Encyclopaedia of Indian Temple Architecture - North and South India
author: Michael W. Meister
edition: 1986, American Institute of Indian Studies
pages: 6147
Topic: History
Chapter 49 - End of Hoysala and Kakatiya Domination
This chapter describes End of Hoysala and Kakatiya Domination located on page 3 in the book Encyclopaedia of Indian Temple Architecture (North and South India) compiled by Michael W. Meister, George Michell and M. A. Dhaky. These books deal with Indian temples from the early centuries. South India developed the Dravidian style while North India expressed symbolic experimentation of the divine manifestation.
This historical compilation contains seven volumes and comprises 14 books. For example, this chapter describes End of Hoysala and Kakatiya Domination. Everything together represents a huge collection of material related to the temple architecture of North and South India.
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You can look up the meaning of the phrase “End of Hoysala and Kakatiya Domination” according to 28 books dealing with History. The following list shows a short preview of potential definitions.
Triveni Journal
The administrative divisions of ‘Sthala, Rajya and ‘Nayankara that were in vogue in the Vijayanagara Kingdom are not at all met with either in the Seuna or Hoysala Kingdoms. Besides this, the crest of the Vijayanagara Kings is more or less akin to that of the Kakatiyas. Thus it is shown that the founders of Vijayanagara were either directly or indirectly connected with the Telugu Kings of the Kakatiya dynasty of Warangal and that Vijayanagara was of Telugu origin....
Read full contents: Reviews
Temples in and around Madurantakam [by B. Mekala]
Kakatiya Rule at Kanchi (AD 1316). The Chera hold on Tondaimandalam did not last long, for, Kakatiya King Pratabarudra-Il forced the Chera to retire to their own kingdom and installed aTelugu Governor, Manavira in Kanchipurarn in A. D. 1316. (* 1) Sewell Robert, Historical Inscriptions of Southern India and Outlines of Political History, Madras, 1932, p. 179....
Read full contents: Kakatiya Rule at Kanchi (AD 1316)
Tibet (Myth, Religion and History) [by Tsewang Gyalpo Arya]
King Srongtsan Gampo turned out to be a great king, who conquered the warring neighbors and brought them under his domination, and earned great recognition through marriage alliances with Nepal, China, Zhangzhung, and A-sha kingdoms. It was said that Buddhist texts which arrived in Tibet during the twenty eighth King Lha Thothori were translated into the Tibetan language during his reign. Shrines were built to host the Buddha statues brought in by the Nepalese and Chinese princesses....
Read full contents: 5. Persecution and the Decline
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