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Wadiyar dynasty

(Redirected from Wodeyar dynasty)

The Wadiyar dynasty,(Kannada: [(ʷ)oɖejɐru]) also referred to as the Wadiyars of Mysore (also spelt Wodeyer, Odeyer, and Wadeyar), is a late-medieval Indian royal family of former maharajas of Mysore[1] from the Urs clan originally based in Mysore city.

House of Wadiyar
Yaduveer Krishnadatta Chamaraja Wadiyar, the present head of the family
CountryKingdom of Mysore
Founded1399; 625 years ago (1399)
FounderYaduraya Wodeyar
Current headYaduveer Krishnadatta Chamaraja Wadiyar
Final rulerJayachamaraja Wodeyar
TitlesMaharaja of Mysore
Websitewww.ykcwadiyar.in

As Maharajas of Mysore, the Wadiyars ruled the Kingdom of Mysore from the late 1300s until 1950. Members of the Wadiyar dynasty and the Urs clan have also been royal advisers as dewans to their reigning siblings, cousins, nephews, or distant relatives.[1] Some members have also commanded army divisions as dalvoys (commander-in-chief) for their reigning monarch.

During the late 14th century, the family was originally poleygars (Kannada for garrison) defending the regions in and around Mysore town for the Vijayanagara Empire, their feudal overlords. With the fall and decline of the empire in the 17th century, the Wadiyars declared independence when Timmaraja Wodeyar II seized the nearby town of Srirangapattana, the seat of Tirumala, Sriranga II's viceroy, in 1610.[2] Between 1766 and 1799, when Hyder Ali and Tipu dictated the kingdom, the Wadiyar rulers as maharajas were largely nominal without any actual powers.[3] After Tipu's execution in 1799, the East India Company which governed large territories in India at that time restored the kingdom back to the Wadiyars under a subsidiary alliance. After India's independence from the Crown, the ruling Maharaja Jayachamaraja Wadiyar ceded the kingdom to the newly formed Dominion of India.[4]

Name

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In Kannada, the common noun odeyaru (Kannada: ಒಡೆಯರು oḍeyaru) is the plural form of odeya (ಒಡೆಯ) which means lord or lordship. The first poleygar and raja of Mysore, Yaduraya, assumed the term as his titular proper noun.

Members of the Wadiyar dynasty hail from the Urs clan; upon adoption or by heredity, they assume the title Wadiyar and their immediate family therewith, the latest instance of its happening with the present head of the family Yaduveer Wadiyar upon his coronation in 2015.[5][6][7]

History

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The Wadiyars claim descent from the Hindu deity Krishna. Legend has it that they arrived from Dvārakā.[8] However, historians like P. V. Nanjaraj Urs, Shyam Prasad, Nobuhiro Ota, David Leeming, and Aya Ikegame instead suggest that the Wadiyars were local feudal lords who purported Puranic ancestry and claimed to be the direct descendants of the Lunar Dynasty.[9][10][11][12]

Vassal fiefdom

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The Wadiyar dynasty started when Yaduraya, a garrison leader (poleygar), was made the prefect of Mysore and the surrounding regions by his overlord Harihara II of the Vijayanagara Empire in 1399. With this, Yaduraya assumed the title Raja and the honorary surname Wadiyar. He and his successors ruled the fiefdom of Mysore as rajas under the vassalage of the Vijayanagara Empire until around 1553.

Independent kingdom

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The Vijayanagara Empire disintegrated in 1565. With the fall of the empire, Mysore became an independent kingdom, the first independent king being Timmaraja Wodeyar II, the great-great-great-grandson of the founding ruler Yaduraya. Thimmaraja's nephew Raja Wodeyar I expanded the borders of the kingdom. In 1610, he moved the capital from Mysore to nearby island town of Srirangapattana on the river Kaveri, which provided strategic protection against military attacks. Raja Wadiya's cousin and successor down the line Kanthirava Narasaraja I expanded the frontiers of the kingdom to Trichy in present-day Tamil Nadu. The kingdom reached its peak under Kanthirava's grand-nephew Devaraja Wodeyar II, who reformed the administration of the kingdom by dividing it into 18 departments (called chavadis); he also introduced a coherent system of taxation.

During Hyder Ali and Tipu

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From 1760 to 1799, the rule of the Wadiyar dynasty was essentially nominal, with real power firmly in the hands of the Commander-in-chief and later self-proclaimed sultan, Hyder Ali, and his son and successor Tipu. The two, ruling the sultanate from Srirangapattana, expanded the kingdom aggressively.

Independent kingdom in a subsidiary alliance

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After Tipu's defeat in the Siege of Seringapatam during the Fourth Anglo-Mysore War in 1799, the British restored the Kingdom to the Wadiyars under a subsidiary alliance that required an annual payment as tribute. The capital was moved back to Mysore. The four-year-old infant prince Krishnaraja Wodeyar III, adopted son of the previous ruler Chamaraja Wadiyar IX, was anointed as the Maharaja of Mysore.

In 1831, on a specious plea of non-payment by Krishnaraja Wodeyar III, the kingdom was placed under Mysore Commission that lasted from 1831 to 1881. Mark Cubbon and L. B. Bowring were among the well-known commissioners of the period.

In 1868, upon Krishnaraja Wodeyar III's demise, his five-year-old grandson Chamaraja Wadiyar X became the heir to the throne. When in 1881 he attained the age of majority, through an act of parliament, the British once again transferred power back to the Wadiyars. The maharaja changed the English spelling of their royal name from Wodeyar to Wadiyar. He established the Mysore Representative Assembly; the first of its kind in Princely India.

Chamaraja Wadiyar X's son and successor Krishnaraja Wadiyar IV earned great fame as a saintly king, and his kingdom was hailed as Ramarajya by Mahatma Gandhi–as an ideal kingdom comparable to the one ruled by Lord Rama.[13]

Krishnaraja Wadiyar IV's nephew, successor, and the last reigning king of the Wadiyar dynasty, Jayachamarajendra Wadiyar, ruled from 1940 until 1950. Upon India's independence from the British crown in 1947, Jayachamarajendra Wadiyar ceded his kingdom to the new provisional Dominion of India but continued as Maharajah until India became a Republic in 1950.

Dissolution of the kingdom

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Jayachamarajendra Wadiyar became the rajapramukh of the renamed Mysore State from 1950 to 1956. After the reorganisation of Indian states on a linguistic basis in 1956, he was appointed Governor of the integrated Mysore State (present Karnataka State), a post which he held until 1964. He was then appointed Governor of Madras (now Tamil Nadu) for two years.

The Indian Constitution continued to recognise him as the Maharajah of Mysore until 1971, when titles and privy purses of maharajas were abolished by the Government of India under Indira Gandhi. The maharajah died in 1974.

His only son Srikantadatta Narasimharaja Wadiyar became the head of the family; he was a member of the Indian Parliament.

Upon Srikantadatta Wadiyar's demise 2013, his widowed wife Devi Pramoda Wadiyar adopted Yaduveer Wadiyar, who was anointed as the maharaja of Mysore and the head of the family in 2015.

Residences

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Mysore Palace has been the official residence of the Wadiyars for most of the family's recorded history. Briefly, Srirangapattana was also the seat of the Wadiyars. By the early 1900s, Bangalore had seen significant infrastructural development and had become a secondary residence for the Wadiyars at the Bangalore Palace.

Alamelamma's Curse

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With a declining Vijayanagara Empire, in 1610 Raja Wadiyar conquered the fort of Srirangapattana from Tirumala, the Vijayanagara viceroy stationed there. Tirumala is said to have retired to the nearby town of Talakadu with his two wives. At about the same time, Tirumala suffered from a terminal disease; his condition deteriorated and he eventually died.

One of his wives was Alamelamma, a staunch devotee of Ranganayaki, the consort of Lord Ranganatha, the presiding deity of the famous Adi-Ranga temple in the island fortress of Srirangapatna. Alamelamma had a large amount of jewellery, including a fine nose ring studded with a large pearl. As a widow, customs forbade jewellery on her. She frequently lent the jewels to the temple of Ranganayaki. Every Tuesdays and Fridays, Ranaganayaki's idol would be decorated with the jewellery, returned to Alamelamma's safe custody for rest of the week.

On one instance, the temple requested the king's soldiers to fetch the jewels from Alamelamma as has become a practice. An approaching king's emissaries, headed by Chief Courtier Ramanath Molahalli, seems to have scared her off. To escape an ill-presumed imminent wrath of the king, she ran over to a cliff overlooking the Kaveri river into the whirlpool and cursed before plunging to her own death, "may Talakadu become a barren expanse of land, Malangi turn into a whirlpool, and may kings of Mysore never beget children to all eternity" (Kannada: ತಲಕಾಡು ಮರಳಾಗಲಿ, ಮಾಲಂಗಿ ಮಡುವಾಗಲಿ, ಮೈಸೂರು ದೊರೆಗಳಿಗೆ ಮಕ್ಕಳಿಲ್ಲದೆ ಹೋಗಲಿ; transliteration: talakāḍu maral̤āgali, mālaṃgi maḍuvāgali, maisūru dŏrĕgal̤igĕ makkal̤illadĕ hogali).

Alamelamma's idol

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Learning of this accident, the king felt repentant and had an idol of Alamelamma made in gold, installed it in the palace, and worshipped it as a deity. To this day, the idol can be found in Mysore Palace. The king's only surviving son, Narasaraja Wadiyar, died (believed to be an effect of the curse in folklore).

The Dasara festivities inside the palace end on the evening of Navarathri with a formal pooja to Alamelamma. Another interesting part of the story is that the Alamelamma temple is under the care of her legal heirs. Strangely, these priests/caretakers appear to be cursed by the same curse, following the same pattern afflicting the Wadiyars.

Talakadu and Malangi

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Lord Vishnu Temple under sand dunes in Talakadu, Karnataka

Talakadu and Malangi are two small towns near Tirumakudalu Narasipura on the banks of the Kaveri where the river takes a bend. To date, most parts of Talakadu lie under sand, and the village of Malangi is slowly eroding due to whirlpools.[14][15] Talakadu's temples lie buried in a vast expanse of sand and are dug up and exposed every 12 years. At Malangi, on the other hand, the river is at its deepest. Whether these phenomena appeared only after Alamelamma's curse in 1610 is a matter of conjecture.

Family tree of the Wadiyars

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Direct lineage from Yaduraya

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Raja Yaduraya is recorded as the founding ruler of the Kingdom of Mysore. The sixteenth maharaja Krishnaraja Wodeyar I was the last direct male lineage of Raja Yaduraja.[16] However, Krishnaraja Wodeyar I's successor was his adopted son, Maharaja Chamaraja Wodeyar VII from the Ankanahalli Urs branch. After him, Maharaja Chamaraja Wodeyar III's second daughter Rajakumari Chikkadevi's family with the Bettada Kote Urs branch takes over the monarchy.

I. YadurayaChikkadevi
II. Chamaraja Wodeyar I?
III. Timmaraja Wodeyar I?
IV. Chamaraja Wodeyar II?
V. Chamaraja Wodeyar III?Kalale
Mallaraja Urs I
?
VI. Timmaraja Wodeyar IIRajakumara
Krishnaraja
?Rajakumari
Chikkadevi
Mallaraja Urs IIVII. Chamaraja Wodeyar IV?
VIII. Chamaraja Wodeyar VIX. Raja Wodeyar I?Rajakumara
Devaraja
?Rajakumara
Bettada Chamaraja
?Rajakumari
Chikkadepa
Yuvaraja
Narasaraja
?XI. Raja Wodeyar IIDevaraja?XIII. Devaraja Wodeyar IXII. Narasaraja Wodeyar I
X. Chamaraja Wodeyar VIXIV. Devaraja Wodeyar II?
XV. Narasaraja Wodeyar II?
XVI. Krishnaraja Wodeyar IMaharani
Devaja

Bettada Kote (Hill Fort) Urs branch

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The Bettada Kote Urs was one of the larger jagirs, or feudal estates, in the Kingdom of Mysore. After the death of the 22nd ruler Maharaja Chamaraja Wodeyar VIII, his widowed queen mother Maharani Lakshmi Devi adopted Chamaraja Wodeyar IX of the Bettada Kote Urs branch which continues to-date.

Chikkanahalli
Chamaraja Urs
?Bettada Kote Sardar
Gopalraj Urs
?
XVII. Chamaraja Wodeyar VII?XVIII. Krishnaraja Wodeyar IIMaharani
Lakshmi Devi
Karugahalli Sardar
Devaraj Urs
Honnajamma
XIX. Nanjaraja WodeyarXX. Chamaraja Wodeyar VIIIXXI. Chamaraja Wodeyar IXMaharani
Kempananjammani Devi
XXII. Krishnaraja Wadiyar IIIMaharani
Devarajammanni
Rajakumari
Puttammanni
Sardar
Krishnaraja Urs II
Maharani
Kempananjammani Devi
XXIII. Chamarajendra Wadiyar XYuvaraja
Sardar Gopal Raj Urs
Kantamanni Devi
XXIV. Krishnaraja Wadiyar IVMaharani
Pratapa Kumaribai Devi
Yuvaraja
Kanteerava Narasimharaja Wadiyar
Yuvarani
Kempu Cheluvaja Devi
Rajakumari
Jayalakshmi Devi
Diwan
M. Kantharaj Urs
Rajakumari
Krishnajammani Devi
Col Desaraja UrsRajakumari
Cheluvajammani Devi
Sardar
M. Lakshmikantha Raj Urs
Col.
Madan Gopala Krishna Urs
Kempumallaja Ammanni
Rani Vijaya Devi?Sujayakantha Ammani Devi?Maharani
Jayachamundi Ammani Devi
?XXV. Jayachamarajendra WadiyarTripurasundari DeviK.G. Madan Gopala Raj UrsUma Devi Ammanni
Gayatri DeviKanthraj Basavaraj UrsMeenakshi Devi?XXVI. Srikantadatta Narasimharaja WadiyarMaharani
Pramoda Devi
Kamakshi Devi?Indrakshi Devi?Vishalakshi Devi?
Leela Tripurasundari DeviSwarup Anand Gopalraj Urs
XXVII. Yaduveer Krishnadatta Chamaraja WadiyarTrishikha Kumari DeviJayathmika LakshmiKunwar Divyraj Singhji
Adyaveer Narasimharaja Wadiyar

Kalale Urs branch

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Kalale
Mallaraja Urs I
?
Mallaraja Urs IIRajakumari
Chikkadevi
Thimmaraja UrsRajakumari
Chikkadepa
Sardar
Karikala Mallaraja Urs
?
Thimmaraja Urs II?
Kantaraja Urs I?Maddur
Narasaraja Urs
Sardar
Raja Urs I
?
Sardar
Viraraja Urs
?
Sardar Karachuri
Nanjaraja Urs
?
Maharani
Devaja
XVI. Krishnaraja Wodeyar I

Maddur Urs branch

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Maddur
Narasaraja Urs
?
Maddur
Kantharaja Urs II
?
Maddur
Krishnaraja Urs
?
Maddur
Krishnaraja Urs III
?
Maddur
Narasaraja Urs II
?
Maddur
Kantharaja Urs III
?
Maddur
N. Kantharaja Urs IV
?
Dewan
M. Kantharaj Urs
Maharani
Kempananjammani Devi
XXIII. Chamarajendra Wadiyar X
Rajakumari
Jayalakshmi Devi
Rajakumari
Lelavathi


Contributions

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The Wadiyars were patrons of fine arts, fostering a number of famous musicians, writers and painters. Their contributions to music and literature has rendered the city of Mysore a cultural centre of Karnataka.

See also

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Notes

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References

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  1. ^ a b S, Rajaram N. (12 January 2019). The Vanished Raj A Memoir of Princely India. Prism Books Private Limited. ISBN 978-93-88478-11-3.
  2. ^ Hüsken, Ute; Narayanan, Vasudha; Zotter, Astrid (1 September 2021). Nine Nights of Power: Durgā, Dolls, and Darbārs. State University of New York Press. ISBN 978-1-4384-8408-2.
  3. ^ Iyengar, Venkatesa (1932). The Mysore. Mittal Publications.
  4. ^ Syed, Muzaffar Husain; Akhtar, Syed Saud; Usmani, B. D. (14 September 2011). Concise History of Islam. Vij Books India Pvt Ltd. ISBN 978-93-82573-47-0.
  5. ^ "Yaduveer Gopal Raj Urs is heir of Mysuru royal family". The Hindu. 13 February 2015. Retrieved 18 February 2015.
  6. ^ "Mysuru new King to wed Trishika Kumari". NewsKarnataka. 25 February 2015.
  7. ^ "In Yaduveer, erstwhile Mysuru kingdom gets new king". The Times of India. 28 May 2015. Retrieved 29 May 2015.
  8. ^ Pranesh, Meera Rajaram (2003) [2003]. Musical Composers during Wodeyar Dynasty (1638–1947 A.D.). Bangalore: Vee Emm.
  9. ^ Census of India 1961 Volume XI, Mysore Part VI, VILLAGE· SURVEY MONOGRAPHS. Delhi: Government of India. 1961. p. 10.
  10. ^ Prasad, S.Shyam (2018). Enigmas of Karnataka: Mystery meets History. Chennai: Notion Press. ISBN 9781642491227.
  11. ^ Ikegame, Aya (7 May 2013). Princely India Re-imagined: A Historical Anthropology of Mysore from 1799 to the present. Routledge. pp. 76–77. ISBN 978-0-415-55449-7.
  12. ^ Vikram Sampath (2008). SPLENDOURS OF ROYAL MYSORE (PB). Rupa Publications. pp. Introd. I. ISBN 9788129115355.
  13. ^ "The Rajarshi of Mysore". Bangalore Mirror. 6 June 2009. Retrieved 9 June 2021.
  14. ^ "Does Alamelamma's curse continue to haunt Wadiyars?". Deccan Herald. 10 December 2013. Retrieved 11 October 2015.
  15. ^ "400-year-old curse haunts Wodeyar royals of erstwhile princely state of Mysore". India Today. 12 December 2013. Retrieved 11 October 2015.
  16. ^ Wilks, Mark (1869). Historical Sketches of the South of India, in an Attempt to Trace the History of Mysoor, Etc.
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