Publisher's Synopsis
After reading this book, a reader would feel that Mysore is not just a city but it is indeed a city of palaces and culture. It was in the summer of 1399 ad that disaster struck a small principality of Southern India. Mahisuru, whichater went on to become Mysore, hadost its chieftain and was vulnerable to the machinations of a cunning upstart. Around the same time, two young aspirantseft their ancestral home in Dwaraka, Gujarat, and proceeded Southwards in search of fame. Yaduraya, the elder of the two aspirants, was destiny's chosen man toead a valiant attack against the vile upstart, rescue the family in distress, wed the princess and assume theordship of the place. This event marked the birth of the Wodeyar Dynasty, which was among India'songest reigning royal houses. In one of the most definitive accounts of the Wodeyar Dynasty, author Vikram Sampath sketches this long and fascinating regime replete with wars, palace intrigues, romance, valour and deceit. From the genesis in 1399, to the age of glory under Raja Wodeyar, Ranadhira Kanthirava Narasaraja Wodeyar and Chikkadevaraja Wodeyar, to the times of spineless monarchs whoet the reigns of the kingdom slip into the hands of the powerful ministers, the book revisits the ups and downs of the Dynasty. The brief interlude under Haidar Ali and his son Tipu Sultan saw Mysore emerge as a veritable nightmare for the British East India Company. With Tipu's death in 1799, power was restored to the Wodeyars and they continued to hold sway over the region till the time of India's Independence. Under progressive rulers and able Dewans, Mysore emerged as a front-runner State of India by the time of Independence on all developmental indices"a strong foundation on which the modern state of Karnataka was built. Vikram Sampath narrates the history of the Mysore royal family, documenting the victories, struggles, the tumultuous half century when they nearlyost their kingdom, to the glorious days of what we now refer to as the Golden Age of Karnataka.