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Errapragada, the last of the Kavitraya (Trinity of Poets) was the court poet of Prolaya Vema Reddi. He completed the Telugu translation of the Mahabharata . He completed the rendition of the Aranya Parva of Mahabharata left incomplete by Nannaya Bhattu (Aadi Kavi who started the translation of Mahabharata into Telugu).
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Prolaya Vema Reddi proclaimed independence, establishing a "Reddi dynasty" based in Addanki. [30] [31] [32] He had been part of a coalition of Telugu rulers who overthrew the "foreign" Turkic rulers of the Delhi Sultanate. [32] The dynasty (1325–1448 CE) ruled coastal and central Andhra for over a hundred years. [33] [34]
Vema may refer to: Prolaya Vema Reddy, the first king of the Reddy dynasty in Andhra Pradesh, India; A Greek pace (unit of length) Research Vessel Vema, a research ship of the Lamont–Doherty Earth Observatory and some ocean phenomena discovered using it: Vema (mollusc), a genus of monoplacophoran molluscs
Yarrapragada or Erranna was a Telugu poet in the court of King Prolaya Vema Reddy (1325–1353). The surname of Erranna was Yerrapragada or Yerrana, which are epithets of the fair-skinned Lord Skanda in the Telugu language, but became attached to his paternal family due its having notable members with fair or red-skinned complexions.
Several individuals—Prolaya Vema Reddi, Musunuri Prolaya nayaka, and Arviti Somadeva liberated these parts and they had no political connection with each other. Modern historian Cynthia Talbot has warned against taking the inscriptional evidence at face value.
The grant also states that Prolaya Vema Reddi was one among these 75 Nayakas. [18] [a] Muhammad bin Tughluq, who became the Sultan of Delhi in 1324, witnessed numerous rebellions starting in 1330, first in the immediate vicinity in the Ganga-Yamuna doab, which caused a famine in Delhi, and rebellions within ranks in Ma'bar and Bengal. It is ...
But in 1481, after the death of Sultan Mahammad, the Bahmani Sultanate was in disarray and taking advantage of this situation Purushottam fought with Mahmad Shah, the Sultan's son, and took control of Rajahmundry and Kondapalli fort. Gajapati Purushottam Deva died in 1497 and was succeeded by his son Gajapati Prataprudra Deva. [16]