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With the expansion of Hoysala territory in Tamil country, these immigrants went as officers and soldiers of the empire and were given land concessions. [6] Migration of Tamil sculptors to Belur and Halebidu is also apparent from the presence of some Chola style sculptures in a few Hoysala temples. [7] The marketplace was the nuclei of urban ...
The first Hoysala capital was Sosavur (also called Sasakapura, Sosevuru, or Sosavurpattana), at present-day Angadi in Chikmagalur district. Sosavur was the Hoysala capital from 1026 to 1048. Even after the capital was moved, though, Sosavur remained an important commercial and administrative centre, as well as a Jain religious centre. [53]: 88
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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.
The Hoysala administrative machinery had many similarities with that of the Western Chalukya and Western Ganga Dynasties in matters of cabinet and command, local governing bodies and division of territory into provinces and districts. [1] Several of the major feudatories of the Hoysalas were Gavundas of the peasant extraction. [2]
The Hoysala Empire was the sole remaining Hindu state in the path of the Islamic invasion. [5] After the death of Hoysala monarch Veera Ballala III during a battle against the Sultan of Madurai in 1343, the Hoysala Empire merged with the growing Vijayanagara empire. Virupaksha temple, Hampi
Other Hoysala Karnataka dishes include: [5] Badanekayi-aloogedde gojju, a curry [6] made with eggplant and potatoes; Bili holige, similar to the rice flatbread akki rotti but softer and suppler; Gulpavate, a sweet made with dried fruit, ghee, jaggery, and toasted wheat flour; Mysuru kootu, a Karnataka-style lentil and vegetable stew
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 ...