Book: Raya: Krishnadevaraya of Vijayanagara
Author: Srinivas Reddy
Publisher: Juggernaut
Language: English
Hardcover: 264 pages
Item Weight: 295 g
Dimensions: 20 x 14 x 4 cm
Country of Origin: India
Price: 428/-
vijayanagara-vṛttāntamu
sujanalache vinnayaṭṭi sūnṛta-vākyul
prajalaku teṭapaḍaṅgā
sṛjiyiñciti kṛṣṇrāya śekharu-carital
So that the people may clearly know
the history of Vijayanagara,
I have put together the deeds of King Krishnaraya,
in true and pleasing words
that one might hear from virtuous men. [Rāyavācakamu I.1]
Krishnadevaraya of Vijayanagara is remembered as the iconic king of south India. Most histories render him as a Hindu warrior who crushed Muslim invaders, some paint him as a peasant who rose to become an emperor, and yet others remember him as a perceptive statesman, a gleaming poet or a compassionate ruler.
Each of these identities contributed to the king’s incredible facade, but he was much more than any one of these readings.
It is simple to oversight Krishnadeva Raya for a character straight out of a fable — a king whose conquests and traits are exaggerated to make a great story. Just, munificent, bighearted, a patron of arts and architecture, a poet — how could one man possess all these qualities and still manage to be a flourishing military commander under whom the empire reached its zenith?
What makes Krishnadevaraya so exciting is that his life embodies all the vibrant dynamism of his era, a time that witnessed fundamental alterations in the societal, intellectual and political life of South Asia, and the world at large.
His two-decade reign from 1509 to 1529 falls in what scholars call the early modern period, a crag of world history when new global networks were being forged – cultures merged and cultures clashed, but the vast lands of the earth were not yet claimed by European colonialism.
Krishnadevaraya thus symbolizes a critical makeover from ancient king to modern politician.
And in that sense, he was India’s first global leader.
He had to confront very modern dilemmas such as building international alliances and negotiating overseas trade deals while grappling with the tests of globalism and multiculturalism. The Deccan of his time was a place where Hindus and Muslims, north Indians and south Indians, Persians and Portuguese, all amalgamated as they made their lives and fortunes.
This book is just one telling of Krishnadevaraya’s life. It is based on the available historical archives, but it listens with sympathy to the legends, songs and memories of people.
To quote the author: ‘I was first enchanted by Krishnadevaraya when I read the remarkable poetry of his Amuktamalyada. Although literary texts like these are often viewed as works of pure imagination, rarely if ever mined as historical sources, I believe a sensitive reading of such material gives us a unique window into a poet’s mind, and in this case, the spirit of a great king. With this array of materials, I have tried, in the most genuine way I can, to present Krishnadevaraya as he might have seen himself, at the very heart of a magnificent world.’
The author divides his book in three sections, each section comprised of five chapters.
Part I deals with the ascension and early trobles of Raya. The chapters included are:
1. Coronation
2. The Early Days
3. The Medieval Deccan
4. The Expanding Empire
5 Bijapur and the Sultans
Part II deals with the intermediate perios of Raya’s rule and focusses on his administrative acumen as well as the troubles faced and handled by him. The chapters included are:
6. The Eastern Mountain
7. Tirupati and Temples
8. Kondavidu Fort
9. Rival Kings
10. The Lion Mountain
Part III leads us through the mature stage of his rule right up to the end of his life. The chapters included are:
11. Court of Culture
12. Road to Raichur
13. Battle on the Krishna
14. City and Palace
15. The Final Years
In the eyes of the world, Vijayanagara was the epitome of oriental opulence. It was a cosmopolitan metropolis, the best provided city of the world, more magnificent than Rome, and so exceedingly rich that diamonds were traded in the streets by the basket load!
And at the height of the empire’s glory there ruled a magnificent monarch, the most feared and perfect king that could ever be!
The myths surrounding Krishnadevaraya began in his own lifetime, nurtured by sycophantic court poets, horse-trading Portuguese chroniclers and travelling storytellers.
But myths are not antithetical to the discipline of history; indeed, they are critical components of how history is made and why it is propagated.
Disentangling fact from fiction is but one part of historical research, contextualizing and interpreting that material is another part, for good history is not the pursuit of an absolute truth, but rather a search for meaning.
The legends of Krishnadevaraya’s exploits spread widely after his death, but he consciously set them in motion, particularly through his Amuktamalyada, a glorious epic poem that the king did in fact compose in honour of Andhra Mahavishnu. That fateful dream of 1515 was no mere fiction – it was divine inspiration for an unforgettable empire.
The book is enormously readable and charming. You would almost feel the complete cosmos of Vijayanagara come alive.
The author has left no stone unturned in his minuscule research. Consequently, the reader would be privy to new material in almost every chapter.