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Yelandur estate

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Yelandur Estate
Jagir of Kingdom of Mysore and later British India
1807–1956
Area 
• 1901
264 km2 (102 sq mi)
Population 
• 1901
35,271
History 
• Established
1807
• Abolition of the estate
1956
Succeeded by
India

Estate of Yelandur or Yelandur Jagir was an princely estate in the erstwhile State of Mysore of Madras Presidency. At present it is located in the Chamarajanagara district in the Indian state of Karnataka..The town of Yelandur was the administrative headquarters.[1]

History

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On 27 November 1807 Yelandur was given in jagir by the British East India company to Dewan Purnaiah in recognition of his services as Dewan of Mysore Kingdom at a special Durbar 1807. Shri Krishna Charya Purnaiya was the first Jagirdar of the estate.[2] The jagir consisted of 46 villages.[3]

The last holder of the estate, Raghavendra Rao Purnaiya, was awarded compensation by the State Government under the provisions of the Karnataka (Personal and Miscellaneous) Inams Abolition Act, 1954.[4]

Jagirdars/Rulers of Yelandur

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The rulers of Yelandur estate were Deshastha Madhva Brahmins and were devout followers of Uttaradi Matha.[5] The rulers of Yelandur estate were

  • Purnaiah — (1807–1812)
  • Anantharamappa — (1812–1825)
  • Srinivasa Murthy — (1825–1830)
  • Narasingha Rao Krishnamurthy — (1830–1858)
  • Sir P. N. Krishnamurti — (1858–1911), also Dewan of Mysore (1901–1906)
  • Narasingha Rao Purniah — (1911–1920)
  • Nagaraja Rao Purnaiya — (1920–1960) — accession in 1956
  • Raghavendra Rao Purnaiya — (1960–2001)

References

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  1. ^ Yelandur Estate
  2. ^ B. L. Rice (2001). Gazetteer of Mysore. Asian Educational Services. p. 318. In1807 yelandur was given as jagir by British government in recognition of services as dewan and regent during the minority of Raja
  3. ^ Artha Vijnana, Volume 13, Issues 1-2. Gokhale Institute of Politics and Economics. 1970. p. 130. The jagir granted to Purniya in 1807 as a reward for his meritorious services to the state was the largest single grant during the period.This consisted of 46 villages
  4. ^ Aditya Sondhi. The Order of the Crest: Tracing the Alumni of Bishop Cotton Boys’ School, Bangalore (1865–2015). Penguin UK. p. 81. Retrieved 18 December 2014.
  5. ^ Rajaram 2019, p. 300.

Bibliography

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  • Rajaram, N S (2019). The Vanished Raj A Memoir of Princely India. Prism Books Private Limited. ISBN 978-9388478113.