Kanthirava Narasarava I was the wodeyar ruler of Mysore (a principality or petty kingdom in southern India) from 1638 to 1659.
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Early years
The previous significant ruler, Chamaraja V, was succeeded by his uncle, who in turn was quickly poisoned on the orders of the Delavoi (Prime Minister), Vikramaraya, within a year of becoming the wodeyar.[1] The 23-year-old Kanthirava Narasaraja I, who had earlier been adopted by the widow of Raja I, became, in 1638, the new Wodeyar of Mysore.[1]
Rule
Soon after his accession, he was called on to defend Srirangapatna against the invasions of the
Early Christianity in Mysore
Catholic missionaries, who had arrived in the coastal areas of southern India—the Malabar coast, the Kanara coast, and the Coromandel coast—starting early in the sixteenth century, did not begin work in land-locked Mysore until half way through the seventeenth.[3] The Mysore mission was established in Srirangapatna in 1649 by Leonardo Cinnami, an Italian Jesuit from Goa.[3] Although a few years later Cinnami was expelled from Mysore on account of opposition in Kanthirava's court, the ruler himself was not seen by the Jesuits as unsympathetic, and towards the end of Kanthirava's rule, Cinnami returned to establish missions in half a dozen locations.[3] During his second stay Cinnami obtained permission to convert Kanthirava's subjects to Christianity; however, he was successful mostly in the eastern regions of Kanthirava's dominions, regions that later became part of the Madras Presidency of British India.[3] According to (Subhrahmanyam 1985, p. 209), "Of a reported 1700 converts in the Mysore mission in the mid-1660s, a mere quarter were Kannadigas (Kannada language speakers), the rest being Tamil speakers from the western districts of modern-day Tamilnadu, ..."[3]
See also
Notes
- ^ a b c d e f Imperial Gazetteer of India: Provincial Series 1908, p. 20
- ^ Imperial Gazetteer of India: Provincial Series 1908, p. 20, Michell 1995, p. 20
- ^ a b c d e Subrahmanyam 1989, pp. 208–209
References
- Imperial Gazetteer of India: Provincial Series (1908), Mysore and Coorg, Calcutta: Superintendent of Government Printing. Pp. xvii, 365, 1 map., <http://books.google.com/books?id=lgO2AAAAIAAJ&printsec=titlepage&source=gbs_summary_r&cad=0>
- Michell, George (1995), Architecture and Art of Southern India: Vijayanagara and the successor states: 1350–1750, Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press. Pp. 250, ISBN 0521441102, <http://books.google.com/books?id=W6bphUvvPf4C>
- Subrahmanyam, Sanjay (1989), "Warfare and state finance in Wodeyar Mysore, 1724–25: A missionary perspective", Indian Economic Social History Review 26 (2): 203-233, <http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/001946468902600203>
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