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Pakhal Lake

Pakhal lake is situated amidst unspoiled forest in Pakhal wildlife sanctuary near Pakhalashoknagar Village, Khanapur Mandal, Warangal District, Telangana State, India. 'Pakhal' literally means 'a large container of water' and is a Sanskrit derivative. According to the inscription set up on the bund, it was constructed during the reign of Ganapatideva by Jagadala Mummadi, son of the minister Bayyana Nayaka and Bachamamba, around 1213 AD, at Maudgalya-tirtha close to the temple of Siva-Ramanatha. By the side of the tank he built a splendid city called Ganapapura and granted a mansion and five martulu of land to Ravi-cakravarti (Kavi Chakravarti), who composed the record. Inscription Details: Reference 1: A Corpus of Inscriptions in the Telangana Districts of Andhra Pradesh. Part III, 1956, pp. 150–157. Place: Pakhal, Warangal District. Dynasty: Kakatiya. Reign: Ganapatideva. Language: Sanskrit. The inscription is on a stone pillar near Pakhal lak...
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Aggalayya: Ayurveda & Jaina Legacy

The 11th Century Surgical Wizard of Telangana Royal Physician (Ayurveda) · Mahasamantha · Vaidyaratnakara Pranacharya · Vaidyasikhamani · 1034–1074 CE Name Aggalayya (Aggalarasa) — flourished 1034 AD – 1074 AD Spouse Vallikambe (praised for philanthropic qualities) Born / Died c. 1000 AD – c. 1080 AD Profession Royal Physician (Ayurveda), Mahasamanta (feudal lord), Gavunda (village headman) Titles Vaidyaratnakara, Pranacharya, Naravaidya, Vaidyasikhamani, Mahasamanta Religion Jainism (devout Jaina, follower of Yapaniya sangha, Maduvagana) Inscriptions Yadadri Bhuvanagiri (Saidapur / Saidapuram), Sangareddy (Sirur, Singuru, Narayankhed Mandal) — 1034 AD to 1074 AD The Saidapur Jaina Inscription (1034 CE) Discovered on a three-sided pillar in Saidapur, Bhongir region (Nalgonda district, Telangana), this record from the reign of the Chalukya king Jagadekamalla I (Jayasimh...

Epigraphia Telanganica: Irrigation Inscriptions of Telangana

Irrigation Tanks of Telangana Based on Epigraphia Telanganica (Vol. I–IV) • Verified with modern districts of Telangana (33-district structure) Source: Epigraphia Telanganica (Volumes I–IV). Modern districts verified against Telangana's 33-district structure (created 2016, updated 2019). Places like "Mahabubabad," "Jangaon," "Nagarkurnool," "Jogulamba Gadwal," "Hanamkonda," "Suryapet," "Yadadri Bhuvanagiri," "Siddipet," "Jagtial," "Peddapalli," "Kamareddy," "Rajanna Sircilla," "Jayashankar Bhupalpally," "Mancherial," "Kumuram Bheem Asifabad," "Nirmal," "Medchal–Malkajgiri," "Vikarabad," "Narayanpet," "Wanaparthy," "Sangareddy," "Bhadradri Kothagudem," "Mulugu" are used as per official district reorganisation.

Kakatiya Chronicles: The Merchant King's Promise | Motupalli Edict

⚡ The Merchant King's Promise How Ganapatideva’s Abhaya Sasana transformed medieval sea trade 📜 Motupalli Pillar Inscription | A.D. 1244–45 | Abhaya Sasana (Edict of Safety) 🛡️ "Imagine a world where shipwrecked sailors weren't rescued but robbed by the state." Until 1244, coastal kings routinely seized entire cargoes — gold, elephants, horses, gems — from wrecked vessels. Ganapatideva changed everything. Issuing the Motupalli Pillar Inscription (also known as the Abhaya Sasana — "edict of safety"), the Kakatiya emperor declared safety to traders arriving from all "countries, islands, foreign countries, and cities" . He formally ended the brutal practice of confiscating shipwreck cargo, shifting from plunder to predictable taxation. The king stated he did this out of mercy, for glory and merit , recognizing that wealth is oft...

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: ...

Suryapet District History

Suryapet district is a district in the Indian state of Telangana. The city of Suryapet is the district headquarters. The district has three revenue divisions Suryapet, Kodad and Huzurnagar. It is sub-divided into 23 mandals. The district shares boundaries with Nalgonda, Khammam, Yadadri, Jangaon and Mahabubabad districts and with Andhra Pradesh state. It is carved out from erst while Nalgonda district. Part of Amangallu-70 and Kondapalli-300 or Kondapallinadu (Huzurnagar) in olden times. Kondapalli-300 (also known as Kondapallinadu ) during Western Chalukyas of Kalyani (973-1153 CE) is located within the current boundaries of Suryapet district , specifically covering its southern and eastern regions. Its influence centered around the Huzurnagar-Kodad belt (Suryapet) and extended toward Nelakondapalli (now in Khammam district). Amangallu-70 was a core territory of the Kandur Chodas (also known as the Kanduri Cholas). While the Western Chalukya emperors were the overall sovereigns, ...