Harihara I

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Harihara I
Vijayanagara Emperor
Reign1336 – 1356 (unofficial)
PredecessorPosition established
(
Vijayanagar, Vijayanagara Empire
(modern day Hampi, Karnataka, India)
HouseSangama
FatherBhavana Sangama
MotherMaravve Nayakiti
ReligionHinduism (1306 - 1323; 1334 - 1356)
Sunni Islam (1323 - 1334)[1][2]

Harihara I, also called Hakka and Vira Harihara I, was the founder of the

Sangama dynasty, the first of four dynasties to rule the empire. He was the eldest son of Bhavana Sangama,[3] the chieftain of a cowherd pastoralist community, who claimed Yadava descent.[4][5]

The early life of Hakka and his brother

Muhammad bin Tughlaq, Bukka and his brother were taken prisoners and sent to Delhi, where they both converted to Islam. Bukka and his brother eventually escaped, reconverted to Hinduism under the influence of the sage Vidyaranya, and founded the Vijayanagara Empire.[6][7]

Ballappa Dandanayaka, a nephew of the

Mulabagalu region, Marappa oversaw Chandragutti
and Bukka Raya was his second in command.

His initial military exploits established his control over the valley of Tungabhadra River, and gradually he expanded his control to certain regions of Konkan and Malabar Coast. By that time, the Hoysala ruler Veera Ballala III had died fighting the Sultan of Madurai, and the vacuum thus created allowed Harihara to emerge as a sovereign power with all the Hoysala territories under his rule.

An inscription dated 1346 regarding a grant to the

Sringeri matha describes Harihara I as the ruler of "whole country between the eastern and the western seas
" and describes Vidya Nagara (that is, the city of learning) as his capital.

Harihara I was succeeded by his brother

Bukka I
who emerged as the most distinguished amongst the five rulers (Panchasangamas) of the Sangama dynasty.

Administration

.

Harihara was an able administrator. Vijayanagar was the first southern Indian state to have hegemony over three major linguistic and cultural regions and to have established a degree of political unity among them. The administration of the kingdom sporadically achieved some degree of centralization, although centrifugal tendencies regularly appeared. To the original five rajyas (provinces) held by the

conquered
. Within and among these regions, a complex mosaic of rival chiefly houses exercised power to varying degrees, though not with the virtual autonomy that some historians have suggested [citation needed]. The central administration had both a revenue and a military side, but the actual business of raising taxes and troops was mostly the responsibility of the provincial governors and their subordinates. The central government maintained a relatively small body of troops, but it assigned a value to the lands held by the provincial governors and determined the number of troops that were to be supplied from the revenues of each province.[9]

Harihara was fully conscious of the dangers which the

Hoysala
kings.

He also converted Udayagiri into a strong fort and placed his younger brother Kampana in charge of it. With the help of his able minister Anantarasa Chikka Udaiya, he reorganized the civil administration that survived for more than two hundred years. Under the nayankara system, military commanders were appointed 'nayaka' (local governor) and granted income from estates for the purpose of raising troops and maintain control over local chiefs.[10]

In order to increase the resources of the state, he forced the farmers to cut down forests and bring this land under cultivation. The kingdom was divided into sthalas, nadus and simas. A number of officers were appointed to run the administration and collect the revenues.[11]

References

Sources

  • Dr. Suryanath U. Kamat, Concise history of Karnataka, MCC, Bangalore, 2001 (Reprinted 2002)
  • Chopra, P.N. T.K. Ravindran and N. Subrahmaniam.History of South India. S. Chand, 2003.
Preceded by ruler of the
Vijayanagar Empire

1336–1356
Succeeded by
Bukka Raya