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Deva Raya I
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Key Information
| Vijayanagara Empire |
|---|
| Ruling dynasties |
Deva Raya I (c. 1370 – 25 February 1423) was an Emperor of the Vijayanagara Empire (of the Sangama Dynasty).[3] After Harihara II died, there was a dispute among his sons over succession, in which Deva Raya I eventually emerged victor. He was a very capable ruler noted for his military exploits and his support to irrigation works in his empire.[4] He modernized the Vijayanagara army by improving the cavalry, employed skilled archers of the Turkic clans and raised the fighting capacity of his bowmen and imported horses from Arabia and Persia.[5]
The Italian traveler Niccolo Conti, who visited Vijayanagara c. 1420, described Deva Raya I thus: "In this city, there are 90,000 men fit to bear arms... their king is more powerful than all the kings of India".[5][6] Conti also noted that the royal city had grown to a circumference of 60 mi.[7]
Deva Raya I was a patron of Kannada literature and architecture. Madhura, a noted Jain poet was in his court and wrote in Kannada the Dharmanathapurana on the life of the fifteenth Jain Tirthankara (Dharmanatha), and a poem in eulogy of Gommateshvara of Shravanabelagola.[8]
Irrigation works and general administration
[edit]
The credit for making the capital city of the Vijayanagara Empire one of the biggest cities in the 15th century goes to Deva Raya I. He realized that the scarcity of water, both for drinking and irrigation, was restricting the growth of the royal capital.[4] In c. 1410 he had a barrage constructed across the Tungabhadra River and commissioned a 24 km long aqueduct from the Tungabhadra River to the capital.[9] The account provided by Nuniz gives details of the projects undertaken by Deva Raya I that brought prosperity to the empire. He maintained a secular attitude in administrative matters. He had a mosque and a slaughter house constructed for the convenience of the Muslim soldiers in his army.[10] In c. 1413, a dispute over property between the Shanka Jainalya of Lakshmeshwara and the Someshvara temple trust of the palace was settled in favor of the Jains. Deva Raya I had a Muslim bodyguard who built a choultry in honor of the Emperor.[7]
Military campaigns
[edit]Throughout his reign, Deva Raya was continually at war with the Velamas of Golconda, the Bahmani Sultan of Gulbarga, the Reddis of Kondavidu, and the traditional rivals of Vijayanagara, the Gajapatis of Kalinga. Deva Raya I was capable of managing the vast territory that he controlled by employing skilled archers of the Turkic clan and raised the fighting capacity of his bowmen. Following a confusion in the Reddi kingdom, Deva Raya I entered into an alliance with Warangal for partitioning the Reddi kingdom between them.[11] The split of Warangal changed the balance of power in the Deccan. In c.1420, Firoz Shah invaded Pangal but the two-year siege at Pangal ended in disease and disaster for Firoz Shah's armies. Deva Raya inflicted a shattering defeat on Firoz Shah.[12] Deva Raya's army massacred Firoz Shah's troops and created a great platform with their heads upon the field of battle. Firoz was followed deep into his own territory, which was completely devastated by the rampaging Hindu army under Deva Raya I. The Hindu army destroyed many mosques and holy places belonging to the Islamic community, and committed great carnages on the civilian Muslim population. The Sultan had to hand over the southern and eastern districts of his kingdom to Deva Raya I to secure peace. Consequently, by c.1422, Deva Raya I came to control territory up to the Krishna River - Tungabhadra river doab including Pangal[11][13] In the following days, the distressed Sultan died after leading a life of piety after abdicating power to his brother Ahmad.[7][14] Unable to accept this turnaround, the Gajapati Emperor Bhanudeva of Odisha invaded Rajamahendri. When a war with Vijayanagara seemed imminent, some skilful diplomacy by Vijayanagara chief Dodda Alla averted it.[15] Deva Raya was to be succeeded by his sons Ramachandra Raya and shortly thereafter by Vijaya Raya.
Ferishta's account
[edit]Persian writer Ferishta narrates an interesting story, of the kings' love for a beautiful girl, a daughter of a goldsmith from Mudugal in the Raichur district. Unable to wed her, a frustrated Deva Raya I attacked Mudgal and laid to waste a few villages. Aroused by this provocation, the Bahmani Sultan Taj ud-Din Firuz Shah invaded Vijayanagara leading to defeat of Deva Raya I. Though injured in the conflict, Firuz Shah sent his able commanders who successfully invaded Vijayanagara territory south of Adoni.
According to this account, Deva Raya I had to give as tribute, one of his daughters in marriage to the Sultan's prince,[3] several pearls and cash, Bankapura territory, fifty elephants, and 2,000 dancers. The goldsmith's daughter who was the reason for the war was wedded to Hassan Khan, a prince in the Sultan's family.[7][16]
Personal life
[edit]One of Deva Raya's queens Bhima Devi was a disciple of the Jain guru Abhinava Charukirti Panditacharya. She was a devotee of Shantinatha, 16th Jain tirthankara and built a temple at the Mangayi Basti in Shravanabelagola.[17]
Gallery
[edit]-
Mallikarjuna temple in Mallapangudi, near Hospet, built by Deva Raya I
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Kannada inscription of Deva Raya I at the Mallikarjuna temple in Mallappanagudi
Notes
[edit]- ^ Lakshmi, Kumari Jhansi (1958). "The Chronology of the Sangama Dynasty". Proceedings of the Indian History Congress. 21: 290–297. JSTOR 44145214.
- ^ "From Prehistoric Times To The Fall Of Vijayanagar : K. A. Nilakanta Sastri : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive". Internet Archive. 22 September 2015. Retrieved 26 November 2024.
- ^ a b Sen, Sailendra (2013). A Textbook of Medieval Indian History. Primus Books. pp. 103–108. ISBN 978-9-38060-734-4.
- ^ a b Kulakarṇī, Nayeem, De Souza (1996), p.106
- ^ a b Bowman,(2013) p.271
- ^ Chopra, Ravindran and Subrahmanian (2003), p.31
- ^ a b c d Kamath (1980), p.163
- ^ Sastri (1955), p.360
- ^ V.K Agnihotri (2007), India History, p.150, Allied Publishers Private Limited, ISBN 8184242999
- ^ Chopra, Ravindran and Subrahmanian (2003), pp.30-31
- ^ a b Chandra (1997), p.180
- ^ Chandra, Satish (1997), p.180, Medieval India: From Sultanat to the Mughals - Delhi Sultanat (1206-1526), Har-Anand Publications Pvt. Ltd., New Delhi
- ^ Chaurasia (2002) p.109
- ^ Sastri (1955). p.225
- ^ Chopra, Ravindran and Subrahmanian (2003), p.30
- ^ Sastri (1955), pp.224-225
- ^ Sangave (1981), p.46
References
[edit]- Chandra, Satish (2004) [1997]. Medieval India: From Sultanat to the Mughals-Delhi Sultanat (1206-1526) - Part One. New Delhi: Har-Anand Publications.
- Chaurasia, Radhey Shyam (2002) [2002]. History of Medieval India: From 1000 A.D. to 1707 A.D. New Delhi: Atlantic Publiushers. ISBN 81-269-0123-3.
- Nilakanta Sastri, K.A. (2002) [1955]. A history of South India from prehistoric times to the fall of Vijayanagar. New Delhi: Indian Branch, Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-560686-8.
- Kamath, Suryanath U. (2001) [1980]. A concise history of Karnataka: from pre-historic times to the present. Bangalore: Jupiter books. LCCN 80905179. OCLC 7796041.
- Bowman, John Stewart (2013) [2013]. Columbia Chronologies of Asian History and Culture. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0231-11004-4.
- Kulakarṇī,Nayeem,De Souza, A. Rā, M. A., Teotonio R. (1996) [1996]. Mediaeval Deccan History: Commemoration Volume in Honour of Purshottam Mahadeo Joshi. Popular Prakashan. ISBN 81-7154-579-3.
{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - John M. Fritz; George Michell, eds. (2001) [2001]. New Light on Hampi, Recent research in Vijayanagara. Mumbai: Marg. ISBN 81-85026-53-X.
- Chopra, P.N.; Ravindran, T.K.; Subrahmanian, N (2003) [2003]. History of South India (Ancient, Medieval and Modern) Part 2. New Delhi: Chand Publications. ISBN 81-219-0153-7.
- Sangave, Vilas Adinath (1981), The Sacred Shravanabelagola (A Socio-Religious Study) (1st ed.), New Delhi: Bharatiya Jnanpith
External links
[edit]- Our Karnataka article Archived 1 November 2005 at the Wayback Machine
- AP Online article
Deva Raya I
View on GrokipediaEarly Life and Accession
Origins and Family Background
Deva Raya I was a prince of the Sangama dynasty, the founding royal lineage of the Vijayanagara Empire established in 1336 CE by Harihara I and Bukka Raya I, who were sons of the chieftain Sangama and former feudatories in the Kampili region under Hoysala influence.[4] The dynasty's early members, including Deva Raya I's forebears, originated from Telugu-speaking warrior families in the eastern Deccan, with ties to the Kakatiya kingdom before migrating southward amid 14th-century Muslim invasions.[5] He was the son of Harihara II, who ruled the empire from 1377 to 1404 CE, as confirmed by inscriptions from his reign that explicitly identify Deva Raya as "the son of Harihara Raya, who was the son of Bukka Raya."[6] Prior to his accession, Deva Raya served as a provincial governor, managing territories amid internal family rivalries.[7] Details on his mother remain sparse in historical records, though some accounts reference a queen named Bhima Devi; no verified birth date or early childhood events are documented beyond his immersion in the empire's martial and administrative traditions.[2] Upon Harihara II's death in 1404 CE, a succession dispute erupted among his sons, including Bukka II (who briefly ruled until 1406 CE) and Virupaksha Raya; Deva Raya prevailed through military and political maneuvering, ascending the throne in 1406 CE and consolidating power by sidelining rivals.[8] This fraternal conflict highlighted the dynasty's reliance on primogeniture tempered by capability, with Deva Raya's victory attributed to his governance experience and alliances within the nobility.[9]Succession After Harihara II
After Harihara II's death in 1404, a succession crisis engulfed the Vijayanagara Empire as his sons vied for the throne, including Bukka Raya II, Virupaksha Raya, and Deva Raya.[4][5] Bukka Raya II initially claimed the succession and ruled briefly for approximately two years amid the ensuing instability.[4] Deva Raya, also a son of Harihara II, ultimately prevailed in the power struggle through military and political maneuvering, overthrowing Bukka Raya II and consolidating control.[2][8] He formally ascended the throne in 1406, marking the end of the fraternal conflict and the beginning of his 16-year reign.[2][1] This transition, documented in contemporary inscriptions and later historical accounts, stabilized the Sangama dynasty temporarily but highlighted the internal vulnerabilities exploited by external rivals like the Bahmani Sultanate.[10]Reign and Administration
Economic Policies and Infrastructure
Deva Raya I prioritized agricultural development as the cornerstone of his economic policies, recognizing the Deccan region's dependence on reliable water supply for sustaining crop yields and revenue from land taxes. His administration implemented measures to expand irrigation infrastructure, including the construction of canals, tanks, and dams, which enhanced cultivable areas and mitigated drought risks in arid zones. These efforts aligned with broader Vijayanagara traditions of state-sponsored agrarian support, fostering increased productivity in staples like rice, millets, and pulses.[9][11] A pivotal initiative was the erection of a barrage across the Tungabhadra River around 1410 CE, coupled with a 24-kilometer canal-cum-aqueduct that diverted water directly to the capital at Vijayanagara, addressing chronic urban shortages while enabling downstream irrigation for surrounding farmlands. This engineering feat not only irrigated thousands of hectares but also exemplified strategic resource allocation, with sluice gates allowing controlled distribution to fields and reservoirs. Complementary projects involved building additional tanks and minor canals, which historical records attribute to his direct patronage, thereby stabilizing food supplies and bolstering the empire's fiscal base through higher agricultural output.[12][13] These infrastructural advancements complemented military campaigns that secured vital trade corridors, promoting internal commerce and overseas exchanges with Arab and Chinese merchants in commodities such as textiles, spices, and metals. Efficient governance under Deva Raya I, including oversight of public works, yielded substantial economic expansion, as conquests expanded taxable territories and protected mercantile activities from raids. While primary reliance on agriculture persisted, these policies laid groundwork for sustained prosperity, evidenced by epigraphic grants to temples that often included irrigated devadana lands under state-managed systems.[2][9]Governance and Military Reforms
Deva Raya I's governance emphasized pragmatic secular policies to integrate diverse military personnel, including the construction of a mosque and slaughterhouse to accommodate Muslim soldiers in his service.[2] He also employed a Muslim bodyguard unit, which constructed a choultry in his honor, reflecting a strategic tolerance that prioritized administrative functionality over religious exclusivity.[2] In 1413 CE, he adjudicated a property dispute in favor of Shanka Jainalya against the Someshvara temple trust, demonstrating direct intervention in local judicial matters to maintain order.[2] His military reforms focused on modernizing the Vijayanagara army through enhanced cavalry and archery units, importing horses from Arabia and Persia to improve mobility and endurance.[14] [2] Deva Raya I recruited skilled Turkish archers and bolstered the capabilities of Arabian and Persian bowmen, shifting emphasis toward mounted archery to counter the cavalry tactics of Bahmani forces.[14] [2] These changes elevated infantry support roles and overall fighting efficiency, enabling victories such as the defeat of Firoz Shah Bahmani circa 1420 CE, which secured territories in the Krishna-Tungabhadra doab including Pangal by 1422 CE.[2]Military Campaigns
Conflicts with the Bahmani Sultanate
Deva Raya I's reign began amid escalating tensions with the Bahmani Sultanate under Sultan Firuz Shah (r. 1397–1422), culminating in the War of the Goldsmith's Daughter in 1406. This conflict originated from Deva Raya's alleged desire to marry a goldsmith's daughter from Bahmani territory, prompting Firuz Shah to launch a preemptive invasion with support from regional chiefs, including Velamas and Reddys. Vijayanagara forces suffered initial defeats and heavy casualties, forcing Deva Raya to accept Bahmani terms, including territorial concessions and possibly a matrimonial alliance involving his daughter.[15] To counter the Bahmani advantage in cavalry and archery, Deva Raya reformed his military by recruiting Muslim mercenaries, particularly expert Turkish and Persian bowmen, numbering around 10,000, whom he exempted from certain taxes and integrated into his forces. This innovation addressed Vijayanagara's traditional reliance on infantry and elephants, enabling more effective ranged combat against Bahmani horsemen. Inscriptions from the period indirectly attest to expanded military capabilities under Deva Raya, though primary Bahmani chronicles like those of Ferishta emphasize the strategic shift as a response to repeated setbacks.[16][17] By circa 1419–1420, Deva Raya launched a counteroffensive, inflicting a decisive defeat on Firuz Shah's army near the Krishna River. Vijayanagara troops massacred thousands of Bahmani soldiers, reportedly constructing a platform from their skulls as a victory monument, and annexed territories up to the Krishna's mouth, including parts of the Raichur Doab. Ferishta's account, while biased toward Bahmani perspectives, corroborates the scale of the rout, attributing it to Deva Raya's tactical adaptations; Vijayanagara epigraphy celebrates these gains without detailing specifics, focusing instead on tribute extraction from subjugated regions.[18][19][16] These victories temporarily shifted the balance, compelling Firuz Shah to redirect focus northward, but underlying rivalries persisted, with border skirmishes continuing until Deva Raya's death in 1422. The conflicts highlighted causal factors like technological asymmetries in warfare and the pragmatic use of foreign expertise, rather than ideological clashes alone, as evidenced by Deva Raya's inclusive military policies.[17]Wars Against Regional Powers
Deva Raya I conducted persistent military campaigns against the Velama chieftains of Telangana, centered around Golconda, from the outset of his reign in 1406 to secure control over the eastern Deccan territories amid regional fragmentation following the Kakatiya collapse. These conflicts involved repeated incursions to subdue Velama resistance, which had previously aligned against Vijayanagara expansions, culminating in Vijayanagara assertions of overlordship by the early 1420s through fortified outposts and tribute extraction.[1][20] Parallel efforts targeted the Reddi kingdom of Kondavidu, weakened by dynastic squabbles after 1400, where Deva Raya I forged a strategic alliance with the Warangal kingdom under Firoz Shah to divide and conquer Reddi holdings in coastal Andhra. Vijayanagara forces captured key strongholds like Rajahmundry and extended influence southward to Nellore by approximately 1417–1420, incorporating fertile delta regions into the empire's administrative fold and disrupting Reddi maritime trade networks.[1][21] These engagements, often coordinated with anti-Bahmani allies, reflected Deva Raya I's broader strategy to consolidate Hindu polities against fragmented Telugu nayakas, though exact battle casualties remain unquantified in surviving inscriptions; epigraphic evidence from his era, such as land grants post-conquest, confirms territorial gains stabilizing the empire's northeastern frontier.[1]Outcomes and Strategic Impacts
Deva Raya I's campaigns against the Bahmani Sultanate initially resulted in setbacks, including a defeat by Sultan Firoz Shah in 1406 or 1407, which compelled the Vijayanagara ruler to arrange a marriage alliance by offering his daughter to the sultan.[15][22] By approximately 1420, however, Deva Raya mounted a counteroffensive that inflicted a decisive defeat on Firoz Shah, reversing prior losses and compelling the Bahmani sultan to cede southern and eastern districts under his control.[18][2][19] In parallel, Deva Raya achieved successes against southern regional powers, including the Gajapatis of Odisha and the Reddis of Kondavidu, which facilitated territorial expansion southward and consolidated Vijayanagara authority up to the Krishna River.[2][22] These victories enhanced the empire's defensive posture and extended its influence across peninsular India, enabling subsequent rulers to build upon a more secure southern frontier.[2] Strategically, the campaigns prompted Deva Raya to reform the Vijayanagara military, incorporating improvements to cavalry, recruitment of skilled Turkic archers, and enhancement of bowmen and Arabian horsemen's effectiveness to counter Bahmani advantages in archery and artillery.[2][23] These adaptations not only contributed to battlefield reversals but also established a precedent for hybrid military tactics that bolstered the empire's resilience against northern incursions for generations.[2] The resulting territorial stability supported infrastructure initiatives, such as fortifications and irrigation dams, which indirectly amplified economic productivity and logistical support for future expansions.[2]Cultural and Religious Contributions
Patronage of Temples and Arts
Deva Raya I actively patronized temple construction as a means of religious devotion and imperial legitimacy, most notably through the building of the Mallikarjuna Temple dedicated to Shiva in Mallapangudi, near Hospet in modern Karnataka. Erected during his reign from 1406 to 1422 AD, the temple exemplifies early Vijayanagara architectural synthesis, incorporating granite construction and pillared halls typical of the period's Dravidian-influenced style.[24][25] A Kannada inscription dated 1412 AD at the Mallikarjuna Temple records Deva Raya I's direct involvement, likely detailing endowments or construction grants that supported Shaivite worship and local priestly communities.[25] This epigraphic evidence underscores his strategic use of temple patronage to consolidate power in contested regions, fostering cultural continuity amid military campaigns against the Bahmani Sultanate.[24] While literary patronage flourished under later Vijayanagara rulers, Deva Raya I's temple initiatives advanced sculptural arts through detailed friezes and iconography on temple walls, contributing to the empire's distinctive aesthetic that emphasized narrative reliefs and deity representations./22:_South_and_Southeast_Asia_After_1200_CE/22.05:_Vijayanagar_Empire) Such elements in structures like Mallikarjuna laid foundational precedents for the more elaborate Hazara Rama Temple's Rama-themed carvings, though the latter's primary construction is attributed to his successor.[26]Religious Policies in a Contested Era
Deva Raya I pursued religious policies that emphasized Hindu patronage while extending pragmatic tolerance to Jains and Muslims, reflecting the Vijayanagara Empire's position as a Hindu stronghold amid persistent warfare with the Muslim Bahmani Sultanate. He constructed Hindu temples, including the Mallikarjuna Temple in Mallapangudi between 1406 and 1422 CE, and commissioned the Hazare Rama Temple as an exemplar of Deccan architecture.[27] [2] In 1406 CE, he issued copper plate grants to Brahmins at Devarāyapura Agrahāra, supporting Hindu institutions and Vedic traditions.[9] His support for Jainism included settling a property dispute in favor of the Jain community in 1413 CE and patronizing the Kannada Jain poet Madhura, who composed the Dharmanathapurana and a poem on Gommateshvara during his reign.[2] Queen Bhima Devi, a devout Jain, constructed a temple in Shravanabelagola's Mangayi Basti under his auspices, underscoring royal endorsement of Jain devotional practices.[2] Towards Muslims, Deva Raya I demonstrated tolerance by integrating them into military service; historical accounts attribute to him the enlistment of up to 10,000 Muslim troops following defeats by the Bahmani forces.[28] He facilitated their religious observance by constructing a mosque and slaughterhouse for Muslim soldiers and employing a Muslim bodyguard, who in turn built a choultry in the emperor's honor.[2] According to the 16th-century Persian chronicler Ferishta, after a Bahmani victory, Deva Raya allotted estates to Muslim recruits, permitted traditional dress, fasting, and prayer, and erected a mosque for their use—measures aimed at enhancing cavalry effectiveness despite inter-state religious animosities.[29] He also supported Islamic scholars and fostered ties with Arab merchants, promoting economic integration.[9] These policies navigated a contested landscape where Vijayanagara rulers positioned themselves as defenders of Hinduism against northern sultanates, yet internal pluralism strengthened administrative and military resilience; Ferishta's narrative, while valuable, reflects the perspective of a Bahmani-era historian potentially exaggerating Vijayanagara concessions.[30]Personal Life and Death
Family and Succession Planning
Deva Raya I's known male heirs included at least two sons, Ramachandra Raya and Vijaya Raya (also recorded as Veera Vijaya Bukka Raya), who directly succeeded him following his death circa 1422.[31][32] Ramachandra Raya, the elder son, assumed the throne immediately after his father's demise but ruled only briefly, with historical accounts indicating a short, uneventful tenure marked by no major expansions or reforms.[33][34] Vijaya Raya then succeeded his brother around 1422, reigning until approximately 1424, during which the empire experienced relative stability but no significant military or administrative advancements beyond maintaining the status quo established under Deva Raya I.[32][34] Inscriptions and king lists suggest these transitions reflect a hereditary succession within the Sangama dynasty, prioritizing direct male lineage without recorded disputes or external interventions at this stage, implying Deva Raya I's grooming of his sons for rule through exposure to governance and military affairs.[35] Following Vijaya Raya's death, the throne passed to Deva Raya II in 1424, identified in epigraphic evidence as a grandson of Deva Raya I, indicating that succession planning extended to the next generation amid the short-lived reigns of the immediate heirs.[35][36] This pattern underscores a reliance on familial continuity rather than elective or merit-based selection, though the brevity of the intermediate rules highlights potential vulnerabilities in preparing multiple viable successors during a period of ongoing threats from northern sultanates. Primary evidence for family ties derives from temple inscriptions and later compilations of royal genealogies, which consistently affirm the patrilineal descent without contradiction from contemporary records.[35]Death and Immediate Aftermath
Deva Raya I died in 1422, concluding a 16-year reign marked by military innovations and territorial consolidations.[37] [38] No contemporary accounts specify the cause of his death, though it followed periods of intense warfare with the Bahmani Sultanate and regional powers, potentially contributing to physical strain.[39] His eldest son, Ramachandra Raya (also recorded as Ramachandraraya), immediately succeeded him, assuming the throne amid the empire's ongoing administrative and military frameworks.[40] Ramachandra's rule proved short-lived and lacked notable achievements or expansions, lasting approximately one to two years, as per chronicles like those of Portuguese traveler Fernão Nuniz.[8] This transitional phase saw no major disruptions to the empire's stability, though it delayed further aggressions against northern adversaries. Following Ramachandra's death or deposition, Deva Raya I's another son, Vijaya Raya (referred to as Vira-Vijaya or "Visaya" in some accounts), briefly held power before the ascension of Deva Raya II around 1424–1425.[39] [38] Deva Raya II, the most capable of the successors, rapidly consolidated control, leveraging his father's artillery and cavalry reforms to pursue renewed campaigns, ensuring continuity in Vijayanagara's defensive posture against the Bahmani Sultanate.[37] The immediate aftermath thus reflected a pattern of fraternal succession typical of the Sangama dynasty, with minimal internal strife recorded in inscriptions or foreign traveler narratives.[40]Historiography and Controversies
Primary Sources and Archaeological Evidence
The primary sources for Deva Raya I's reign consist predominantly of epigraphic records, including stone inscriptions and copper plates, which provide direct evidence of his administrative grants, military campaigns, and territorial extent.[41] Inscriptions dated to his rule, such as those collected from North Arcot District in 1905-1906, detail land grants and royal orders in Kannada and Sanskrit, attesting to his authority over regions extending to present-day Tamil Nadu.[42] These epigraphs, numbering at least several dozen, corroborate his expansionist policies and interactions with local chieftains, though they often employ hyperbolic eulogies typical of royal inscriptions.[43] A significant recent discovery includes a set of copper plates from the early 15th century, unveiled in 2025, which explicitly record Deva Raya I's coronation date and lineage within the Sangama dynasty.[44] Inscribed in Sanskrit and Kannada, these plates outline governance structures and fiscal privileges granted during his ascension around 1406 CE, offering precise chronological anchors absent in later chronicles.[45] Such artifacts, authenticated by epigraphists, underscore the Vijayanagara rulers' use of durable media for perpetuating legitimacy and administrative continuity. Archaeological evidence complements these texts through coins and temple constructions attributed to his era. Gold varaha and gadyana coins, weighing approximately 3.4 grams, feature iconography like seated Shiva or boar motifs, linking them stylistically to Deva Raya I's minting authority amid fiscal reforms post-Bahmani conflicts.[46] Structures like the Mallikarjuna Temple in Mallapanagudi, erected between 1406 and 1422 CE, bear dedicatory inscriptions invoking his patronage, evidencing investments in Shaivite infrastructure to consolidate Hindu resistance against Islamic incursions.[47] These material remains, excavated and cataloged by the Archaeological Survey of India, affirm the empire's architectural prowess and economic stability under his rule, though numismatic attributions require caution due to overlaps with successors like Deva Raya II.[48]Evaluation of Ferishta's Account
Muhammad Qasim Ferishta, in his Tarikh-i-Ferishta compiled around 1606–1607 CE, provides a detailed narrative of Deva Raya I's conflicts with the Bahmani Sultanate under Taj al-Din Firuz Shah (r. 1397–1422 CE), portraying the Vijayanagara ruler as initially provocative through raids on Mudgal and the Raichur Doab, leading to a decisive Bahmani counter-invasion circa 1406–1407 CE. Ferishta claims Deva Raya suffered a severe defeat, resulting in his temporary capture, the payment of substantial tribute (including 10 lakh huns, elephants, and jewels), cession of Bankapur fort, and the dispatch of a son as hostage; to bolster his forces, Deva Raya allegedly employed 10,000 Muslim archers and cavalry, permitted mosque construction within his capital, and even allowed his troops to adopt Islamic prayer practices during campaigns.[15] This account, drawn from earlier Bahmani chronicles and oral traditions, exhibits limitations in reliability due to Ferishta's temporal distance—nearly two centuries after the events—and his patronage under the Shiite Adil Shahi dynasty of Bijapur, which incentivized glorification of Muslim victories over Hindu adversaries. Specific embellishments, such as a romantic motive for Deva Raya's raids (involving unrequited affection for a Bahmani commander's daughter), lack corroboration from any contemporary sources and contradict the ruler's epigraphically attested focus on territorial consolidation and temple patronage, as seen in Kannada inscriptions from 1406–1422 CE recording grants at sites like Mallapangudi.[49][50] Vijayanagara epigraphy offers no evidence of the claimed humiliations, instead documenting uninterrupted administrative and religious activities, including fortification projects and land endowments, suggesting any setbacks were tactical rather than existential; for instance, Deva Raya's reign saw the issuance of coins and inscriptions affirming sovereignty without reference to tribute or hostages. The employment of Muslim troops, while plausible as a strategic adaptation amid recurrent border wars, is verifiably attributed to Deva Raya II in a 1430 CE inscription citing 10,000 Turushka horsemen, indicating Ferishta may conflate reigns or amplify precedents for narrative effect.[51][52] Scholars assess Ferishta's broader Vijayanagara coverage as selectively biased, prioritizing sultanate perspectives that downplay Hindu resilience; while the occurrence of defeats around 1407 CE aligns with halts in Vijayanagara expansion inferred from inscriptional gaps, the account's hyperbolic submission terms serve propagandistic ends rather than empirical fidelity, underscoring the need to privilege primary epigraphic data over later compilations. Cross-verification with fragmentary Bahmani records confirms mutual hostilities but omits the punitive details, reinforcing that Ferishta's version, though influential, requires cautious interpretation against archaeological and inscriptional primacy.[53]References
- https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Mallikarjuna_temple_%281406-1422_AD%29_at_Hospet.JPG
