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The earliest record of a member of the Hoysala dynasty is dated 950 and names Arekalla as the chieftain. Arekalla was succeeded in turn by Maruga and Nripa Kama I (976), and Munda (1006–1026). The next king, Nripa Kama I, had the title Permanadi , showing that an early alliance with the Western Ganga dynasty existed at the time of his reign.
Hoysala administration was influenced by the Western Ganga Dynasty whom the Hoysalas replaced in present-day South Karnataka and their early overlords, the Western Chalukyas. Administration [ edit ]
After the death of Vikarmaditya VI, the Hoysala monarch re-captured Hanagal, Uchchangi and Bankapura by c.1140 and marched north of the Tungabhadra river up to Lakkundi. [ 19 ] [ 23 ] The historian Majumdar claims Vishnuvardhana controlled areas in the Krishna river region even around c.1131 and performed the prestigious Tulapurusha ceremony, a ...
Ereyanga (r. 1098–1102 CE) was the son of Vinayaditya and distinguished himself as a Chalukya feudatory during their campaigns against Dhara of Malwa. [1] Though he remained the Yuvaraja or crown prince for several decades, his rule as a monarch of Hoysala Empire was short.
Amrutheshwara Temple at Amruthapura, c. 1196 Veeranarayana Temple in Belavadi, c. 1200 The Kedareshwara temple at Halebidu, c. 1200 Nageshvara (near) and Chennakeshava (far) temples at Mosale, c. 1200 Old Kannada inscription (c. 1196 AD) from the rule of Veera Ballala II in the Amrutesvara temple at Amruthapura Old Kannada inscription (c. 1193 AD) of Hoysala empire King Veera Ballala II from ...
The Hoysala dynasty ruled large parts of present-day Karnataka between the 11th and 14th centuries. By the end of the 12th century, they had expanded the agrarian economic system of their kingdom and had also begun to establish taxation, revenue and administrative systems, thus beginning the process of state formation.
Veera Ballala I (r. 1102 – 1108 CE) succeeded Ereyanga as king of the Hoysala Empire.He was a Jain by faith. His rule was short and uneventful other than subduing the Chengalvas and the Santharas.
Hoysala architecture is the building style in Hindu temple architecture developed under the rule of the Hoysala Empire between the 11th and 14th centuries, in the region known today as Karnataka, a state of India. Hoysala influence was at its peak in the 13th century, when it dominated the Southern Deccan Plateau region.