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Kondapalli Nadu

🏰 Kondapalli-Nadu: The Strategic Frontier (Kondapalli-300) During the medieval era, Kondapalli-nadu (alternatively known as Kondapalli-300 ) served as a vital administrative division on the left bank of the Krishna River. It acted as a strategic highway region connecting the coastal plains with the Deccan heartland. 📍 Geographical Scope & Modern Identity Primary Region: Modern-day Huzurnagar and Kodad (Suryapet District). Key Centers: Peda-Kondapalli (Fort) and the ancient town of Nelakondapalli . Context: Identified as the heart of the Natavadi country (Pennatavadi). 👑 Imperial Administration (Western Chalukya Period) Under Vikramaditya VI , the province was governed by the eminent Anantapala Dandanayaka . Inscriptions record his nephew, Govindarajulu , as the specific ruler of the Kondapalli-300 unit. Note: Customs and tolls were managed by high-ranking officers like Bollamaraja (Vaddaravula-su...
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Gnana Saraswati Temple, Basar

📜 Epigraphical Records of Basara (Vyasapura) The historical identity of Basara as a center of learning and piety is firmly established through Western Chalukya inscriptions found in the Mudhol Taluk of Adilabad District. These records transform the site from legend into a documented 12th-century Agrahara in Basura Vishaya. 🌍 Regional Governance: Basura-Vishaya (A.D. 1264) A record from Saka 1186 refers to the administrative division as Basura-vishaya . This territorial unit included gift villages and was mentioned alongside Sholapur (Sonnaligenagara), proving that "Basura" (Basara) remained a key provincial hub into the 13th century. 1. The Basara Inscription (A.D. 1147) Date: August 29, 1147 A.D. (Saka 1070, Prabhava) Reign: Jagadekamalla II (Western Chalukyas of Kalyana) Location: Slab in front of Pathaleshwara Temple Identity: Explicitly names the town Agrahara Vyasapura . This record...

The Evolution of Land, Grain, and Monetary Standards in Telangana

📜 Measuring Telangana How Land, Grain, Weight & Money Were Measured Across Dynasties (Vishnukundin → Asaf Jahi) ⏳ Timeline Covered: Vishnukundin (4th–6th c.) → Western Chalukya (6th–8th c.) → Rashtrakuta (8th–10th c.) → Kalyana Chalukya (10th–12th c.) → Kakatiya (12th–14th c.) → Qutb Shahi (16th–17th c.) → Asaf Jahi (18th–20th c.) 🌱 The Tiny Seed That Weighed Gold: The Gunja (Abrus precatorius) Before coins were stamped, before scales were standardized — there was the Gunja seed (also called Rati ). What is it? A bright red seed with a black dot, harvested from a native climber in Telangana's scrub forests. Its remarkable property: every seed weighs almost exactly the same — about 0.11 grams . How was it used? For over 1,500 years, jewelers and kings used Gunja seeds as natural weights. If a gold coin weighed 40 Gunja seeds, everyone knew how heavy it should be — no scales needed. The Foundation of Everything: ...

Telangana Districts

📌 33 Districts of Telangana Complete Formation & Name History In Telangana, governance operates within the federal framework of India, where the Constitution divides powers between the Union and the State: the Central Government makes national laws, policies, and controls subjects like defence, currency, and major infrastructure, while the State Government led by the Chief Minister handles state subjects through its Legislative Assembly and Council of Ministers; at the state level, the judiciary is headed by the Telangana High Court, and administration is implemented through District Collectors (IAS) managing revenue and development, and Police officers (IPS) maintaining law and order, followed by Mandal-level Tahsildars who oversee local revenue and administration, and Village Panchayats and Secretaries who manage grassroots governance and public services, ensuring a continuous chain of governance from the Central Government down to villages. 📅 Telangana Stat...

Godavari River

Godavari River Complete Guide (Telangana Focus) 🌍 Origin and Formation of Godavari and Krishna Rivers The Godavari and Krishna Rivers have their origins deeply rooted in the geological processes of the Cenozoic Era (Navajeevee Mahakaal, c. 66 million BCE – present) , also known as the Age of Mammals, which witnessed the emergence and diversification of modern life. Plate Tectonics and the Formation of Rivers Approximately 55–50 million years ago , during the Eocene Epoch of the Cenozoic Era, the Indian Plate began colliding with the Eurasian Plate, initiating the uplift of the Himalayas and the Alps. Prior to this collision, the Indian Plate had started breaking away from the supercontinent Gondwana. As it drifted northwards, the continental crust stretched, cracked, and fractured, forming major geological structures that would define river systems in peninsular India. Rift Valleys and River Basins One of the m...