There is another good work by Srinvasa Rau. He writes very passionately about the Empire and its rulers. Worth reading.
These posts on Vijayanagar....are dedicated to my friend G.V.Krishna.
I have also some shots of VitthalMandir of hampi. Ihave them on facebook.
There's a section in a major Malay epic where the hero goes and lives in 'Benua Kaling'. (Not Kalinga = Orissa; in epic Malay, it can refer to anywhere from Dhaka to Kanyakumari, as well as anywhere accessed from that side of the subcontinent.) His patron is Kisna Rayan and his minister Nala Sang Guna. Most commentators identify the kingdom as Vijayanagar and the names as Krishnaraya and Narasingha.
And there's your trivia for the day.
Extract from this book :
INTRODUCTION.
A HISTORY OF THE EMPIRE OF VIJAYANAGAR
FROM ORIGINAL SOURCES.
THE history of the empire of Vijayanagar, which till recently
was as good as lost to us, was recovered through the efforts of Mr. Robert Sewell, whose work in South Indian Archaeology and Epigraphy naturally gave him the qualifications to take up the work. He brought out his work ' A Forgotten Empire ' of Vijayanagar early in 1900 based upon his previous knowledge of the antiquities of the Madras Presidency, and of the information he derived from two Portuguese chronicles which were unearthed in the archives of Lisbon, and which he translated and appended to his work. Excellent as the work was for the time, and for the sources and historical material at his disposal, it suffered from the neglect of the evidence available in various forms in literature which go a long way towards filling up the many gaps that Epigraphy leaves in respect of that history. These sources are collected together in the following pages and they will speak for themselves. A constructive study of these goes a long way in correcting the chronicles in many places, and conveys information which would make a fuller history of the Empire of Vijayanagar possible. It is these untapped sources only that are brought together in the following extracts from various works, Sanskrit and Telugu principally, which bear on the particular period. Many of these are taken from manuscripts and published works now out of print. Some of the passages extracted are taken from works which may be available, but not in a form that would be useful to students not acquainted with Telugu. There is besides the advantage of these being brought together in a
collection which otherwise it would be possible for one to get at only by voluminous reading. Each one of these extracts is provided with an English introduction which without pretending to be a literal translation of the passages, contains a faithful summary of the historical facts traceable in the extracts.
Read Book Online : http://www.archive.org/stream/sourcesofvijayan00krisrich#page/n5/mode/2up
Download pdf Book : http://ia700304.us.archive.org/6/items/sourcesofvijayan00krisrich/sourcesofvijayan00krisrich.pdf
There is another good work by Srinvasa Rau. He writes very passionately about the Empire and its rulers. Worth reading.
These posts on Vijayanagar....are dedicated to my friend G.V.Krishna.
I have also some shots of VitthalMandir of hampi. Ihave them on facebook.
There's a section in a major Malay epic where the hero goes and lives in 'Benua Kaling'. (Not Kalinga = Orissa; in epic Malay, it can refer to anywhere from Dhaka to Kanyakumari, as well as anywhere accessed from that side of the subcontinent.) His patron is Kisna Rayan and his minister Nala Sang Guna. Most commentators identify the kingdom as Vijayanagar and the names as Krishnaraya and Narasingha. And there's your trivia for the day.
Extract from this book : INTRODUCTION. A HISTORY OF THE EMPIRE OF VIJAYANAGAR FROM ORIGINAL SOURCES. THE history of the empire of Vijayanagar, which till recently was as good as lost to us, was recovered through the efforts of Mr. Robert Sewell, whose work in South Indian Archaeology and Epigraphy naturally gave him the qualifications to take up the work. He brought out his work ' A Forgotten Empire ' of Vijayanagar early in 1900 based upon his previous knowledge of the antiquities of the Madras Presidency, and of the information he derived from two Portuguese chronicles which were unearthed in the archives of Lisbon, and which he translated and appended to his work. Excellent as the work was for the time, and for the sources and historical material at his disposal, it suffered from the neglect of the evidence available in various forms in literature which go a long way towards filling up the many gaps that Epigraphy leaves in respect of that history. These sources are collected together in the following pages and they will speak for themselves. A constructive study of these goes a long way in correcting the chronicles in many places, and conveys information which would make a fuller history of the Empire of Vijayanagar possible. It is these untapped sources only that are brought together in the following extracts from various works, Sanskrit and Telugu principally, which bear on the particular period. Many of these are taken from manuscripts and published works now out of print. Some of the passages extracted are taken from works which may be available, but not in a form that would be useful to students not acquainted with Telugu. There is besides the advantage of these being brought together in a collection which otherwise it would be possible for one to get at only by voluminous reading. Each one of these extracts is provided with an English introduction which without pretending to be a literal translation of the passages, contains a faithful summary of the historical facts traceable in the extracts.