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  2. History of Karnataka - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Karnataka

    Karnataka was divided between the Bombay Presidency, the Kingdom of Mysore and the Nizam of Hyderabad. India became Independent in 1947, and according to the States Reorganization Act, 1956, the Kannada-speaking areas of Hyderabad State, Madras State were unified with Mysore State. The state was renamed as Karnataka in 1973.

  3. Karnataka - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karnataka

    Kannada is the official language of the state of Karnataka, as the native language of 66.46% of its population as of 2011 and is one of the classical languages of India. Urdu is the second largest language, spoken by 10.83% of the population, and is the language of Muslims outside the coastal region.

  4. Timeline of Karnataka - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_Karnataka

    The name Karnataka is derived from Karunadu, meaning 'lofty land' or 'high plateau', due to its location on the Deccan Plateau. The name can also mean 'land of black soil' (kari, 'black'; nadu, - 'area' or 'region') in Kannada. There are other possible roots of the name. [1] The recorded history of Karnataka goes back to the Ramayana and ...

  5. Kannada inscriptions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kannada_inscriptions

    578 CE Mangalesha Kannada inscription in Cave temple # 3 at Badami 634CE Aihole inscription of Ravi Kirti. About 25,000 inscriptions found in Karnataka and nearby states [1] belong to historic Kannada rulers, including the Kadambas, the Western Ganga Dynasty, the Rashtrakuta, the Chalukya, the Hoysala and the Vijayanagara Empire.

  6. Halmidi inscription - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halmidi_inscription

    The undated Halmidi (Hassan District, Karnataka) inscription, allegedly written during the reign of Kadamba Kakusthavarman, is taken by some scholars to belong, on palaeographical grounds, to the middle of the 5th century AD, while a few other scholars have held, on the same grounds of palaeography, that it is as late as the second half of the ...

  7. Asaga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asaga

    Asaga's name is considered an apbramsha form of the Sanskrit name Aśoka or Asanga. [7] A contemporary of Rashtrakuta King Amoghavarsha I (800–878 CE), Asaga lived in modern Karnataka and made important contributions to the corpus of Rashtrakuta literature created during their rule in southern and central India between the 8th and 10th centuries. [11]

  8. A. R. Krishnashastry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A._R._Krishnashastry

    Krishnashastry was born on 12 February 1890, in Ambale, Kingdom of Mysore (in present-day Karnataka, India), into a Smarta Hoysala Karnataka Brahmin family. [citation needed] His parents were Ramakrishna Shastry, grammarian and principal of Sanskrit school in Mysore and Shankaramma, a homemaker; she died of disease when he was ten.

  9. Hebbal-Kittayya inscription - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hebbal-Kittayya_inscription

    A literal translation of the inscription is: "When SriPurusha Maharaja was ruling the Earth, Pelnagattarasa was administering Perbbolalnaadu-30, Kittayya the brother-in-law of Arakommora of Kodandale clan attained Indra Loka in an uuralivu battle during a Rattavadi attack. This stone was installed by Pergundi and his brother Kirugundi".