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The state of
Karnataka, formerly known as
Mysore, is one of the more
easy-going Indian states.
It's a state of strong
contrasts with the modem,
industrialised city of
Bangalore at one extreme and
the expanses of rural
farming areas at the other.
Karnataka also boasts some
of the most interesting
historic architecture in
India and a varied and
tumultuous history.
It was to Sravanabelagola in
Karnataka that Chandragupta
Maurya, India's first great
emperor, retreated after he
had renounced worldly ways
and embraced Jain ism. Later
the mighty statue of
Gomateshvara was erected at
Sravanabelagola and it
celebrated its 1000th
anniversary in 1981. At
Badami, in the north of the
state, the Chalukyans built
some of the earliest Hindu
temples in India, 1500 years
ago. All later south Indian
temple architecture stems
from the Chalukyan designs
at Badami and the Pallavas
at Kanchipuram and
Maha-balipuram in Tamil Nadu.
Other important Indian
dynasties, such as the
Cholas and the Gangas, have
also played their part in
Kamataka's history, but it
was the Hoysalas, who ruled
between the 11th and 14th
centuries, who left the most
vivid evidence of their
presence. The beautiful
Hoysala temples at
Som-nathpur, Belur and Hale
bid are gems of Indian
architecture with intricate
and detailed sculptures
rivalling anything to be
found at Khajuraho or
Konorak.
In 1327 Hindu Halebid fell
to the Moslem army of
Mohammed bin Tughlaq and in
the succeeding centuries
Karnataka was held by first
the follows of one religion,
then the other. Founded in
1336, the Hindu kingdom of
Vijaya-nagar, with its
capital at Hampi, is one of
the least visited and thus
most surprising of India's
ruined kingdoms. Vijayanagar
reached its peak in the
early 1500s but in 1565 it
fell to the Deccan Sultans
and Bijapur became the most
important city of the
region. Today Bijapur is
just a small city surrounded
by an imposing wall and
packed with an amazing
collects on of mosques and
other reminders of its
glorious past.
Finally Hyder Ali took
control in 1761 and the seat
of paver moved back south to
Srirangapatna near Mysore.
His son, Tipu Sultan, with
help from the French,
further extended his
father's kingdom and put th«
British in their place on
more than one occasion
before finally being
defeated and killed in 1799.
The British installed a
Hindu ruler when they
brought the region under
their control and a series
of enlightened and
progressive rulers held
power right through to
independence. The Maharaja
at that time was so popular
that he became the first
governor of the state. |