in 1834.[75] He made Bangalore the capital and divided the princely state into four divisions, each under a British superintendent. The state was further divided into 120 taluks with 85 taluk courts, with all lower level administration in the Kannada language.[75] The office of the commissioner had eight departments; revenue, post, police, cavalry, public works, medical, animal husbandry, judiciary and education. The judiciary was hierarchical with the commissioners' court at the apex, followed by the Huzur Adalat, four superintending courts and eight Sadar Munsiff courts at the lowest level.[76] Lewin Bowring became the chief commissioner in 1862 and held the position until 1870. During his tenure, the property "Registration Act", the "Indian Penal Code" and "Code of Criminal Procedure" came into effect and the judiciary was separated from the executive branch of the administration.[76] The state was divided into eight districts – Bangalore, Chitraldroog, Hassan, Kadur, Kolar, Mysore, Shimoga, and Tumkur.[77]

After rendition, C. V. Rungacharlu, was made the Diwan. Under him, the first Representative Assembly of British India, with 144 members, was formed in 1881.[78] He was followed by K. Seshadri Iyer in 1883 during whose tenure gold mining at the Kolar Gold Fields began, the Shivanasamudra hydroelectric project was initiated in 1899 (the first such major attempt in India) and electricity and drinking water (the latter through pipes) was supplied to Bangalore.[79] Seshadri Iyer was followed by P. N. Krishnamurti, who created The Secretariat Manual to maintain records and the Co-operative Department in 1905,[79] V. P. Madhava Rao who focussed on conservation of forests and T. Ananda Rao, who finalised the Kannambadi Dam project.[80]

Sir Mokshagundam Visvesvaraya, popularly known as the "Maker of Modern Mysore", holds a key place in the history of Karnataka.[81] An engineer by education, he became the Diwan in 1909.[80][82] Under his tenure, membership of the Mysore Legislative Assembly was increased from 18 to 24, and it was given the power to discuss the state budget.[80] The Mysore Economic Conference was expanded into three committees; industry and commerce, education, and agriculture, with publications in English and Kannada.[83] Important projects commissioned during his time included the construction of the Kannambadi Dam, the founding of the Mysore Iron Works at Bhadravathi, founding of the Mysore University in 1916, the University Visvesvaraya College of Engineering in Bangalore, establishment of the Mysore state railway department and numerous industries in Mysore. In 1955, he was awarded the Bharat Ratna, India's highest civilian honour.[83][84]

Sir Mirza Ismail took office as Diwan in 1926 and built on the foundation laid by his predecessor. Amongst his contributions were the expansion of the Bhadravathi Iron Works, the founding of a cement and paper factory in Bhadravathi and the launch of Hindustan Aeronautics Limited. A man with a penchant for gardens, he founded the Brindavan Gardens (Krishnaraja Sagar) and built the Kaveri River high-level canal to irrigate 120,000 acres (490 km2) in modern Mandya district.[85]

In 1939 Mandya District was carved out of Mysore District, bringing the number of districts in the state to nine.

Economy edit

The vast majority of the people lived in villages and agriculture was their main occupation. The economy of the kingdom was based on agriculture. Grains, pulses, vegetables and flowers were cultivated. Commercial crops included sugarcane and cotton. The agrarian population consisted of landlords (vokkaliga, zamindar, heggadde) who tilled the land by employing a number of landless labourers, usually paying them in grain. Minor cultivators were also willing to hire themselves out as labourers if the need arose.[86] It was due to the availability of these landless labourers that kings and landlords were able to execute major projects such as palaces, temples, mosques, anicuts (dams) and tanks.[87] Because land was abundant and the population relatively sparse, no rent was charged on land ownership. Instead, landowners paid tax for cultivation, which amounted to up to one-half of all harvested produce.[87]

Under Hyder Ali and Tipu Sultan edit

Tipu Sultan is credited with founding state trading depots in various locations of his kingdom. In addition, he founded depots in foreign locations such as Karachi, Jeddah and Muscat, where Mysore products were sold.[88] During Tipu's rule French technology was used for the first time in carpentry and smithing, Chinese technology was used for sugar production, and technology from Bengal helped improve the sericulture industry.[89] State factories were established in Kanakapura and Taramandelpeth for producing cannons and gunpowder respectively. The state held the monopoly in the production of essentials such as sugar, salt, iron, pepper, cardamom, betel nut, tobacco and sandalwood, as well as the extraction of incense oil from sandalwood and the mining of silver, gold and precious stones. Sandalwood was exported to China and the Persian Gulf countries and sericulture was developed in twenty-one centers within the kingdom.[90]

The Mysore silk industry was initiated during the rule of Tipu Sultan.[91] Later the industry was hit by a global depression and competition from imported silk and rayon. In the second half of the 20th century, it however revived and the Mysore State became the top multivoltine silk producer in India.[91]

Under British rule edit

This system changed under the subsidiary alliance with the British, when tax payments were made in cash and were used for the maintenance of the army, police and other civil and public establishments. A portion of the tax was transferred to England as the "Indian tribute".[92] Unhappy with the loss of their traditional revenue system and the problems they faced, peasants rose in rebellion in many parts of south India.[93] After 1800, the Cornwallis land reforms came into effect. Reade, Munro, Graham and Thackeray were some administrators who improved the economic conditions of the masses.[94] However, the homespun textile industry suffered while most of India was under British rule, with the exception of the producers of the finest cloth and the coarse cloth which was popular with the rural masses. This was due to the manufacturing mills of Manchester, Liverpool and Scotland being more than a match for the traditional handweaving industry, especially in spinning and weaving.[95][96]

The economic revolution in England and the tariff policies of the British also caused massive de-industrialization in other sectors throughout British India and Mysore. For example, the gunny bag weaving business had been a monopoly of the Goniga people, which they lost when the British began ruling the area. The import of a chemical substitute for saltpetre (potassium nitrate) affected the Uppar community, the traditional makers of saltpetre for use in gunpowder. The import of kerosene affected the Ganiga community which supplied oils. Foreign enamel and crockery industries affected the native pottery business, and mill-made blankets replaced the country-made blankets called kambli.[97] This economic fallout led to the formation of community-based social welfare organisations to help those within the community to cope better with their new economic situation, including youth hostels for students seeking education and shelter.[98] However, the British economic policies created a class structure consisting of a newly established middle class comprising various blue and white-collared occupational groups, including agents, brokers, lawyers, teachers, civil servants and physicians. Due to a more flexible caste hierarchy, the middle class contained a heterogeneous mix of people from different castes.[99]

Culture edit

Religion edit

 
Temple pond constructed by King Chikka Devaraja Wodeyar at Shravanabelagola, an important Jain temple town
 
Shweta Varahaswamy temple (1673–1704) in the Mysore Palace grounds

The early kings of the Wodeyar dynasty worshipped the Hindu god Shiva. The later kings, starting from the 17th century, took to Vaishnavism, the worship of the Hindu god Vishnu.[100] According to musicologist Meera Rajaram Pranesh, King Raja Wodeyar I was a devotee of the god Vishnu, King Dodda Devaraja was honoured with the title "Protector of Brahmins" (Deva Brahmana Paripalaka) for his support to Brahmins, and Maharaja Krishnaraja III was devoted to the goddess Chamundeshwari (a form of Hindu goddess Durga).[101] Wilks ("History of Mysore", 1800) wrote about a Jangama (Veerashaiva saint-devotee of Shiva) uprising, related to excessive taxation, which was put down firmly by Chikka Devaraja. Historian D.R. Nagaraj claims that four hundred Jangamas were murdered in the process but clarifies that Veerashaiva literature itself is silent about the issue.[102] Historian Suryanath Kamath claims King Chikka Devaraja was a Srivaishnava (follower of Sri Vaishnavism, a sect of Vaishnavism) but was not anti-Veerashaiva.[103] Historian Aiyangar concurs that some of the kings including the celebrated Narasaraja I and Chikka Devaraja were Vaishnavas, but suggests this may not have been the case with all Wodeyar rulers.[104] The rise of the modern day Mysore city as a centre of south Indian culture has been traced from the period of their sovereignty.[105] Raja Wodeyar I initiated the celebration of the Dasara festival in Mysore, a proud tradition of the erstwhile Vijayanagara royal family.[106][107]

Jainism, though in decline during the late medieval period, also enjoyed the patronage of the Mysore kings, who made munificent endowments to the Jain monastic order at the town of Shravanabelagola.[108][109] Records indicate that some Wodeyar kings not only presided over the Mahamastakabhisheka ceremony, an important Jain religious event at Shravanabelagola, but also personally offered prayers (puja) during the years 1659, 1677, 1800, 1825, 1910, 1925, 1940, and 1953.[110]

The contact between South India and Islam goes back to the 7th century, when trade between Hindu kingdoms and Islamic caliphates thrived. These Muslim traders settled on the Malabar Coast with the permission and blessings of the Hindu Lords of those parts, and married local Hindu women, and their descendants came to be known as Mappillas.[111] By the 14th century, Muslims had become a significant minority in the south, though the advent of Portuguese missionaries checked their growth.[111] Hyder Ali, though a devout Muslim, did not allow his faith to interfere with the administration of the predominantly Hindu kingdom ruled by Hindu Kings. Historians are, however, divided on the intentions of Haider Ali's son, Tipu Sultan. It has been claimed that Tipu raised Hindus to prominent positions in his administration back in Mysore, made generous grants to Hindu temples and Brahmins, and generally respected other faiths, and that any religious conversions that Tipu undertook were as punishment to those who rebelled against his authority.[112] However, this has been countered by other historians who claim that Tipu Sultan treated the non-Muslims of Mysore far better than those of the Malabar Coast, Raichur and Kodagu regions. They point out that Tipu was responsible for mass conversions of Christians and Hindus in these regions by force to convert.[113][114]

Society edit

 
The Crawford Hall on Mysore University campus houses the university offices.

Prior to the 18th century, the society of the kingdom followed age-old and deeply established norms of social interaction between people. Accounts by contemporaneous travellers indicate the widespread practice of the Hindu caste system and of animal sacrifices during the nine-day celebrations (called Mahanavami).[115] Later, fundamental changes occurred due to the struggle between native and foreign powers. Though wars between the Hindu kingdoms and the Sultanates continued, the battles between native rulers (including Muslims) and the newly arrived British took centre stage.[73] The spread of English education, the introduction of the printing press and the criticism of the prevailing social system by Christian missionaries helped make the society more open and flexible. The rise of modern nationalism throughout India also affected Mysore.[116]

With the advent of British power, English education gained prominence in addition to traditional education in local languages. These changes were orchestrated by Lord Elphinstone, the governor of the Madras Presidency. His plan became the constitution of the central collegiate institution or University Board in 1841.[117] Accordingly, a high school department of the university was established. For imparting education in the interior regions, schools were raised in principal towns which eventually were elevated to college level, with each college becoming central to many local schools (zilla schools).[118] The earliest English-medium schools appeared in 1833 in Mysore and spread across the region. In 1858, the department of education was founded in Mysore and by 1881, there were an estimated 2,087 English-medium schools in the state of Mysore. Higher education became available with the formation of Bangalore Central College in Bangalore (1870), Maharaja's College (1879), Maharani's College (1901) and the Mysore University (1916) in Mysore and the St. Agnes College in Mangalore (1921).[119]

Social reforms aimed at removing practices such as sati and social discrimination based upon untouchability, as well as demands for the emancipation of the lower classes, swept across India and influenced Mysore territory.[120] In 1894, the kingdom passed laws to abolish the marriage of girls below the age of eight. Remarriage of widowed women and marriage of destitute women was encouraged, and in 1923, some women were granted the permission to exercise their franchise in elections.[121] There were, however, uprisings against British authority in the Mysore territory, notably the Kodagu uprising in 1835 (after the British dethroned the local ruler Chikkaviraraja) and the Kanara uprising of 1837.[122] The era of printing heralded by Christian missionaries, notably Hermann Mögling, resulted in the founding of printing presses across the kingdom. The publication of ancient and contemporary Kannada books (such as the Pampa Bharata and the Jaimini Bharata), a Kannada-language Bible, a bilingual dictionary and a Kannada newspaper called Kannada Samachara began in the early 19th century.[123] Aluru Venkata Rao published a consolidated Kannada history glorifying the achievements of Kannadigas in his book Karnataka Gatha Vaibhava.[124]

Classical English and Sanskrit drama,[125] and native Yakshagana musical theatre influenced the Kannada stage and produced famous dramatists like Gubbi Veeranna.[126] The public began to enjoy Carnatic music through its broadcast via public address systems set up on the palace grounds.[127] Mysore paintings, which were inspired by the Bengal Renaissance, were created by artists such as Sundarayya, Ala Singarayya, and B. Venkatappa.[128]

Literature edit

 
Opening page of the musical treatise Sritattvanidhi proclaiming Krishnaraja Wodeyar III as the author

The era of the Kingdom of Mysore is considered a golden age in the development of Kannada literature. Not only was the Mysore court adorned by famous Brahmin and Veerashaiva writers and composers,[109][129] the kings themselves were accomplished in the fine arts and made important contributions.[130][131] While conventional literature in philosophy and religion remained popular, writings in new genres such as chronicle, biography, history, encyclopaedia, novel, drama, and musical treatise became popular.[132] A native form of folk literature with dramatic representation called Yakshagana gained popularity.[133][134] A remarkable development of the later period was the influence of English literature and classical Sanskrit literature on Kannada.[135]

Govinda Vaidya, a native of Srirangapatna, wrote Kanthirava Narasaraja Vijaya, a eulogy of his patron King Narasaraja I. Written in sangatya metre (a composition meant to be rendered to the accompaniment of a musical instrument), the book describes the king's court, popular music and the types of musical compositions of the age in twenty-six chapters.[136][137] King Chikka Devaraja was the earliest composer of the dynasty.[31][138] To him is ascribed the famous treatise on music called Geetha Gopala. Though inspired by Jayadeva's Sanskrit work Geetha Govinda, it had an originality of its own and was written in saptapadi metre.[139] Contemporary poets who left their mark on the entire Kannada-speaking region include the Brahmin poet Lakshmisa and the itinerant Veerashaiva poet Sarvajna. Female poets also played a role in literary developments, with Cheluvambe (the queen of Krishnaraja Wodeyar I), Helavanakatte Giriyamma, Sri Rangamma (1685) and Sanchi Honnamma (Hadibadeya Dharma, late 17th century) writing notable works.[140][141]

A polyglot, King Narasaraja II authored fourteen Yakshaganas in various languages, though all are written in Kannada script.[142] Maharaja Krishnaraja III was a prolific writer in Kannada for which he earned the honorific Abhinava Bhoja (a comparison to the medieval King Bhoja).[143] Over forty writings are attributed to him, of which the musical treatise Sri Tatwanidhi and a poetical romance called Saugandika Parinaya written in two versions, a sangatya and a drama, are most well known.[144] Under the patronage of the Maharaja, Kannada literature began its slow and gradual change towards modernity. Kempu Narayana's Mudramanjusha ("The Seal Casket", 1823) is the earliest work that has touches of modern prose.[145] However, the turning point came with the historically important Adbhuta Ramayana (1895) and Ramaswamedham (1898) by Muddanna, whom the Kannada scholar Narasimha Murthy considers "a Janus like figure" of modern Kannada literature. Muddanna has deftly handled an ancient epic from an entirely modern viewpoint.[146]

Basavappa Shastry, a native of Mysore and a luminary in the court of Maharaja Krishnaraja III and Maharaja Chamaraja X, is known as the "Father of Kannada theatre" (Kannada Nataka Pitamaha).[147] He authored dramas in Kannada and translated William Shakespeare's "Othello" to Shurasena Charite. His well-known translations from Sanskrit to Kannada are many and include Kalidasa and Abhignyana Shakuntala.[148]

Music edit

 
Legendary Vainikas – Veene Subbanna and Veene Sheshanna (photographed in 1902)

Under Maharaja Krishnaraja III and his successors – Chamaraja X, Krishnaraja IV and the last ruler, Jayachamaraja, the Mysore court came to be the largest and most renowned patron of music.[149] While the Tanjore and Travancore courts also extended great patronage and emphasised preservation of the art, the unique combination of royal patronage of individual musicians, founding of music schools to kindle public interest and a patronage of European music publishers and producers set Mysore apart.[150] Maharaja Krishnaraja III, himself a musician and musicologist of merit, composed a number of javalis (light lyrics) and devotional songs in Kannada under the title Anubhava pancharatna. His compositions bear the pen name (mudra) "Chamundi'" or '"Chamundeshwari'", in honour of the Wodeyar family deity.[151]

Under Krishnaraja IV, art received further patronage. A distinct school of music which gave importance to raga and bhava evolved.[128][152][153] The Royal School of Music founded at the palace helped institutionalise teaching of the art. Carnatic compositions were printed and the European staff notation came to be employed by royal musicians. Western music was also encouraged – Margaret Cousins' piano concerto with the Palace Orchestra marked the celebrations of Beethoven's centenary in Bangalore.[149] Maharaja Jayachamaraja, also a renowned composer of Carnatic kritis (a musical composition), sponsored a series of recordings of Russian composer Nikolai Medtner and others.[149] The court ensured that Carnatic music also kept up with the times. Gramophone recordings of the palace band were made and sold commercially.[154] Attention was paid to "technology of the concert". Lavish sums were spent on acquiring various instruments including the unconventional horn violin, theremin and calliaphone, a mechanical music player.[155]

The Mysore court was home to several renowned experts (vidwan) of the time. Veena Sheshanna, a court musician during the rule of Maharaja Chamaraja X,[156] is considered one of the greatest exponents of the veena.[157] His achievements in classical music won Mysore a premier place in the art of instrumental Carnatic music and he was given the honorific Vainika Shikhamani by Maharaja Krishnaraja Wodeyar IV.[158][159] Mysore Vasudevacharya was a noted musician and composer in Sanskrit and Telugu from Mysore.[160] He holds the unique distinction of being patronised by four generations of Mysore kings and rulers and for being court musician to three of them.[161][162] H.L. Muthiah Bhagavatar was another musician-composer who adorned the Mysore court.[163] Considered one of the most important composers of the post-Tyagaraja period,[164] he is credited with about 400 compositions in Sanskrit, Kannada, Telugu and Tamil under the pen name "Harikesha". Among violinists, T. Chowdiah emerged as one of the most accomplished exponents of the time. He is known to have mastered the seven-stringed violin.[126][165] Chowdiah was appointed court musician by Maharaja Krishnaraja Wodeyar IV in 1939 and received such titles as "Sangeeta Ratna" and "Sangeeta Kalanidhi". He is credited with compositions in Kannada, Telugu and Sanskrit under the pen name "Trimakuta".[166]

Architecture edit

The architectural style of courtly and royal structures in the kingdom underwent profound changes during British rule – a mingling of European traditions with native elements. The Hindu temples in the kingdom were built in typical South Indian Dravidian style – a modest version of the Vijayanagara building idiom.[167] When in power, Tipu Sultan constructed two places namely Lal Mahal Palace (later destroyed after the siege of Serirangpatnam in 1799), the Summer Palace and famous Masjid e Aala in Srirangapatna, his capital. However, it is the city of Mysore that is best known for its royal palaces, earning it the nickname "City of Palaces". The city's main palace, the Mysore Palace, is also known as the Amba Vilas Palace. The original complex was destroyed by fire and a new palace was commissioned by the Queen-Regent and designed by the English architect Henry Irwin in 1897.[168] The overall design is a combination of Hindu, Islamic, Indo-Saracenic and Moorish styles, which for the first time in India, used cast iron columns and roof frames. The striking feature of the exterior is the granite columns that support cusped arches on the portico, a tall tower whose finial is a gilded dome with an umbrella (chattri) on it, and groups of other domes around it.[169] The interior is richly decorated with marbled walls and a teakwood ceiling on which are sculptures of Hindu deities. The Durbar hall leads to an inner private hall through silver doors. This opulent room has floor panels that are inlaid with semi-precious stones, and a stained glass roof supported centrally by columns and arches. The marriage hall (Kalyana mantapa) in the palace complex is noted for its stained glass octagonal dome with peacock motifs.[170]

The Lalitha Mahal Palace was built in 1921 by E. W. Fritchley under the commission of Maharaja Krishnaraja IV. The architectural style is called "Renaissance" and exhibits concepts from English manor houses and Italian palazzos.[171] The central dome is believed to be modelled on St. Paul's Cathedral in London. Other important features are the Italian marble staircase, the polished wooden flooring in the banquet and dance halls, and the Belgian cut glass lamps.[171] The Jaganmohan Palace was commissioned in 1861 and was completed in 1910. The three-storeyed building with attractive domes, finials and cupolas was the venue of many a royal celebration. It is now called the Chamarajendra Art Gallery and houses a rich collection of artefacts.[172]

The Mysore University campus, also called "Manasa Gangotri", is home to several architecturally interesting buildings. Some of them are in European style and were completed in the late 19th century. They include the Jayalakshmi Vilas mansion, the Crawford Hall, the Oriental Research Institute (built between 1887 and 1891) with its Ionic and Corinthian columns, and the district offices (Athara Kutchery, 1887). The Athara Kutchery, which initially served as the office of the British commissioner, has an octagonal dome and a finial that adds to its beauty.[173] The Maharaja's summer palace, built in 1880, is called the Lokaranjan Mahal, and initially served as a school for royalty. The Rajendra Vilas Palace, built in the Indo-British style atop the Chamundi Hill, was commissioned in 1922 and completed in 1938 by Maharaja Krishnaraja IV.[171] Other royal mansions built by the Mysore rulers were the Chittaranjan Mahal in Mysore and the Bangalore Palace in Bangalore, a structure built on the lines of England's Windsor Castle.[174] The Central Food Technical Research Institute (Cheluvamba Mansion), built in baroque European renaissance style, was once the residence of princess Cheluvambaamani Avaru, a sister of Maharaja Krishnaraja IV. Its extensive pilaster work and mosaic flooring are noteworthy.[175]

Most famous among the many temples built by the Wodeyars is the Chamundeshwari Temple atop the Chamundi Hill. The earliest structure here was consecrated in the 12th century and was later patronised by the Mysore rulers. Maharaja Krishnaraja III added a Dravidian-style gopuram in 1827. The temple has silver-plated doors with images of deities. Other images include those of the Hindu god Ganesha and of Maharaja Krishnaraja III with his three queens.[176] Surrounding the main palace in Mysore and inside the fort are a group of temples, built in various periods. The Prasanna Krishnaswamy Temple (1829), the Lakshmiramana Swamy Temple whose earliest structures date to 1499, the Trinesvara Swamy Temple (late 16th century), the Shweta Varaha Swamy Temple built by Purnaiah with a touch of Hoysala style of architecture, the Prasanna Venkataramana Swami Temple (1836) notable for 12 murals of the Wodeyar rulers.[177] Well-known temples outside Mysore city are the yali ("mythical beast") pillared Venkataramana temple built in the late 17th century at Bangalore fort, and the Ranganatha temple in Srirangapatna.[178]

Tipu Sultan built a wooden colonnaded palace called the Dariya Daulat Palace (lit, "garden of the wealth of the sea") in Srirangapatna in 1784. Built in the Indo-Saracenic style, the palace is known for its intricate woodwork consisting of ornamental arches, striped columns and floral designs, and paintings. The west wall of the palace is covered with murals depicting Tipu Sultan's victory over Colonel Baillie's army at Pollilur, near Kanchipuram in 1780. One mural shows Tipu enjoying the fragrance of a bouquet of flowers while the battle is in progress. In that painting, the French soldiers' moustaches distinguish them from the cleanshaven British soldiers.[179][180] Also in Srirangapatna is the Gumbaz mausoleum, built by Tipu Sultan in 1784. It houses the graves of Tipu and Hyder Ali. The granite base is capped with a dome built of brick and pilaster.[181]

Science and Technology in Mysore edit

 
Tip of an early Mysorean rocket/Congreve rocket of the Napoleonic Wars, on display at Paris Naval Museum


The first iron-cased and metal-cylinder rocket artillery were invented by Tipu Sultan and his father Hyder Ali, in the 1780s. He successfully used these metal-cylinder rockets against the larger forces of the British East India Company during the Anglo-Mysore Wars. The Mysore rockets of this period were much more advanced than what the British had seen, chiefly because of the use of iron tubes for holding the propellant; this enabled higher thrust and longer range for the missile (up to 2 km (1 mi) range). After Tipu's eventual defeat in the Fourth Anglo-Mysore War and the capture of the Mysore iron rockets, they were influential in British rocket development, inspiring the Congreve rocket, which was soon put into use in the Napoleonic Wars.[182]

According to Stephen Oliver Fought and John F. Guilmartin Jr. in Encyclopædia Britannica (2008):

Hyder Ali, prince of Mysore, developed war rockets with an important change: the use of metal cylinders to contain the combustion powder. Although the hammered soft iron he used was crude, the bursting strength of the container of black powder was much higher than the earlier paper construction. Thus a greater internal pressure was possible, with a resultant greater thrust of the propulsive jet. The rocket body was lashed with leather thongs to a long bamboo stick. Range was perhaps up to three-quarters of a mile (more than a kilometre). Although individually these rockets were not accurate, dispersion error became less important when large numbers were fired rapidly in mass attacks. They were particularly effective against cavalry and were hurled into the air, after lighting, or skimmed along the hard dry ground. Tipu Sultan, continued to develop and expand the use of rocket weapons, reportedly increasing the number of rocket troops from 1,200 to a corps of 5,000. In battles at Seringapatam in 1792 and 1799 these rockets were used with considerable effect against the British."[183]

The rockets were observed by Lieutenant general Thomas Desaguliers, colonel commandant of the Royal Artillery at Woolwich, who was impressed by reports of their effectiveness, and undertook several unsuccessful experiments to produce his own rocket weapons. Several captured Mysorean rockets were sent to England following the annexation of the Mysorean kingdom into British India following the death of Tipu Sultan in the siege of Seringapatam.[184] The British research led to the development of the Congreve rocket, designed by British inventor Sir William Congreve in 1808.[185]

 
A soldier from Tipu Sultan's army, using his rocket as a flagstaff.
 
Tipu Sultan organised his Rocket artillery brigades known as Cushoons, Tipu Sultan expanded the number of servicemen in the various Cushoons from 1500 to almost 5000. The Mysorean rockets utilised by Tipu Sultan, were later updated by the British and successively employed during the Napoleonic Wars.

Dr APJ Abdul Kalam, the former President of India, in his Tipu Sultan Shaheed Memorial Lecture in Bangalore (30 November 1991), called Tipu Sultan the innovator of the world's first war rocket. Two of these rockets, captured by the British at Srirangapatna, were displayed in the Royal Artillery Museum in London. According to historian Dr Dulari Qureshi Tipu Sultan was a fierce warrior king and was so quick in his movement that it seemed to the enemy that he was fighting on many fronts at the same time.[186]

Tipu Sultan's father had expanded on Mysore's use of rocketry, making critical innovations in the rockets themselves and the military logistics of their use. He deployed as many as 1,200 specialised troops in his army to operate rocket launchers. These men were skilled in operating the weapons and were trained to launch their rockets at an angle calculated from the diameter of the cylinder and the distance to the target. The rockets had twin side sharpened blades mounted on them, and when fired en masse, spun and wreaked significant damage against a large army. Tipu greatly expanded the use of rockets after Hyder's death, deploying as many as 5,000 rocketeers at a time.[187] The rockets deployed by Tipu during the Battle of Pollilur were much more advanced than those the British East India Company had previously seen, chiefly because of the use of iron tubes for holding the propellant; this enabled higher thrust and longer range for the missiles (up to 2 km range).[187][184]

British accounts describe the use of the rockets during the third and fourth wars.[188] During the climactic battle at Srirangapatna in 1799, British shells struck a magazine containing rockets, causing it to explode and send a towering cloud of black smoke with cascades of exploding white light rising up from the battlements. After Tipu's defeat in the fourth war the British captured a number of the Mysorean rockets. These became influential in British rocket development, inspiring the Congreve rocket, which was soon put into use in the Napoleonic Wars.[184]


 
Tipu's Tiger in the V&A Museum, London showing the prostrate European being attacked

Tipu's Tigeris an 18th-century automaton or mechanical toy created for Tipu Sultan, the ruler of the Kingdom of Mysore (present day Bengaluru) in India. The carved and painted wood casing represents a tiger mauling a near life-size European man. Mechanisms inside the tiger and the man's body make one hand of the man move, emit a wailing sound from his mouth and grunts from the tiger. In addition a flap on the side of the tiger folds down to reveal the keyboard of a small pipe organ with 18 notes.[189]

The automaton makes use of his personal emblem of the tiger and expresses his hatred of his enemy, the British of the East India Company. The tiger was taken from his summer palace when East India Company troops stormed Tipu's capital in 1799. The Governor General, Lord Mornington, sent the tiger to Britain initially intending it to be an exhibit in the Tower of London. First exhibited to the London public in 1808 in East India House, then the offices of the East India Company in London, it was later transferred to the Victoria and Albert Museum (V&A) in 1880 (accession number 2545(IS)).[190] It now forms part of the permanent exhibit on the "Imperial courts of South India".[191] From the moment it arrived in London to the present day, Tipu's Tiger has been a popular attraction to the public.

 
Side view, showing how the handle when turned gets in the way of the player of the keyboard

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Rajakaryaprasakta Rao Bahadur (1936), pg. 383
  2. ^ "Raja Wodeyar's Conquest of Srirangapatna". 26 March 2018.
  3. ^ Yazdani, Kaveh (2017), India, Modernity and the Great Divergence: Mysore and Gujarat (17th to 19th C.), Brill Publisher, p. 115, ISBN 9789004330795
  4. ^ Simmons, Caleb (2020), Devotional Sovereignty: Kingship and Religion in India, Oxford University Press, pp. 10–12, ISBN 9780190088897
  5. ^ Roddam Narasimha (May 1985). Rockets in Mysore and Britain, 1750–1850 A.D. 27 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine. Published by the National Aeronautical Laboratory.
  6. ^ Kamath (2001), pp. 11–12, pp. 226–227; Pranesh (2003), p. 11
  7. ^ Narasimhacharya (1988), p. 23
  8. ^ Subrahmanyam (2003), p. 64; Rice E.P. (1921), p. 89
  9. ^ Kamath (2001), p. 226
  10. ^ Rice B.L. (1897), p. 361
  11. ^ Ikegame, Aya (7 May 2013). Princely India Re-imagined: A Historical Anthropology of Mysore from 1799 to the present. Routledge. pp. 76–77. ISBN 978-0-415-55449-7.
  12. ^ Pranesh (2003), pp. 2–3
  13. ^ Wilks, Aiyangar in Aiyangar and Smith (1911), pp. 275–276
  14. ^ Aiyangar (1911), p. 275; Pranesh (2003), p. 2
  15. ^ Stein (1989), p. 82
  16. ^ Stein 1987, p. 82
  17. ^ Kamath (2001), p. 227
  18. ^ Subrahmanyam (2001), p. 67
  19. ^ a b c Subrahmanyam (2001), p. 68
  20. ^ Venkata Ramanappa, M. N. (1975), p. 200
  21. ^ Shama Rao in Kamath (2001), p. 227
  22. ^ a b c d e Venkata Ramanappa, M. N. (1975), p.201
  23. ^ a b Subrahmanyam (2001), p. 68; Kamath (2001), p. 228
  24. ^ a b Subrahmanyam (2001), p. 71
  25. ^ Kamath (2001), pp. 228–229
  26. ^ Subrahmanyam (2001), p. 69; Kamath (2001), pp. 228–229
  27. ^ Subrahmanyam (2001), p. 69
  28. ^ Subrahmanyam (2001), p. 70
  29. ^ Subrahmanyam (2001), pp. 70–71; Kamath (2001), p. 229
  30. ^ Pranesh (2003), pp. 44–45
  31. ^ a b c Kamath (2001), p. 230
  32. ^ Shama Rao in Kamath (2001), p. 233
  33. ^ Quote: "A military genius and a man of vigour, valour and resourcefulness" (Chopra et al. 2003, p. 76)
  34. ^ a b Venkata Ramanappa, M. N. (1975), p. 207
  35. ^ Chopra et al. (2003), p. 71, 76
  36. ^ Chopra et al. (2003), p. 55
  37. ^ a b c d Kamath (2001), p. 232
  38. ^ Chopra et al. (2003), p. 71
  39. ^ Chopra et al. (2003), p. 73
  40. ^ a b Jacques, Tony (2007). Dictionary of Battles and Sieges. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press. p. 916. ISBN 978-0-313-33536-5.
  41. ^ Chopra et al. (2003), p. 74
  42. ^ Chopra et al. (2003), p. 75
  43. ^ Chopra et al. 2003, p. 75
  44. ^ Venkata Ramanappa, M. N. (1975), p. 211
  45. ^ Naravane, Wing Commander (Retired) M. S. (2014). Battles of the Honorourable East India Company. New Delhi: A.P.H. Publishing Corporation. p. 175. ISBN 9788131300343.
  46. ^ Mohibbul Hasan (2005), History of Tipu Sultan (Reprint ed.), Delhi: Aakar Books, pp. 105–107, ISBN 9788187879572
  47. ^ Sailendra Nath Sen (1994), Anglo-Maratha Relations, 1785–96, Volume 2 (Reprint ed.), Bombay: Popular Prakashan, p. 55, ISBN 9788171547890
  48. ^ a b Chopra et al. (2003), p. 78–79; Kamath (2001), p. 233
  49. ^ Chopra et al. (2003), pp. 75–76
  50. ^ a b Chopra et al. (2003), p. 77
  51. ^ Mohibbul Hasan (2005), History of Tipu Sultan, Aakar Books, p. 167, ISBN 9788187879572
  52. ^ Chopra et al. (2003), pp. 79–80; Kamath (2001), pp. 233–234
  53. ^ Chopra et al. (2003), pp. 81–82
  54. ^ Kamath (2001), p. 249
  55. ^ a b Kamath (2001), p. 234
  56. ^ Venkata Ramanappa, M. N. (1975), p. 225
  57. ^ Quote: "The Diwan seems to pursue the wisest and the most benevolent course for the promotion of industry and opulence" (Gen. Wellesley in Kamath 2001, p. 249)
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Further reading edit

  • "India". Life. Time, Inc. 12 May 1941. pp. 94–103.
  • Yazdani, Kaveh. India, Modernity and the Great Divergence: Mysore and Gujarat (17th to 19th C.) (Leiden: Brill), 2017. xxxi + 669 pp. online review

12°18′N 76°39′E / 12.30°N 76.65°E / 12.30; 76.65

kingdom, mysore, realm, southern, india, traditionally, believed, have, been, founded, 1399, vicinity, modern, city, mysore, from, 1799, until, 1950, princely, state, until, 1947, subsidiary, alliance, with, british, india, british, took, direct, control, over. The Kingdom of Mysore was a realm in southern India traditionally believed to have been founded in 1399 in the vicinity of the modern city of Mysore From 1799 until 1950 it was a princely state until 1947 in a subsidiary alliance with British India The British took direct control over the princely state in 1831 1 Upon accession to the Dominion of India it became Mysore State later uniting with other Kannada speaking regions to form the state of Karnataka with its ruler remaining as Rajapramukh until 1956 when he became the first governor of the reformed state Kingdom of Mysore1399 1947Flag Coat of armsAnthem ಕ ಯ ಶ ರ ಗ ರ Kayou Sri Gowri 1868 1947 English Great Gowri The Kingdom of Mysore during the reign of Tipu Sultan 1784 AD at its greatest extent StatusKingdom Subordinate to Vijayanagara Empire until 1565 under a subsidiary alliance with the British Crown from 1799Princely state under the British Crown from 1831CapitalMysore SrirangapatnaOfficial languagesKannadaReligionHinduism IslamDemonym s MysoreansGovernmentMonarchyMaharaja 1399 1423 first Yaduraya Wodeyar 1940 1950 last Jayachamaraja WodeyarDiwan 1782 1811 first Purnaiah 1946 1949 last Arcot Ramasamy MudaliarHistory Established1399 Earliest records1551 Anglo Mysore Wars1767 1799 Maratha Mysore War1785 1787 Disestablished1947Preceded by Succeeded byVijayanagara Empire Mysore StateToday part ofIndiaAdmiral Suffren meeting with ally Hyder Ali in 1783 J B Morret engraving 1789The kingdom which was founded and ruled for most part by the Hindu Wodeyar family initially served as feudatories under the Vijayanagara Empire 2 The 17th century saw a steady expansion of its territory and during the rule of Narasaraja Wodeyar I and Chikka Devaraja Wodeyar the kingdom annexed large expanses of what is now southern Karnataka and parts of Tamil Nadu to become a powerful state in the southern Deccan During a brief Muslim rule the kingdom shifted to a Sultanate style of administration under Hyder Ali and Tipu Sultan and was renamed the Sultanat e Khudadad translating into The God gifted empire 3 4 During this time it came into conflict with the Marathas the Nizam of Hyderabad the Kingdom of Travancore and the British which culminated in the four Anglo Mysore Wars Success in the First Anglo Mysore war and stalemate in the Second was followed by defeats in the Third and the Fourth Following Tipu Sultan s death in the fourth war in the Siege of Seringapatam 1799 large parts of his kingdom were annexed by the British which signalled the end of a period of Mysorean hegemony over South India The British restored the Wodeyars to their throne by way of a subsidiary alliance and the diminished Mysore was transformed into a princely state The Wodeyars continued to rule the state until Indian independence in 1947 when Mysore acceded to the Union of India Even as a princely state Mysore came to be counted among the more developed and urbanised regions of India This period 1799 1947 also saw Mysore emerge as one of the important centres of art and culture in India The Mysore kings were not only accomplished exponents of the fine arts and men of letters they were enthusiastic patrons as well Their legacies continue to influence music and the arts even today as well as rocket science with the use of Mysorean rockets 5 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history 1 2 Autonomy advances and reversals 1 3 Under Hyder Ali and Tipu Sultan 1 4 Princely state 2 Administration 3 Economy 3 1 Under Hyder Ali and Tipu Sultan 3 2 Under British rule 4 Culture 4 1 Religion 4 2 Society 4 3 Literature 4 4 Music 5 Architecture 6 Science and Technology in Mysore 7 See also 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 Further readingHistory editEarly history edit Main article Origin of the Kingdom of Mysore nbsp Kingdom of Mysore 1704 during the rule of King Chikka Devaraja WodeyarSources for the history of the kingdom include numerous extant lithic and copper plate inscriptions records from the Mysore palace and contemporary literary sources in Kannada Persian and other languages 6 7 8 According to traditional accounts the kingdom originated as a small state based in the modern city of Mysore and was founded by two brothers Yaduraya also known as Vijaya and Krishnaraya Their origins are mired in legend and are still a matter of debate while some historians posit a northern origin at Dwarka 9 10 others locate it in Karnataka 11 12 13 Yaduraya is said to have married Chikkadevarasi the local princess and assumed the feudal title Wodeyar Kannada ಒಡ ಯರ romanized Oḍeyar lit lord which the ensuing dynasty retained 14 The first unambiguous mention of the Wodeyar family is in 16th century Kannada literature from the reign of the Vijayanagara king Achyuta Deva Raya 1529 1542 the earliest available inscription issued by the Wodeyars themselves dates to the rule of the petty chief Timmaraja II in 1551 15 Autonomy advances and reversals edit The kings who followed ruled as vassals of the Vijayanagara Empire until the decline of the latter in 1565 By this time the kingdom had expanded to thirty three villages protected by a force of 300 soldiers 16 King Timmaraja II conquered some surrounding chiefdoms 17 and King Bola Chamaraja IV lit Bald the first ruler of any political significance among them withheld tribute to the nominal Vijayanagara monarch Aravidu Ramaraya 18 After the death of Aravidu Aliya Rama Raya the Wodeyars began to assert themselves further and King Raja Wodeyar I wrested control of Srirangapatna from the Vijayanagara governor Mahamandaleshvara Aravidu Tirumalla a development which elicited if only ex post facto the tacit approval of Venkatapati Raya the incumbent king of the diminished Vijayanagar Empire ruling from Chandragiri 19 Raja Wodeyar I s reign also saw territorial expansion with the annexation of Channapatna to the north from Jaggadeva Raya 19 20 a development which made Mysore a regional political factor to reckon with 21 22 Consequently by 1612 13 the Wodeyars exercised a great deal of autonomy and even though they acknowledged the nominal overlordship of the Aravidu dynasty tributes and transfers of revenue to Chandragiri stopped This was in marked contrast to other major chiefs the Nayaks of Tamil country who continued to pay off Chandragiri emperors well into the 1630s 19 Chamaraja VI and Kanthirava Narasaraja I attempted to expand further northward but were thwarted by the Bijapur Sultanate and its Maratha subordinates though the Bijapur armies under Ranadullah Khan were effectively repelled in their 1638 siege of Srirangapatna 22 23 Expansionist ambitions then turned southward into Tamil country where Narasaraja Wodeyar acquired Satyamangalam in modern northern Erode district while his successor Dodda Devaraja Wodeyar expanded further to capture western Tamil regions of Erode and Dharmapuri after successfully repulsing the chiefs of Madurai The invasion of the Keladi Nayakas of Malnad was also dealt with successfully This period was followed by one of complex geo political changes when in the 1670s the Marathas and the Mughals pressed into the Deccan 22 23 Chikka Devaraja r 1672 1704 the most notable of Mysore s early kings who ruled during much of this period managed to not only survive the exigencies but further expanded territory He achieved this by forging strategic alliances with the Marathas and the Mughals 24 25 The kingdom soon grew to include Salem and Bangalore to the east Hassan to the west Chikkamagaluru and Tumkur to the north and the rest of Coimbatore to the south 26 Despite this expansion the kingdom which now accounted for a fair share of land in the southern Indian heartland extending from the Western Ghats to the western boundaries of the Coromandel plain remained landlocked without direct coastal access Chikka Devaraja s attempts to remedy this brought Mysore into conflict with the Nayaka chiefs of Ikkeri and the kings Rajas of Kodagu modern Coorg who between them controlled the Kanara coast coastal areas of modern Karnataka and the intervening hill region respectively 27 The conflict brought mixed results with Mysore annexing Periyapatna but suffering a reversal at Palupare 28 Nevertheless from around 1704 when the kingdom passed on to Mute king Mukarasu Kanthirava Narasaraja II the survival and expansion of the kingdom was achieved by playing a delicate game of alliance negotiation subordination on occasion and annexation of territory in all directions According to historians Sanjay Subrahmanyam and Sethu Madhava Rao Mysore was now formally a tributary of the Mughal Empire Mughul records claim a regular tribute peshkash was paid by Mysore However historian Suryanath U Kamath feels the Mughals may have considered Mysore an ally a situation brought about by Mughal Maratha competition for supremacy in southern India 29 By the 1720s with the Mughal empire in decline further complications arose with the Mughal residents at both Arcot and Sira claiming tribute 24 The years that followed saw Krishnaraja Wodeyar I tread cautiously on the matter while keeping the Kodagu chiefs and the Marathas at bay He was followed by Chamaraja Wodeyar VII during whose reign power fell into the hands of prime minister Dalwai or Dalavoy Nanjarajiah or Nanjaraja and chief minister Sarvadhikari Devarajiah or Devaraja the influential brothers from Kalale town near Nanjangud who would rule for the next three decades with the Wodeyars relegated to being the titular heads 30 31 The latter part of the rule of Krishnaraja II saw the Deccan Sultanates being eclipsed by the Mughals and in the confusion that ensued Hyder Ali a captain in the army rose to prominence 22 His victory against the Marathas at Bangalore in 1758 resulting in the annexation of their territory made him an iconic figure In honour of his achievements the king gave him the title Nawab Haider Ali Khan Bahadur 31 Under Hyder Ali and Tipu Sultan edit Main articles Anglo Mysore wars and Maratha Mysore War nbsp Admiral Suffren meeting with ally Hyder Ali in 1783 J B Morret engraving 1789 nbsp The flag of the Sultanate of Mysore at the entrance to the fort of Bangalore nbsp A portrait of Tipu Sultan made during the Third Anglo Mysore War nbsp Mural of the famous Battle of Pollilur in Tipu Sultan s summer palace in Srirangapatna nbsp Lord Cornwallis hastily retreats after his unsuccessful siege of Srirangapatna 1792 Hyder Ali has earned an important place in the history of Karnataka for his fighting skills and administrative acumen 32 33 The rise of Hyder came at a time of important political developments in the sub continent While the European powers were busy transforming themselves from trading companies to political powers the Nizam as the subedar of the Mughals pursued his ambitions in the Deccan and the Marathas following their defeat at Panipat sought safe havens in the south The period also saw the French vie with the British for control of the Carnatic a contest in which the British would eventually prevail as British commander Sir Eyre Coote decisively defeated the French under the Comte de Lally at the Battle of Wandiwash in 1760 a watershed in Indian history as it cemented British supremacy in South Asia 34 Though the Wodeyars remained the nominal heads of Mysore during this period real power lay in the hands of Hyder Ali and his son Tipu 35 By 1761 Maratha power had diminished and by 1763 Hyder Ali had captured the Keladi kingdom defeated the rulers of Bilgi Bednur and Gutti invaded the Malabar Coast in the south and conquered the Zamorin s capital Calicut with ease in 1766 and extended the Mysore kingdom up to Dharwad and Bellary in the north 36 37 Mysore was now a major political power in the subcontinent and Haider s meteoric rise from relative obscurity and his defiance formed one of the last remaining challenges to complete British hegemony over the Indian subcontinent a challenge which would take them more than three decades to overcome 38 In a bid to stem Hyder s rise the British formed an alliance with the Marathas and the Nizam of Golconda culminating in the First Anglo Mysore War in 1767 Despite numerical superiority Hyder Ali suffered defeats at the battles of Chengham and Tiruvannamalai The British ignored his overtures for peace until Hyder Ali had strategically moved his armies to within five miles of Madras modern Chennai and was able to successfully sue for peace 34 37 39 In 1770 when the Maratha armies of Madhavrao Peshwa invaded Mysore three wars were fought between 1764 and 1772 by Madhavrao against Hyder in which Hyder lost Hyder expected British support as per the 1769 treaty but they betrayed him by staying out of the conflict The British betrayal and Hyder s subsequent defeat reinforced Hyder s deep distrust of the British a sentiment that would be shared by his son and one which would inform Anglo Mysore rivalries of the next three decades In 1777 Haider Ali recovered the previously lost territories of Coorg and parts of what wou d later become Malabar District from the Marathas 40 Haider Ali s army advanced towards the Marathas and fought them at the Battle of Saunshi and came out victorious during the same year 40 By 1779 Hyder Ali had captured parts of modern Tamil Nadu and Kerala in the south extending the Kingdom s area to about 80 000 mi2 205 000 km2 37 In 1780 he befriended the French and made peace with the Marathas and the Nizam 41 However Hyder Ali was betrayed by the Marathas and the Nizam who made treaties with the British as well In July 1779 Hyder Ali headed an army of 80 000 mostly cavalry descending through the passes of the Ghats amid burning villages before laying siege to British forts in northern Arcot starting the Second Anglo Mysore War Hyder Ali had some initial successes against the British notably at Pollilur the worst defeat the British suffered in India until Chillianwala and Arcot until the arrival of Sir Eyre Coote when the fortunes of the British began to change 42 On 1 June 1781 Coote struck the first heavy blow against Hyder Ali in the decisive Battle of Porto Novo The battle was won by Coote against odds of five to one and is regarded as one of the greatest feats of the British in India It was followed up by another hard fought battle at Pollilur the scene of an earlier triumph of Hyder Ali over a British force on 27 August in which the British won another success and by the rout of the Mysore troops at Sholinghur a month later Hyder Ali died on 7 December 1782 even as fighting continued with the British He was succeeded by his son Tipu Sultan who continued hostilities against the British by recapturing Baidanur and Mangalore 37 43 By 1783 neither the British nor Mysore were able to obtain a clear overall victory The French withdrew their support of Mysore following the peace settlement in Europe 44 Undaunted Tipu popularly known as the Tiger of Mysore continued the war against the British but lost some regions in modern coastal Karnataka to them The Maratha Mysore War occurred between 1785 and 1787 and consisted of a series of conflicts between the Sultanate of Mysore and the Maratha Empire 45 Following Tipu Sultan s victory against the Marathas at the siege of Bahadur Benda a peace agreement was signed between the two kingdoms with mutual gains and losses 46 47 Similarly the treaty of Mangalore was signed in 1784 bringing hostilities with the British to a temporary and uneasy halt and restoring the others lands to the status quo ante bellum 48 49 The treaty is an important document in the history of India because it was the last occasion when an Indian power dictated terms to the British who were made to play the role of humble supplicants for peace A start of fresh hostilities between the British and French in Europe would have been sufficient reason for Tipu to abrogate his treaty and further his ambition of striking at the British 50 His attempts to lure the Nizam the Marathas the French and the Sultan of Turkey failed to bring direct military aid 50 nbsp General Lord Cornwallis receiving Tipu Sultan s sons as hostages Tipu s successful attacks in 1790 on the Kingdom of Travancore a later British ally ended in defeat for him and moreover it resulted in greater hostilities with the British which culminated in the Third Anglo Mysore War 51 In the beginning the British made gains taking the Coimbatore district but Tipu s counterattack reversed many of these gains By 1792 with aid from the Marathas who attacked from the north west and the Nizam who moved in from the north east the British under Lord Cornwallis successfully besieged Srirangapatna resulting in Tipu s defeat and the Treaty of Srirangapatna Half of Mysore was distributed among the allies and two of his sons were held to ransom 48 A humiliated but indomitable Tipu went about re building his economic and military power He attempted to covertly win over support from Revolutionary France the Amir of Afghanistan the Ottoman Empire and Arabia However these attempts to involve the French soon became known to the British who were at the time fighting the French in Egypt were backed by the Marathas and the Nizam In 1799 Tipu died defending Srirangapatna in the Fourth Anglo Mysore War heralding the end of the Kingdom s independence 52 Modern Indian historians consider Tipu Sultan an inveterate enemy of the British an able administrator and an innovator 53 Princely state edit nbsp Palace of the Maharajah of Mysore India from the Illustrated London News 1881 with modern hand coloring Following Tipu s fall a part of the kingdom of Mysore was annexed and divided between the Madras Presidency and the Nizam The remaining territory was transformed into a Princely State the five year old scion of the Wodeyar family Krishnaraja III was installed on the throne with chief minister Diwan Purnaiah who had earlier served under Tipu handling the reins as regent and Lt Col Barry Close taking charge as the British Resident The British then took control of Mysore s foreign policy and also exacted an annual tribute and a subsidy for maintaining a standing British army at Mysore 54 55 56 As Diwan Purnaiah distinguished himself with his progressive and innovative administration until he retired from service in 1811 and died shortly thereafter following the 16th birthday of the boy king 57 58 nbsp Mysore Palace built between 1897 and 1912The years that followed witnessed cordial relations between Mysore and the British until things began to sour in the 1820s Even though the Governor of Madras Thomas Munro determined after a personal investigation in 1825 that there was no substance to the allegations of financial impropriety made by A H Cole the incumbent Resident of Mysore the Nagar revolt a civil insurrection which broke out towards the end of the decade changed things considerably In 1831 close on the heels of the insurrection and citing mal administration the British took direct control of the princely state placing it under a commission rule 59 60 For the next fifty years Mysore passed under the rule of successive British Commissioners Sir Mark Cubbon renowned for his statesmanship served from 1834 until 1861 and put into place an efficient and successful administrative system which left Mysore a well developed state 61 nbsp Jayachamrajendra Wadiyar with Elizabeth IIIn 1876 77 however towards the end of the period of direct British rule Mysore was struck by a devastating famine with estimated mortality figures ranging between 700 000 and 1 100 000 or nearly a fifth of the population 62 Shortly thereafter Maharaja Chamaraja X educated in the British system took over the rule of Mysore in 1881 following the success of a lobby set up by the Wodeyar dynasty that was in favour of rendition Accordingly a resident British officer was appointed at the Mysore court and a Diwan to handle the Maharaja s administration 63 From then onwards until Indian independence in 1947 Mysore remained a Princely State within the British Indian Empire with the Wodeyars continuing their rule 63 After the demise of Maharaja Chamaraja X Krishnaraja IV still a boy of eleven ascended the throne in 1895 His mother Maharani Kemparajammanniyavaru ruled as regent until Krishnaraja took over the reins on 8 February 1902 64 Under his rule with Sir M Vishweshwariah as his Diwan the Maharaja set about transforming Mysore into a progressive and modern state particularly in industry education agriculture and art Such were the strides that Mysore made that Mahatma Gandhi called the Maharaja a saintly king Rajarishi 65 Paul Brunton the British philosopher and orientalist John Gunther the American author and British statesman Lord Samuel praised the ruler s efforts Much of the pioneering work in educational infrastructure that took place during this period would serve Karnataka invaluably in the coming decades 66 The Maharaja was an accomplished musician and like his predecessors avidly patronised the development of the fine arts 67 He was followed by his nephew Jayachamarajendra whose rule continued for some years after he signed the instrument of accession and Mysore joined the Indian Union on 9 August 1947 68 Jayachamarajendra continued to rule as Rajapramukh of Mysore until 1956 when as a result of the States Reorganisation Act 1956 his position was converted into Governor of Mysore State From 1963 until 1966 he was the first Governor of Madras State 69 Administration editMain article Administration of the Kingdom of Mysore Mysore Kings 1399 present Feudatory Monarchy As vassals of Vijayanagara Empire 1399 1553 Yaduraya Wodeyar 1399 1423 Chamaraja Wodeyar I 1423 1459 Timmaraja Wodeyar I 1459 1478 Chamaraja Wodeyar II 1478 1513 Chamaraja Wodeyar III 1513 1553 Absolute Monarchy Independent Wodeyar Kings 1553 1761 Timmaraja Wodeyar II 1553 1572 Chamaraja Wodeyar IV 1572 1576 Chamaraja Wodeyar V 1576 1578 Raja Wodeyar I 1578 1617 Chamaraja Wodeyar VI 1617 1637 Raja Wodeyar II 1637 1638 Narasaraja Wodeyar I 1638 1659 Dodda Devaraja Wodeyar 1659 1673 Chikka Devaraja Wodeyar 1673 1704 Narasaraja Wodeyar II 1704 1714 Krishnaraja Wodeyar I 1714 1732 Chamaraja Wodeyar VII 1732 1734 Krishnaraja Wodeyar II 1734 1761 Puppet Monarchy Under Haider Ali and Tipu Sultan 1761 1799 Krishnaraja Wodeyar II 1761 1766 Nanjaraja Wodeyar 1766 1770 Chamaraja Wodeyar VIII 1770 1776 Chamaraja Wodeyar IX 1776 1796 Puppet Monarchy Under British Rule 1799 1831 Krishnaraja Wodeyar III 1799 1831 Titular Monarchy Monarchy abolished 1831 1881 Krishnaraja Wodeyar III 1831 1868 Chamarajendra Wadiyar X 1868 1881 Constitutional MonarchyMonarchy restored by Rendition Act 1881 under British Crown 1881 1947 Chamarajendra Wadiyar X 1881 1894 Krishnaraja Wadiyar IV 1894 1940 Jayachamaraja Wadiyar 1940 1947 Constitutional Monarchy Mysore State Dominion of India 1947 1956 Jayachamaraja Wadiyar as Rajpramukh 1947 1956 Titular Monarchy Monarchy abolished 1956 present Jayachamaraja Wadiyar 1956 1974 Srikantadatta Wadiyar 1974 2013 Yaduveera Chamaraja Wadiyar 2015 present There are no records relating to the administration of the Mysore territory during the Vijayanagara Empire s reign 1399 1565 Signs of a well organised and independent administration appear from the time of Raja Wodeyar I who is believed to have been sympathetic towards peasants raiyats who were exempted from any increases in taxation during his time 22 The first sign that the kingdom had established itself in the area was the issuing of gold coins Kanthirayi phanam resembling those of the erstwhile Vijayanagara Empire during Narasaraja Wodeyar s rule 70 The rule of Chikka Devaraja saw several reforms effected Internal administration was remodeled to suit the kingdom s growing needs and became more efficient A postal system came into being Far reaching financial reforms were also introduced A number of petty taxes were imposed in place of direct taxes as a result of which the peasants were compelled to pay more by way of land tax 71 The king is said to have taken a personal interest in the regular collection of revenues the treasury burgeoned to 90 000 000 Pagoda a unit of currency earning him the epithet Nine crore Narayana Navakoti Narayana In 1700 he sent an embassy to Aurangazeb s court who bestowed upon him the title Jug Deo Raja and awarded permission to sit on the ivory throne Following this he founded the district offices Attara Kacheri the central secretariat comprising eighteen departments and his administration was modelled on Mughal lines 72 During Hyder Ali s rule the kingdom was divided into five provinces Asofis of unequal size comprising 171 taluks Paraganas in total 73 When Tipu Sultan became the de facto ruler the kingdom which encompassed 160 000 km2 61 776 sq mi 62 000 mi2 was divided into 37 provinces and a total of 124 taluks Amil Each province had a governor Asof and one deputy governor Each taluk had a headman called Amildar and a group of villages were in charge of a Patel 55 The central administration comprised six departments headed by ministers each aided by an advisory council of up to four members 74 When the princely state came under direct British rule in 1831 early commissioners Lushington Briggs and Morrison were followed by Mark Cubbon who took charge in 1834 75 He made Bangalore the capital and divided the princely state into four divisions each under a British superintendent The state was further divided into 120 taluks with 85 taluk courts with all lower level administration in the Kannada language 75 The office of the commissioner had eight departments revenue post police cavalry public works medical animal husbandry judiciary and education The judiciary was hierarchical with the commissioners court at the apex followed by the Huzur Adalat four superintending courts and eight Sadar Munsiff courts at the lowest level 76 Lewin Bowring became the chief commissioner in 1862 and held the position until 1870 During his tenure the property Registration Act the Indian Penal Code and Code of Criminal Procedure came into effect and the judiciary was separated from the executive branch of the administration 76 The state was divided into eight districts Bangalore Chitraldroog Hassan Kadur Kolar Mysore Shimoga and Tumkur 77 After rendition C V Rungacharlu was made the Diwan Under him the first Representative Assembly of British India with 144 members was formed in 1881 78 He was followed by K Seshadri Iyer in 1883 during whose tenure gold mining at the Kolar Gold Fields began the Shivanasamudra hydroelectric project was initiated in 1899 the first such major attempt in India and electricity and drinking water the latter through pipes was supplied to Bangalore 79 Seshadri Iyer was followed by P N Krishnamurti who created The Secretariat Manual to maintain records and the Co operative Department in 1905 79 V P Madhava Rao who focussed on conservation of forests and T Ananda Rao who finalised the Kannambadi Dam project 80 Sir Mokshagundam Visvesvaraya popularly known as the Maker of Modern Mysore holds a key place in the history of Karnataka 81 An engineer by education he became the Diwan in 1909 80 82 Under his tenure membership of the Mysore Legislative Assembly was increased from 18 to 24 and it was given the power to discuss the state budget 80 The Mysore Economic Conference was expanded into three committees industry and commerce education and agriculture with publications in English and Kannada 83 Important projects commissioned during his time included the construction of the Kannambadi Dam the founding of the Mysore Iron Works at Bhadravathi founding of the Mysore University in 1916 the University Visvesvaraya College of Engineering in Bangalore establishment of the Mysore state railway department and numerous industries in Mysore In 1955 he was awarded the Bharat Ratna India s highest civilian honour 83 84 Sir Mirza Ismail took office as Diwan in 1926 and built on the foundation laid by his predecessor Amongst his contributions were the expansion of the Bhadravathi Iron Works the founding of a cement and paper factory in Bhadravathi and the launch of Hindustan Aeronautics Limited A man with a penchant for gardens he founded the Brindavan Gardens Krishnaraja Sagar and built the Kaveri River high level canal to irrigate 120 000 acres 490 km2 in modern Mandya district 85 In 1939 Mandya District was carved out of Mysore District bringing the number of districts in the state to nine Economy editMain article Economy of the Kingdom of Mysore See also Economic history of India The vast majority of the people lived in villages and agriculture was their main occupation The economy of the kingdom was based on agriculture Grains pulses vegetables and flowers were cultivated Commercial crops included sugarcane and cotton The agrarian population consisted of landlords vokkaliga zamindar heggadde who tilled the land by employing a number of landless labourers usually paying them in grain Minor cultivators were also willing to hire themselves out as labourers if the need arose 86 It was due to the availability of these landless labourers that kings and landlords were able to execute major projects such as palaces temples mosques anicuts dams and tanks 87 Because land was abundant and the population relatively sparse no rent was charged on land ownership Instead landowners paid tax for cultivation which amounted to up to one half of all harvested produce 87 Under Hyder Ali and Tipu Sultan edit Tipu Sultan is credited with founding state trading depots in various locations of his kingdom In addition he founded depots in foreign locations such as Karachi Jeddah and Muscat where Mysore products were sold 88 During Tipu s rule French technology was used for the first time in carpentry and smithing Chinese technology was used for sugar production and technology from Bengal helped improve the sericulture industry 89 State factories were established in Kanakapura and Taramandelpeth for producing cannons and gunpowder respectively The state held the monopoly in the production of essentials such as sugar salt iron pepper cardamom betel nut tobacco and sandalwood as well as the extraction of incense oil from sandalwood and the mining of silver gold and precious stones Sandalwood was exported to China and the Persian Gulf countries and sericulture was developed in twenty one centers within the kingdom 90 The Mysore silk industry was initiated during the rule of Tipu Sultan 91 Later the industry was hit by a global depression and competition from imported silk and rayon In the second half of the 20th century it however revived and the Mysore State became the top multivoltine silk producer in India 91 Under British rule edit This system changed under the subsidiary alliance with the British when tax payments were made in cash and were used for the maintenance of the army police and other civil and public establishments A portion of the tax was transferred to England as the Indian tribute 92 Unhappy with the loss of their traditional revenue system and the problems they faced peasants rose in rebellion in many parts of south India 93 After 1800 the Cornwallis land reforms came into effect Reade Munro Graham and Thackeray were some administrators who improved the economic conditions of the masses 94 However the homespun textile industry suffered while most of India was under British rule with the exception of the producers of the finest cloth and the coarse cloth which was popular with the rural masses This was due to the manufacturing mills of Manchester Liverpool and Scotland being more than a match for the traditional handweaving industry especially in spinning and weaving 95 96 The economic revolution in England and the tariff policies of the British also caused massive de industrialization in other sectors throughout British India and Mysore For example the gunny bag weaving business had been a monopoly of the Goniga people which they lost when the British began ruling the area The import of a chemical substitute for saltpetre potassium nitrate affected the Uppar community the traditional makers of saltpetre for use in gunpowder The import of kerosene affected the Ganiga community which supplied oils Foreign enamel and crockery industries affected the native pottery business and mill made blankets replaced the country made blankets called kambli 97 This economic fallout led to the formation of community based social welfare organisations to help those within the community to cope better with their new economic situation including youth hostels for students seeking education and shelter 98 However the British economic policies created a class structure consisting of a newly established middle class comprising various blue and white collared occupational groups including agents brokers lawyers teachers civil servants and physicians Due to a more flexible caste hierarchy the middle class contained a heterogeneous mix of people from different castes 99 Culture editReligion edit nbsp Temple pond constructed by King Chikka Devaraja Wodeyar at Shravanabelagola an important Jain temple town nbsp Shweta Varahaswamy temple 1673 1704 in the Mysore Palace groundsThe early kings of the Wodeyar dynasty worshipped the Hindu god Shiva The later kings starting from the 17th century took to Vaishnavism the worship of the Hindu god Vishnu 100 According to musicologist Meera Rajaram Pranesh King Raja Wodeyar I was a devotee of the god Vishnu King Dodda Devaraja was honoured with the title Protector of Brahmins Deva Brahmana Paripalaka for his support to Brahmins and Maharaja Krishnaraja III was devoted to the goddess Chamundeshwari a form of Hindu goddess Durga 101 Wilks History of Mysore 1800 wrote about a Jangama Veerashaiva saint devotee of Shiva uprising related to excessive taxation which was put down firmly by Chikka Devaraja Historian D R Nagaraj claims that four hundred Jangamas were murdered in the process but clarifies that Veerashaiva literature itself is silent about the issue 102 Historian Suryanath Kamath claims King Chikka Devaraja was a Srivaishnava follower of Sri Vaishnavism a sect of Vaishnavism but was not anti Veerashaiva 103 Historian Aiyangar concurs that some of the kings including the celebrated Narasaraja I and Chikka Devaraja were Vaishnavas but suggests this may not have been the case with all Wodeyar rulers 104 The rise of the modern day Mysore city as a centre of south Indian culture has been traced from the period of their sovereignty 105 Raja Wodeyar I initiated the celebration of the Dasara festival in Mysore a proud tradition of the erstwhile Vijayanagara royal family 106 107 Jainism though in decline during the late medieval period also enjoyed the patronage of the Mysore kings who made munificent endowments to the Jain monastic order at the town of Shravanabelagola 108 109 Records indicate that some Wodeyar kings not only presided over the Mahamastakabhisheka ceremony an important Jain religious event at Shravanabelagola but also personally offered prayers puja during the years 1659 1677 1800 1825 1910 1925 1940 and 1953 110 The contact between South India and Islam goes back to the 7th century when trade between Hindu kingdoms and Islamic caliphates thrived These Muslim traders settled on the Malabar Coast with the permission and blessings of the Hindu Lords of those parts and married local Hindu women and their descendants came to be known as Mappillas 111 By the 14th century Muslims had become a significant minority in the south though the advent of Portuguese missionaries checked their growth 111 Hyder Ali though a devout Muslim did not allow his faith to interfere with the administration of the predominantly Hindu kingdom ruled by Hindu Kings Historians are however divided on the intentions of Haider Ali s son Tipu Sultan It has been claimed that Tipu raised Hindus to prominent positions in his administration back in Mysore made generous grants to Hindu temples and Brahmins and generally respected other faiths and that any religious conversions that Tipu undertook were as punishment to those who rebelled against his authority 112 However this has been countered by other historians who claim that Tipu Sultan treated the non Muslims of Mysore far better than those of the Malabar Coast Raichur and Kodagu regions They point out that Tipu was responsible for mass conversions of Christians and Hindus in these regions by force to convert 113 114 Society edit Main article Society of the Kingdom of Mysore nbsp The Crawford Hall on Mysore University campus houses the university offices Prior to the 18th century the society of the kingdom followed age old and deeply established norms of social interaction between people Accounts by contemporaneous travellers indicate the widespread practice of the Hindu caste system and of animal sacrifices during the nine day celebrations called Mahanavami 115 Later fundamental changes occurred due to the struggle between native and foreign powers Though wars between the Hindu kingdoms and the Sultanates continued the battles between native rulers including Muslims and the newly arrived British took centre stage 73 The spread of English education the introduction of the printing press and the criticism of the prevailing social system by Christian missionaries helped make the society more open and flexible The rise of modern nationalism throughout India also affected Mysore 116 With the advent of British power English education gained prominence in addition to traditional education in local languages These changes were orchestrated by Lord Elphinstone the governor of the Madras Presidency His plan became the constitution of the central collegiate institution or University Board in 1841 117 Accordingly a high school department of the university was established For imparting education in the interior regions schools were raised in principal towns which eventually were elevated to college level with each college becoming central to many local schools zilla schools 118 The earliest English medium schools appeared in 1833 in Mysore and spread across the region In 1858 the department of education was founded in Mysore and by 1881 there were an estimated 2 087 English medium schools in the state of Mysore Higher education became available with the formation of Bangalore Central College in Bangalore 1870 Maharaja s College 1879 Maharani s College 1901 and the Mysore University 1916 in Mysore and the St Agnes College in Mangalore 1921 119 Social reforms aimed at removing practices such as sati and social discrimination based upon untouchability as well as demands for the emancipation of the lower classes swept across India and influenced Mysore territory 120 In 1894 the kingdom passed laws to abolish the marriage of girls below the age of eight Remarriage of widowed women and marriage of destitute women was encouraged and in 1923 some women were granted the permission to exercise their franchise in elections 121 There were however uprisings against British authority in the Mysore territory notably the Kodagu uprising in 1835 after the British dethroned the local ruler Chikkaviraraja and the Kanara uprising of 1837 122 The era of printing heralded by Christian missionaries notably Hermann Mogling resulted in the founding of printing presses across the kingdom The publication of ancient and contemporary Kannada books such as the Pampa Bharata and the Jaimini Bharata a Kannada language Bible a bilingual dictionary and a Kannada newspaper called Kannada Samachara began in the early 19th century 123 Aluru Venkata Rao published a consolidated Kannada history glorifying the achievements of Kannadigas in his book Karnataka Gatha Vaibhava 124 Classical English and Sanskrit drama 125 and native Yakshagana musical theatre influenced the Kannada stage and produced famous dramatists like Gubbi Veeranna 126 The public began to enjoy Carnatic music through its broadcast via public address systems set up on the palace grounds 127 Mysore paintings which were inspired by the Bengal Renaissance were created by artists such as Sundarayya Ala Singarayya and B Venkatappa 128 Literature edit Main articles Kannada literature in the Kingdom of Mysore and Modern Kannada literature nbsp Opening page of the musical treatise Sritattvanidhi proclaiming Krishnaraja Wodeyar III as the authorThe era of the Kingdom of Mysore is considered a golden age in the development of Kannada literature Not only was the Mysore court adorned by famous Brahmin and Veerashaiva writers and composers 109 129 the kings themselves were accomplished in the fine arts and made important contributions 130 131 While conventional literature in philosophy and religion remained popular writings in new genres such as chronicle biography history encyclopaedia novel drama and musical treatise became popular 132 A native form of folk literature with dramatic representation called Yakshagana gained popularity 133 134 A remarkable development of the later period was the influence of English literature and classical Sanskrit literature on Kannada 135 Govinda Vaidya a native of Srirangapatna wrote Kanthirava Narasaraja Vijaya a eulogy of his patron King Narasaraja I Written in sangatya metre a composition meant to be rendered to the accompaniment of a musical instrument the book describes the king s court popular music and the types of musical compositions of the age in twenty six chapters 136 137 King Chikka Devaraja was the earliest composer of the dynasty 31 138 To him is ascribed the famous treatise on music called Geetha Gopala Though inspired by Jayadeva s Sanskrit work Geetha Govinda it had an originality of its own and was written in saptapadi metre 139 Contemporary poets who left their mark on the entire Kannada speaking region include the Brahmin poet Lakshmisa and the itinerant Veerashaiva poet Sarvajna Female poets also played a role in literary developments with Cheluvambe the queen of Krishnaraja Wodeyar I Helavanakatte Giriyamma Sri Rangamma 1685 and Sanchi Honnamma Hadibadeya Dharma late 17th century writing notable works 140 141 A polyglot King Narasaraja II authored fourteen Yakshaganas in various languages though all are written in Kannada script 142 Maharaja Krishnaraja III was a prolific writer in Kannada for which he earned the honorific Abhinava Bhoja a comparison to the medieval King Bhoja 143 Over forty writings are attributed to him of which the musical treatise Sri Tatwanidhi and a poetical romance called Saugandika Parinaya written in two versions a sangatya and a drama are most well known 144 Under the patronage of the Maharaja Kannada literature began its slow and gradual change towards modernity Kempu Narayana s Mudramanjusha The Seal Casket 1823 is the earliest work that has touches of modern prose 145 However the turning point came with the historically important Adbhuta Ramayana 1895 and Ramaswamedham 1898 by Muddanna whom the Kannada scholar Narasimha Murthy considers a Janus like figure of modern Kannada literature Muddanna has deftly handled an ancient epic from an entirely modern viewpoint 146 Basavappa Shastry a native of Mysore and a luminary in the court of Maharaja Krishnaraja III and Maharaja Chamaraja X is known as the Father of Kannada theatre Kannada Nataka Pitamaha 147 He authored dramas in Kannada and translated William Shakespeare s Othello to Shurasena Charite His well known translations from Sanskrit to Kannada are many and include Kalidasa and Abhignyana Shakuntala 148 Music edit Main article Musicians of the Kingdom of Mysore nbsp Legendary Vainikas Veene Subbanna and Veene Sheshanna photographed in 1902 Under Maharaja Krishnaraja III and his successors Chamaraja X Krishnaraja IV and the last ruler Jayachamaraja the Mysore court came to be the largest and most renowned patron of music 149 While the Tanjore and Travancore courts also extended great patronage and emphasised preservation of the art the unique combination of royal patronage of individual musicians founding of music schools to kindle public interest and a patronage of European music publishers and producers set Mysore apart 150 Maharaja Krishnaraja III himself a musician and musicologist of merit composed a number of javalis light lyrics and devotional songs in Kannada under the title Anubhava pancharatna His compositions bear the pen name mudra Chamundi or Chamundeshwari in honour of the Wodeyar family deity 151 Under Krishnaraja IV art received further patronage A distinct school of music which gave importance to raga and bhava evolved 128 152 153 The Royal School of Music founded at the palace helped institutionalise teaching of the art Carnatic compositions were printed and the European staff notation came to be employed by royal musicians Western music was also encouraged Margaret Cousins piano concerto with the Palace Orchestra marked the celebrations of Beethoven s centenary in Bangalore 149 Maharaja Jayachamaraja also a renowned composer of Carnatic kritis a musical composition sponsored a series of recordings of Russian composer Nikolai Medtner and others 149 The court ensured that Carnatic music also kept up with the times Gramophone recordings of the palace band were made and sold commercially 154 Attention was paid to technology of the concert Lavish sums were spent on acquiring various instruments including the unconventional horn violin theremin and calliaphone a mechanical music player 155 The Mysore court was home to several renowned experts vidwan of the time Veena Sheshanna a court musician during the rule of Maharaja Chamaraja X 156 is considered one of the greatest exponents of the veena 157 His achievements in classical music won Mysore a premier place in the art of instrumental Carnatic music and he was given the honorific Vainika Shikhamani by Maharaja Krishnaraja Wodeyar IV 158 159 Mysore Vasudevacharya was a noted musician and composer in Sanskrit and Telugu from Mysore 160 He holds the unique distinction of being patronised by four generations of Mysore kings and rulers and for being court musician to three of them 161 162 H L Muthiah Bhagavatar was another musician composer who adorned the Mysore court 163 Considered one of the most important composers of the post Tyagaraja period 164 he is credited with about 400 compositions in Sanskrit Kannada Telugu and Tamil under the pen name Harikesha Among violinists T Chowdiah emerged as one of the most accomplished exponents of the time He is known to have mastered the seven stringed violin 126 165 Chowdiah was appointed court musician by Maharaja Krishnaraja Wodeyar IV in 1939 and received such titles as Sangeeta Ratna and Sangeeta Kalanidhi He is credited with compositions in Kannada Telugu and Sanskrit under the pen name Trimakuta 166 Architecture editMain article List of religious buildings and structures of the Kingdom of Mysore The architectural style of courtly and royal structures in the kingdom underwent profound changes during British rule a mingling of European traditions with native elements The Hindu temples in the kingdom were built in typical South Indian Dravidian style a modest version of the Vijayanagara building idiom 167 When in power Tipu Sultan constructed two places namely Lal Mahal Palace later destroyed after the siege of Serirangpatnam in 1799 the Summer Palace and famous Masjid e Aala in Srirangapatna his capital However it is the city of Mysore that is best known for its royal palaces earning it the nickname City of Palaces The city s main palace the Mysore Palace is also known as the Amba Vilas Palace The original complex was destroyed by fire and a new palace was commissioned by the Queen Regent and designed by the English architect Henry Irwin in 1897 168 The overall design is a combination of Hindu Islamic Indo Saracenic and Moorish styles which for the first time in India used cast iron columns and roof frames The striking feature of the exterior is the granite columns that support cusped arches on the portico a tall tower whose finial is a gilded dome with an umbrella chattri on it and groups of other domes around it 169 The interior is richly decorated with marbled walls and a teakwood ceiling on which are sculptures of Hindu deities The Durbar hall leads to an inner private hall through silver doors This opulent room has floor panels that are inlaid with semi precious stones and a stained glass roof supported centrally by columns and arches The marriage hall Kalyana mantapa in the palace complex is noted for its stained glass octagonal dome with peacock motifs 170 The Lalitha Mahal Palace was built in 1921 by E W Fritchley under the commission of Maharaja Krishnaraja IV The architectural style is called Renaissance and exhibits concepts from English manor houses and Italian palazzos 171 The central dome is believed to be modelled on St Paul s Cathedral in London Other important features are the Italian marble staircase the polished wooden flooring in the banquet and dance halls and the Belgian cut glass lamps 171 The Jaganmohan Palace was commissioned in 1861 and was completed in 1910 The three storeyed building with attractive domes finials and cupolas was the venue of many a royal celebration It is now called the Chamarajendra Art Gallery and houses a rich collection of artefacts 172 The Mysore University campus also called Manasa Gangotri is home to several architecturally interesting buildings Some of them are in European style and were completed in the late 19th century They include the Jayalakshmi Vilas mansion the Crawford Hall the Oriental Research Institute built between 1887 and 1891 with its Ionic and Corinthian columns and the district offices Athara Kutchery 1887 The Athara Kutchery which initially served as the office of the British commissioner has an octagonal dome and a finial that adds to its beauty 173 The Maharaja s summer palace built in 1880 is called the Lokaranjan Mahal and initially served as a school for royalty The Rajendra Vilas Palace built in the Indo British style atop the Chamundi Hill was commissioned in 1922 and completed in 1938 by Maharaja Krishnaraja IV 171 Other royal mansions built by the Mysore rulers were the Chittaranjan Mahal in Mysore and the Bangalore Palace in Bangalore a structure built on the lines of England s Windsor Castle 174 The Central Food Technical Research Institute Cheluvamba Mansion built in baroque European renaissance style was once the residence of princess Cheluvambaamani Avaru a sister of Maharaja Krishnaraja IV Its extensive pilaster work and mosaic flooring are noteworthy 175 Most famous among the many temples built by the Wodeyars is the Chamundeshwari Temple atop the Chamundi Hill The earliest structure here was consecrated in the 12th century and was later patronised by the Mysore rulers Maharaja Krishnaraja III added a Dravidian style gopuram in 1827 The temple has silver plated doors with images of deities Other images include those of the Hindu god Ganesha and of Maharaja Krishnaraja III with his three queens 176 Surrounding the main palace in Mysore and inside the fort are a group of temples built in various periods The Prasanna Krishnaswamy Temple 1829 the Lakshmiramana Swamy Temple whose earliest structures date to 1499 the Trinesvara Swamy Temple late 16th century the Shweta Varaha Swamy Temple built by Purnaiah with a touch of Hoysala style of architecture the Prasanna Venkataramana Swami Temple 1836 notable for 12 murals of the Wodeyar rulers 177 Well known temples outside Mysore city are the yali mythical beast pillared Venkataramana temple built in the late 17th century at Bangalore fort and the Ranganatha temple in Srirangapatna 178 Tipu Sultan built a wooden colonnaded palace called the Dariya Daulat Palace lit garden of the wealth of the sea in Srirangapatna in 1784 Built in the Indo Saracenic style the palace is known for its intricate woodwork consisting of ornamental arches striped columns and floral designs and paintings The west wall of the palace is covered with murals depicting Tipu Sultan s victory over Colonel Baillie s army at Pollilur near Kanchipuram in 1780 One mural shows Tipu enjoying the fragrance of a bouquet of flowers while the battle is in progress In that painting the French soldiers moustaches distinguish them from the cleanshaven British soldiers 179 180 Also in Srirangapatna is the Gumbaz mausoleum built by Tipu Sultan in 1784 It houses the graves of Tipu and Hyder Ali The granite base is capped with a dome built of brick and pilaster 181 nbsp Mysore Palace nbsp The Gopura tower of the Chamundeshwari Temple on the Chamundi Hills The temple is dedicated to Mysore s patron deity nbsp The Jaganmohan Palace at Mysore now an art gallery which is home to some of Raja Ravi Varma s masterpieces nbsp Tipu Sultan s tomb at Srirangapatna nbsp Lalitha Mahal at Mysore now a five star hotel plays host to visiting dignitaries and VIPs Science and Technology in Mysore editSee also Mysorean rockets nbsp Tip of an early Mysorean rocket Congreve rocket of the Napoleonic Wars on display at Paris Naval MuseumThe first iron cased and metal cylinder rocket artillery were invented by Tipu Sultan and his father Hyder Ali in the 1780s He successfully used these metal cylinder rockets against the larger forces of the British East India Company during the Anglo Mysore Wars The Mysore rockets of this period were much more advanced than what the British had seen chiefly because of the use of iron tubes for holding the propellant this enabled higher thrust and longer range for the missile up to 2 km 1 mi range After Tipu s eventual defeat in the Fourth Anglo Mysore War and the capture of the Mysore iron rockets they were influential in British rocket development inspiring the Congreve rocket which was soon put into use in the Napoleonic Wars 182 According to Stephen Oliver Fought and John F Guilmartin Jr in Encyclopaedia Britannica 2008 Hyder Ali prince of Mysore developed war rockets with an important change the use of metal cylinders to contain the combustion powder Although the hammered soft iron he used was crude the bursting strength of the container of black powder was much higher than the earlier paper construction Thus a greater internal pressure was possible with a resultant greater thrust of the propulsive jet The rocket body was lashed with leather thongs to a long bamboo stick Range was perhaps up to three quarters of a mile more than a kilometre Although individually these rockets were not accurate dispersion error became less important when large numbers were fired rapidly in mass attacks They were particularly effective against cavalry and were hurled into the air after lighting or skimmed along the hard dry ground Tipu Sultan continued to develop and expand the use of rocket weapons reportedly increasing the number of rocket troops from 1 200 to a corps of 5 000 In battles at Seringapatam in 1792 and 1799 these rockets were used with considerable effect against the British 183 The rockets were observed by Lieutenant general Thomas Desaguliers colonel commandant of the Royal Artillery at Woolwich who was impressed by reports of their effectiveness and undertook several unsuccessful experiments to produce his own rocket weapons Several captured Mysorean rockets were sent to England following the annexation of the Mysorean kingdom into British India following the death of Tipu Sultan in the siege of Seringapatam 184 The British research led to the development of the Congreve rocket designed by British inventor Sir William Congreve in 1808 185 nbsp A soldier from Tipu Sultan s army using his rocket as a flagstaff nbsp Tipu Sultan organised his Rocket artillery brigades known as Cushoons Tipu Sultan expanded the number of servicemen in the various Cushoons from 1500 to almost 5000 The Mysorean rockets utilised by Tipu Sultan were later updated by the British and successively employed during the Napoleonic Wars Dr APJ Abdul Kalam the former President of India in his Tipu Sultan Shaheed Memorial Lecture in Bangalore 30 November 1991 called Tipu Sultan the innovator of the world s first war rocket Two of these rockets captured by the British at Srirangapatna were displayed in the Royal Artillery Museum in London According to historian Dr Dulari Qureshi Tipu Sultan was a fierce warrior king and was so quick in his movement that it seemed to the enemy that he was fighting on many fronts at the same time 186 Tipu Sultan s father had expanded on Mysore s use of rocketry making critical innovations in the rockets themselves and the military logistics of their use He deployed as many as 1 200 specialised troops in his army to operate rocket launchers These men were skilled in operating the weapons and were trained to launch their rockets at an angle calculated from the diameter of the cylinder and the distance to the target The rockets had twin side sharpened blades mounted on them and when fired en masse spun and wreaked significant damage against a large army Tipu greatly expanded the use of rockets after Hyder s death deploying as many as 5 000 rocketeers at a time 187 The rockets deployed by Tipu during the Battle of Pollilur were much more advanced than those the British East India Company had previously seen chiefly because of the use of iron tubes for holding the propellant this enabled higher thrust and longer range for the missiles up to 2 km range 187 184 British accounts describe the use of the rockets during the third and fourth wars 188 During the climactic battle at Srirangapatna in 1799 British shells struck a magazine containing rockets causing it to explode and send a towering cloud of black smoke with cascades of exploding white light rising up from the battlements After Tipu s defeat in the fourth war the British captured a number of the Mysorean rockets These became influential in British rocket development inspiring the Congreve rocket which was soon put into use in the Napoleonic Wars 184 nbsp Tipu s Tiger in the V amp A Museum London showing the prostrate European being attackedTipu s Tigeris an 18th century automaton or mechanical toy created for Tipu Sultan the ruler of the Kingdom of Mysore present day Bengaluru in India The carved and painted wood casing represents a tiger mauling a near life size European man Mechanisms inside the tiger and the man s body make one hand of the man move emit a wailing sound from his mouth and grunts from the tiger In addition a flap on the side of the tiger folds down to reveal the keyboard of a small pipe organ with 18 notes 189 The automaton makes use of his personal emblem of the tiger and expresses his hatred of his enemy the British of the East India Company The tiger was taken from his summer palace when East India Company troops stormed Tipu s capital in 1799 The Governor General Lord Mornington sent the tiger to Britain initially intending it to be an exhibit in the Tower of London First exhibited to the London public in 1808 in East India House then the offices of the East India Company in London it was later transferred to the Victoria and Albert Museum V amp A in 1880 accession number 2545 IS 190 It now forms part of the permanent exhibit on the Imperial courts of South India 191 From the moment it arrived in London to the present day Tipu s Tiger has been a popular attraction to the public nbsp Side view showing how the handle when turned gets in the way of the player of the keyboardSee also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kingdom of Mysore List of Indian princely states Hyderabad State Mysorean invasion of Malabar Political integration of India Mughal EmpireReferences edit Rajakaryaprasakta Rao Bahadur 1936 pg 383 Raja Wodeyar s Conquest of Srirangapatna 26 March 2018 Yazdani Kaveh 2017 India Modernity and the Great Divergence Mysore and Gujarat 17th to 19th C Brill Publisher p 115 ISBN 9789004330795 Simmons Caleb 2020 Devotional Sovereignty Kingship and Religion in India Oxford University Press pp 10 12 ISBN 9780190088897 Roddam Narasimha May 1985 Rockets in Mysore and Britain 1750 1850 A D Archived 27 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine Published by the National Aeronautical Laboratory Kamath 2001 pp 11 12 pp 226 227 Pranesh 2003 p 11 Narasimhacharya 1988 p 23 Subrahmanyam 2003 p 64 Rice E P 1921 p 89 Kamath 2001 p 226 Rice B L 1897 p 361 Ikegame Aya 7 May 2013 Princely India Re imagined A Historical Anthropology of Mysore from 1799 to the present Routledge pp 76 77 ISBN 978 0 415 55449 7 Pranesh 2003 pp 2 3 Wilks Aiyangar in Aiyangar and Smith 1911 pp 275 276 Aiyangar 1911 p 275 Pranesh 2003 p 2 Stein 1989 p 82 Stein 1987 p 82 Kamath 2001 p 227 Subrahmanyam 2001 p 67 a b c Subrahmanyam 2001 p 68 Venkata Ramanappa M N 1975 p 200 Shama Rao in Kamath 2001 p 227 a b c d e Venkata Ramanappa M N 1975 p 201 a b Subrahmanyam 2001 p 68 Kamath 2001 p 228 a b Subrahmanyam 2001 p 71 Kamath 2001 pp 228 229 Subrahmanyam 2001 p 69 Kamath 2001 pp 228 229 Subrahmanyam 2001 p 69 Subrahmanyam 2001 p 70 Subrahmanyam 2001 pp 70 71 Kamath 2001 p 229 Pranesh 2003 pp 44 45 a b c Kamath 2001 p 230 Shama Rao in Kamath 2001 p 233 Quote A military genius and a man of vigour valour and resourcefulness Chopra et al 2003 p 76 a b Venkata Ramanappa M N 1975 p 207 Chopra et al 2003 p 71 76 Chopra et al 2003 p 55 a b c d Kamath 2001 p 232 Chopra et al 2003 p 71 Chopra et al 2003 p 73 a b Jacques Tony 2007 Dictionary of Battles and Sieges Westport Connecticut Greenwood Press p 916 ISBN 978 0 313 33536 5 Chopra et al 2003 p 74 Chopra et al 2003 p 75 Chopra et al 2003 p 75 Venkata Ramanappa M N 1975 p 211 Naravane Wing Commander Retired M S 2014 Battles of the Honorourable East India Company New Delhi A P H Publishing Corporation p 175 ISBN 9788131300343 Mohibbul Hasan 2005 History of Tipu Sultan Reprint ed Delhi Aakar Books pp 105 107 ISBN 9788187879572 Sailendra Nath Sen 1994 Anglo Maratha Relations 1785 96 Volume 2 Reprint ed Bombay Popular Prakashan p 55 ISBN 9788171547890 a b Chopra et al 2003 p 78 79 Kamath 2001 p 233 Chopra et al 2003 pp 75 76 a b Chopra et al 2003 p 77 Mohibbul Hasan 2005 History of Tipu Sultan Aakar Books p 167 ISBN 9788187879572 Chopra et al 2003 pp 79 80 Kamath 2001 pp 233 234 Chopra et al 2003 pp 81 82 Kamath 2001 p 249 a b Kamath 2001 p 234 Venkata Ramanappa M N 1975 p 225 Quote The Diwan seems to pursue the wisest and the most benevolent course for the promotion of industry and opulence Gen Wellesley in Kamath 2001 p 249 Venkata Ramanappa M N 1975 pp 226 229 Kamath 2001 p 250 Venkata Ramanappa M N 1975 pp 229 231 Venkata Ramanappa M N 1975 pp 231 232 Lewis Rice B Report on the Mysore census Bangalore Mysore Government Press 1881 p 3 a b Kamath 2001 pp 250 254 Rama Jois M 1984 Legal and constitutional history of India ancient legal judicial and constitutional system Delhi Universal Law Pub Co p 597 Puttaswamaiah K 1980 Economic development of Karnataka a treatise in continuity and change New Delhi Oxford amp IBH p 3 The Mysore duo Krishnaraja Wodeya IV amp M Visvesvaraya India Today Archived from the original on 24 October 2008 Retrieved 23 October 2007 Pranesh 2003 p 162 Kamath 2001 p 261 Asian Recorder Volume 20 1974 p 12263 Kamath 2001 p 228 Venkata Ramanappa M N 1975 p 201 Venkata Ramanappa M N 1975 p 203 Kamath 2001 pp 228 229 Venkata Ramanappa M N 1975 p 203 a b Kamath 2001 p 233 Kamath 2001 p 235 a b Kamath 2001 p 251 a b Kamath 2001 p 252 Meyer Sir William Stevenson et al The Imperial Gazetteer of India Oxford Clarendon Press 1908 1931 v 18 p 228 Kamath 2001 p 254 a b Kamath 2001 pp 254 255 a b c Kamath 2001 p 257 Kamath 2001 p 259 Indian Science Congress 2003 p 139 a b Kamath 2001 p 258 Indian Science Congress 2003 pp 139 140 Kamath 2001 p 260 Sastri 1955 p 297 298 a b Chopra et al 2003 p 123 M H Gopal in Kamath 2001 p 235 Kamath 2001 pp 235 236 Kamath 2001 pp 236 237 a b R K Datta 2007 Global Silk Industry A Complete Source Book New Delhi APH Publishing p 17 ISBN 978 8131300879 Retrieved 22 January 2013 Chopra et al 2003 p 124 Chopra et al 2003 p 129 Chopra et al 2003 p 130 Kamath 2001 p 286 Chopra et al 2003 p 132 Kamath 2001 p 287 Kamath 2001 pp 288 289 Chopra et al 2003 p 134 Rice E P 1921 p 89 Pranesh 2003 p 5 p 16 p 54 Nagaraj in Pollock 2003 p 379 Kamath 2001 p 229 Aiyangar and Smith 1911 p 304 Pranesh 2003 p 17 Aiyangar and Smith 1911 p 290 Pranesh 2003 p 4 Pranesh 2003 p 44 a b Kamath 2001 pp 229 230 Singh 2001 pp 5782 5787 a b Sastri 1955 p 396 Mohibul Hassan in Chopra et al 2003 p 82 part III Chopra et al 2003 p 82 Kamath 2001 p 237 Sastri 1955 p 394 Kamath 2001 p 278 Chopra et al 2003 p 185 Chopra et al 2003 p 186 Kamath 2001 pp 278 279 Chopra et al 2003 pp 196 197 p 202 Kamath 2001 p 284 Kamath 2001 p 275 Kamath 2001 pp 279 280 Murthy 1992 p 168 Kamath 2001 p 281 Murthy 1992 p 172 Murthy 1992 p 169 a b Kamath 2001 p 282 Pranesh 2003 p163 a b Kamath 2001 p 283 Narasimhacharya 1988 pp 23 27 Mukherjee 1999 p 78 Narasimhacharya 1988 p 23 p 26 Kamath 2001 pp 229 230 Pranesh 2003 preface chapter p i Narasimhacharya 1988 pp 23 26 Narasimhacharya 1988 p 25 Kamath 2001 p 281 Murthy 1992 p 168 171 Kamath 2001 p 280 Rice E P 1921 p 90 Mukherjee 1999 p 119 Kamath 2001 p 227 Pranesh 2003 p 11 Pranesh 2003 p 20 Mukherjee 1999 p 78 Pranesh 2003 p 21 Mukherjee 1999 p 143 p 354 p 133 p 135 Narasimhacharya 1988 pp 24 25 Pranesh 2003 pp 33 34 Rice E P 1921 pp 72 73 pp 83 88 p 91 Pranesh 2003 pp 37 38 Pranesh 2003 p 53 Narasimhacharya 1988 p 26 Murthy 1992 p 167 Pranesh 2003 p 55 Murthy 1992 p 167 Murthy 1992 p 170 Pranesh 2003 p 81 Sahitya Akademi 1988 p 1077 Pranesh 2003 p 82 a b c Weidman 2006 p 66 Weidman 2006 p 65 Pranesh 2003 p 54 Pranesh 2003 p xiii in author s note Kamath 2001 p282 Weidman 2006 p 67 Weidman 2006 p 68 Pranesh 2003 p 110 Bakshi 1996 p 12 Kamath 2001 p 282 Pranesh 2003 pp 110 111 Satish Kamat 11 July 2002 The final adjustment Metro Plus Bangalore The Hindu Chennai India Archived from the original on 4 July 2003 Retrieved 10 October 2007 Subramaniyan 2006 p 199 Kamath 2001 p 282 Pranesh 2003 p 135 Pranesh 2003 p 140 Subramaniyan 2006 p 202 Kamath 2001 p 282 Pranesh 2003 p 170 Pranesh 2003 p 214 216 Pranesh 2003 p 216 Michell p 69 Manchanda 2006 p 158 Manchanda 2006 pp 160 161 Manchanda 2006 p 161 a b c Raman 1994 pp 87 88 Raman 1994 pp 83 84 pp 91 92 Raman 1994 p 84 Bradnock 2000 p 294 Raman 1994 pp 81 82 Raman 1994 p 85 Raman 1996 p 83 Michell p 71 Raman 1994 p 106 Abram et al 2003 p 225 Abram et al 2003 pp 225 226 Roddam Narasimha 1985 Rockets in Mysore and Britain 1750 1850 A D Archived 27 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine National Aeronautical Laboratory and Indian Institute of Science Encyclopaedia Britannica 2008 rocket and missile a b c Narasimha Roddam 27 July 2011 Rockets in Mysore and Britain 1750 1850 A D PDF National Aeronautical Laboratory and Indian Institute of Science Archived from the original on 27 July 2011 Walker Jr William 1864 Memoirs of the distinguished men of science of Great Britain living in the years 1807 8 and Appendix 2nd ed London E amp F N Spon pp 34 35 doi 10 5962 bhl title 28396 Zachariah Mini Pant 7 November 2010 Tipu s legend lives on The Hindu Archived from the original on 29 October 2013 Retrieved 18 December 2013 a b Over 5 000 war rockets of Tipu Sultan unearthed Deccan Herald 28 July 2018 Retrieved 16 September 2020 How the Mysorean rocket helped Tipu Sultan s military might gain new heights 5 August 2018 Tippoo s Tiger European Romanticisms in Association 9 August 2019 Victoria amp Albert Museum 2011 Tipu s Tiger London Victoria amp Albert Museum Retrieved 16 July 2011 Ivan Corinne A 2000 Reflections on the fate of Tippoo s Tiger Defining cultures through public display In Hallam Elizabeth ed Cultural encounters representing otherness Street Brian V Routledge p 194 ISBN 978 0 415 20280 0 permanent dead link Bibliography editAbram David Edwards Nick Ford Mike Sen Devdan Wooldridge Beth 2003 South India Rough Guides ISBN 1 84353 103 8 Aiyangar Krishnaswami S 1911 Ancient India Collected Essays on the Literary and Political History of Southern India New Delhi Facsimile Reprint 2004 Asian Educational Services ISBN 81 206 1850 5 Bakshi Shiri Ram 1996 Gandhi and the Congress New Delhi Sarup and Sons ISBN 81 85431 65 5 Bradnock Robert 2000 2000 South India Handbook The Travel Guide Footprint Travel Guide ISBN 1 900949 81 4 Chopra P N Ravindran T K Subrahmanian N 2003 History of South India Ancient Medieval and Modern Part III New Delhi Sultan Chand and Sons ISBN 81 219 0153 7 Indian Science Congress Association various authors Presidential Address vol 1 1914 1947 2003 The Shaping of Indian Science Orient Blackswan ISBN 81 7371 432 0 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Kamath Suryanath U 2001 1980 A concise history of Karnataka from pre historic times to the present Bangalore Jupiter books LCCN 80905179 OCLC 7796041 Manchanda Bindu 2006 2006 Forts amp Palaces of India Sentinels of History Roli Books Private Limited ISBN 81 7436 381 5 Michell George 17 August 1995 Temple Architecture The Kannada and Telugu zones The New Cambridge History of India Architecture and Art of Southern India Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 44110 2 Mukherjee Sujit 1999 1999 A Dictionary of Indian Literature Orient Blackswan ISBN 81 250 1453 5 Murthy K Narasimha 1992 Modern Kannada Literature In George K M ed Modern Indian Literature An Anthology Vol 1 Sahitya Akademi ISBN 81 7201 324 8 Nagaraj D R 2003 2003 Critical Tensions in the History of Kannada Literary Culture In Sheldon I Pollock ed Literary Cultures in History Reconstructions from South Asia Berkeley and London University of California Press ISBN 0 520 22821 9 Narasimhacharya R 1988 1934 History of Kannada Literature New Delhi Asian Educational Services ISBN 81 206 0303 6 Pranesh Meera Rajaram 2003 2003 Musical Composers during Wodeyar Dynasty 1638 1947 A D Bangalore Vee Emm ISBN 978 8193101605 Raman Afried 1994 Bangalore Mysore A Disha Guide Bangalore Orient Blackswan ISBN 0 86311 431 8 Rice E P 1921 Kannada Literature New Delhi Facsimile Reprint 1982 Asian Educational Services ISBN 81 206 0063 0 Rice B L 2001 1897 Mysore Gazetteer Compiled for Government vol 1 New Delhi Madras Asian Educational Services ISBN 81 206 0977 8 Sastri Nilakanta K A 2005 1955 A history of South India from prehistoric times to the fall of Vijayanagar New Delhi Indian Branch Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 560686 8 Singh Nagendra Kr 2001 Encyclopaedia of Jainism Anmol Publications ISBN 81 261 0691 3 Stein Burton 1987 Vijayanagara The New Cambridge History of India Cambridge and New York Cambridge University Press Pp 156 ISBN 0 521 26693 9 Subrahmanyam Sanjay 2001 Warfare and State Finance in Wodeyar Mysore In Subrahmanyam Sanjay ed Penumbral Visions Ann Arbor University of Michigan Press pp 161 193 ISBN 978 0 472 11216 6 Subramaniyan V K 2006 2006 101 Mystics of India Abhinav Publications ISBN 81 7017 471 6 Various 1988 1988 Encyclopaedia of Indian literature vol 2 Sahitya Akademi ISBN 81 260 1194 7 Venkata Ramanappa M N 1975 1975 Outlines of South Indian history with special reference to Karnataka Delhi Vikas Pub House London 38 Kennington La SE11 4LS Distributed by Independent Pub Co ISBN 0 7069 0378 1 Weidman Amanda J 2006 2006 Singing the Classical Voicing the Modern Duke University Press ISBN 0 8223 3620 0 Further reading edit India Life Time Inc 12 May 1941 pp 94 103 Yazdani Kaveh India Modernity and the Great Divergence Mysore and Gujarat 17th to 19th C Leiden Brill 2017 xxxi 669 pp online review 12 18 N 76 39 E 12 30 N 76 65 E 12 30 76 65 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kingdom of Mysore amp oldid 1192632335, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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