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Some prominent Vokkaliga personalities are:
Some prominent Vokkaliga personalities are:
[[Krishna Byre Gowda]], Current Karnataka Agriculture Minister, [[Kempe Gowda I]], founder of [[Bangalore]],
*[[C. Byre Gowda]], former agriculture minister
[[H. D. Deve Gowda]], former [[Prime Minister of India]] & [[Chief Minister of Karnataka]], [[K.C. Reddy]],first Chief Minister of Karnataka, [[Kengal Hanumanthaiah]] former [[Chief Minister of Karnataka]] and Visionary of The Majestic Vidhana Soudha, [[Kadidal Manjappa]] former [[Chief Minister of Karnataka]], [[D.V. Sadananda Gowda]], former [[Chief Minister of Karnataka]], [[H. D. Kumaraswamy]], former [[Chief Minister of Karnataka]], [[B. Saroja Devi]], [[south Indian]] Famous Film Actress, [[Nagathihalli Chandrashekar]], [[Kannada film]] Director, [[Jaggesh]] Actor, [[[Devaraj]] Actor,![[Prajwal Devaraj]] Actor, [[K. C. N. Gowda]], famous [[Kannada film]] producer,
*[[Krishna Byre Gowda]], Current Karnataka Agriculture Minister
[[Kuvempu]] First Jnanapeetha Award Winner in Kannada and Rashtrakavi
*[[Kempe Gowda I]], founder of [[Bangalore]],
*[[H. D. Deve Gowda]], former [[Prime Minister of India]] & [[Chief Minister of Karnataka]],
[[H. N. Nage Gowda]], Poet,
[[H. L. Nage Gowda]], author,
*[[K.C. Reddy]],first Chief Minister of Karnataka,
[[K. Chidananda Gowda|Dr. K. Chidananda Gowda]], Vice Chancellor of [[Kuvempu University]],
*[[Kengal Hanumanthaiah]] former [[Chief Minister of Karnataka]] and Visionary of The Majestic Vidhana Soudha,
[[Dr.M.H.Marigowda]], Father of Horticulture in India
*[[Kadidal Manjappa]] former [[Chief Minister of Karnataka]],
[[Tirumakudalu Chowdiah]], Violinist and Grandfather of Dr.M.H.Ambareesh,
*[[D.V. Sadananda Gowda]], former [[Chief Minister of Karnataka]],
*[[H. D. Kumaraswamy]], former [[Chief Minister of Karnataka]],
[[V. G. Siddhartha]], founder of [[Cafe Coffee Day]],
[[Arjun Halappa]], men's hockey player,
*[[B. Saroja Devi]], [[south Indian]] Famous Film Actress,
[[Dodda Ganesh]], Indian pace Bowler, [[Vikas Gowda]], Athlete, USA,
*[[Nagathihalli Chandrashekar]], [[Kannada film]] Director,
[[Divya Spandana]], Actress, Present MP from Mandya,[[S. M. Krishna]], former [[Chief Minister of Karnataka]], former Governor of Maharahstra and Ex-MEA of India, [[Poornachandra_Tejaswi]], Famous Environmentalist and Writer and son of [[Kuvempu]], [[Girisha Hosanagara Nagarajegowda]], 2012 London Paralympic High Jump Silver Medallist from India, [[D. K Shivakumar]], MLA & Present Minister for Energy in Karnataka, [[Shobha Karandlaje]], Ex-Minister for Energy in Karnataka, [[Rajeev Gowda]]Indian politician and an academician, Professor of Economics and Social Sciences at IIM-B, national spokesperson for the INC, Director at the Central Board of RBI and former Chairperson of the Centre for Public Policy
*[[Jaggesh]] Actor,
*[[Devaraj]] Actor,
*[[Prajwal Devaraj]] Actor,
*[[K. C. N. Gowda]], famous [[Kannada film]] producer,
*[[Kuvempu]] First Jnanapeetha Award Winner in Kannada and Rashtrakavi
*[[H. N. Nage Gowda]], Poet,
* Vajramuni, One of The Greatest Villain Actor in [[Kannada film]] Industry
* Shakthi Prasad - Kannada Film Actor
* Arjun Sarja, Famous [[Kannada film]] Actor & south Indian actor
* Jai Jagadeesh, actor
* Prem, director & famous [[Kannada film]] actor
* Yash, famous [[Kannada film]] actor
* Chirajivee Sarja & Dhruva Sarja, Kannada Actors
* Ramu, famous [[Kannada film]] Producer
* Abhinaya, actress [[Kannada film]]
*[[H. L. Nage Gowda]], author,
*[[K. Chidananda Gowda|Dr. K. Chidananda Gowda]], Vice Chancellor of [[Kuvempu University]],
*[[Dr.M.H.Marigowda]], Father of Horticulture in India
*[[Tirumakudalu Chowdiah]], Violinist and Grandfather of Dr.M.H.Ambareesh,
*[[V. G. Siddhartha]], founder of [[Cafe Coffee Day]],
*[[Balagangadharanatha Swamiji]], 71st Pontiff of the [[Sri Adichunchanagiri Maha Samsthana Math]],
*Kavya Shivashankar, USA, [[List of Scripps National Spelling Bee champions|National Spelling Bee Champion]],
*[[Arjun Halappa]], men's hockey player,
*[[Dodda Ganesh]], Indian pace Bowler,
*[[Vikas Gowda]], Athlete, USA,
* Dr. N. Sathish Gowda Asst. Prof. ULC
*Dr.M.H.[[Ambareesh]]a, 3 time MP and Present MLA, Minister for Housing in Karnataka & Grandson of Violin Maestro Late Shri.T.Chowdiah
*[[Divya Spandana]], Actress, Present MP from Mandya
*[[S. M. Krishna]], former [[Chief Minister of Karnataka]], former Governor of Maharahstra and Ex-MEA of India
*[[Poornachandra_Tejaswi]], Famous Environmentalist and Writer and son of [[Kuvempu]]
*[[Girisha Hosanagara Nagarajegowda]], 2012 London Paralympic High Jump Silver Medallist from India
*[[D. K Shivakumar]], MLA & Present Minister for Energy in Karnataka
*[[Shobha Karandlaje]], Ex-Minister for Energy in Karnataka
*[[Rajeev Gowda]]Indian politician and an academician, Professor of Economics and Social Sciences at IIM-B, national spokesperson for the INC, Director at the Central Board of RBI and former Chairperson of the Centre for Public Policy
*K.V.ShankareGowda, Ex-Education Minister and Founder of the Famous PES Institutions of Mandya
*D. Nagarajaiah, Ex Minister of Karnataka State and MLA Kunigal Constituency from Kunigal Taluk.
*N. Huchhamasthigowda, Ex Minister of Karnataka State from Kunigal Taluk.
*Y.K. Ramaiah, Ex Minister of Karnataka State and a street fighter for Hemavathy water to Tumkur district and Kunigal Taluk
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Revision as of 17:45, 27 March 2014

Vokkaligas
Regions with significant populations
Languages
Kannada
Religion
Hinduism
Related ethnic groups
Dravidian · Kannadiga · Tamilian · Kodava ·

Vokkaliga (Kannada: ಒಕ್ಕಲಿಗ) (pronounced Okkaliga) is an umbrella term for various agricultural, previously endogamous social groups with a martial past, found mainly in the Old Mysore Region of southern Karnataka. The Vokkaligas are primarily agriculturists.[1][2] They form a politically and numerically dominant caste group and were the most populous group[3][4] until the States Reorganisation Act of 1956 which enlarged the erstwhile State of Mysore by the inclusion of predominantly Canarese districts of the State of Bombay, State of Hyderabad and Coorg, (Mysore State was renamed Karnataka in 1973) following which the Lingayats became the most populous social group. Together the two communities dominate Karnataka State politics.[5][6]

Etymology

Vokkaliga is a Kannada word of considerable antiquity finding mention in some of the earliest available literary works of the language, such as the Kavirajamarga, Pampa Bharata, Mangaraja's Nighantu et al. and has been used as an appellation for the cultivator community since time immemorial.[7][8] Generally the term has come to mean an agriculturist though various etymological derivations are available. A few likely derivations are as follows:

  • The word Okka or Okkalu in Kannada (Dravidian in origin) means a family or a clan[9] and an Okkaliga being a person belonging to such a family.[7] This is an allusion to the totemistic exogamous clans which together form an endogamous sub group, of which there are many amongst the Vokkaligas. These clans are called Bali,Bedagu,Kutumba,Gotra or simply Okkalu all of which mean 'family'. They are named after their progenitor, primary occupation or in most cases after various birds, animals or objects.[10] All the clans have their very own patron god and goddess (called Mane Devaru or Kula Devata)[11] and it is practice to refer to oneself as belonging to that particular god's Okkalu.
  • Okkalutana in Kannada means agriculture[8][9] and the epithet Okkaliga has been used to refer to a person belonging to the cultivator community.
  • Alternate etymologies include Okku which means threshing,[9] said to refer to their agricultural activities from which is derived Okkaliga. It is also supposed to be a contraction of the name Okkahaalu Makkalu which claims the origin of the castemen from the breastmilk of Parvati.[12] This however is merely attributing a divine origin, a common practise in most of the Indian castes.

Gowda People of the Vokkaliga community ascribe various honorifics to their castemen, the most popular of which is Gauda anglicized as Gowda. Titles such as Reddy are also popular, generally used according to their sub group, language spoken and geographical area they belong to. The words Vokkaliga and Gowda are almost synonymous in usage and in colloquial, Gowda has come to mean a Vokkaliga. However the term itself is also used by people of various other castes as an honorary title.[7]

The etymology of Gauda is also heavily debated by scholars. The term and its archaic forms in Old Kannada such as Gamunda, Gavunda, Gavuda, appear frequently in the inscriptions of Karnataka, recorded in the Epigraphia Carnatica. In fact the Epigraphia Carnatica is replete with such references to land grants, donations to temples, hero-stones (Veeragallu), stone edicts and copper plates dating back to the age of the Western Ganga Dynasty (est. 350 CE) and earlier.[13] Attributing a Sanskrit origin, H.V.Nanjundayya has derived the word from Grama or Gava meaning a village and Munda meaning head, thus a Gamunda being the head of the village. Vokkaligas are traditionally known to have been feudal landlords and village chieftains and to this day remain major land-holders.[14] Edgar Thurston, (Castes and Tribes of Southern India), the popular Kannada linguist Shamba Joshi and others propose a derivation from the Sanskrit - go (cow) and govala (cowherd) (Govala->Goula->Gowda).[7][15] Horeover, though the Vokkaligas did practise animal husbandry, Govalas (from whence Golla) or the Yadava tribe form a separate caste group and they were traditionally herdsmen.[16] Alternately Tamil origins to the word claim its derivation from kavundan or kamindan (one who watches over). The Vokkaligas of Tamil Nadu (found mostly in and around Coimbatore,Theni & Dindigul districts) use 'Gowdar(though sometimes addressed by tamils as Kaundar)' as their surname. Whether the name Gauda/Gowda is an allusion to the Gauḍa region[17] or not has not been conclusively proved.

Subgroups

The Vokkaliga Community has several sub-groups within its fold. Previously they were mostly endogamous but in the modern context inter-group marriages have become a common affair, especially since the colonial times.[1] However to this day, within any given sub-group, exogamy at the family/clan level is strictly controlled by using the idiom of Mane Devaru (the patron god of the given exogamic clan) which dictates that the followers of same Mane Devaru are siblings and marriage is thus forbidden, allowing marital alliances only with another clan and not within.[18] This system is akin to the Brahminical Gotra System and is seen as a common feature in most Indian communities.[11] The community is patrilineal. It is opined that all the sub-groups previously formed a single unified community which broke into several factions over the ages.[1]

The major sub-groups of the Vokkaligas include the Gangadikara (also called as Gangatkar), Morasu Vokkaliga, Namadhari Gowda, Kunchitiga and Kodagu Gowda sections, which form the corpus of the community with several other sub-groups.

Gangadikara (Gangatkar) Vokkaliga

Numerically the largest among the Vokkaligas,[1][3] the Gangadikaras are mostly found in the Mysore, Mandya, Chamarajnagar, Hassan, Bangalore, Ramanagara and Tumkur districts of Karnataka. Gangawadi was the name for the area covering these districts, ruled over by the Western Ganga Dynasty and Gangadikara is a contraction of the term Gangawadikara (A man of Gangawadi).[1] The Gangadikara Gowdas claim to be descendants of the erstwhile Ganga royalty.[7][19][20][21] With various theories on the origins of the Gangas, this is hard to prove but some scholars do opine that the Gangas were local chieftains who ascertained their power and rose to dominance during the political unrest caused in South India after the invasion of Samudragupta I.[22] It is however, a fact that the administrative setup of Gangas vested power in the Ooru Gauda,Nadu Gauda, Pergade (archaic for Hegde.Pergade->Peggade->Heggade) and so on, at various levels of administration and apart from administrative duties the Gauda was expected to raise militia when called for.[22] The Gangadikaras and the Kongu Vellalars are said to share a common origin and they regard themselves Ganga Kshatriyas. In fact the word Kongu is the Tamil equivalent for Ganga. There is a significant number of Vellala Goundars in Kollegala and T. Narsipur of southern Karnataka.[16]

The Gangadikaras have two primary sections - the Bujjanige (or Dhaare Shastradavaru) and the Pettige (or Veelyada Shastradavaru) based on differences in rituals performed during the wedding ceremony. They can be Shaiva or Vaishnava in religious affiliation (called Mullu and Dasa sects). The Dasa sect forms a separate endogamous group under the Gangadikaras and are called Dasa Vokkaligas. Cheluru Gangadikaras (also called Chelaru),another small sub-sect, are said to be strictly vegetarian, a vestige of the times when the Gangas followed Jainism.Oral traditions of the people maintain that after the decline of the Ganga power they reverted to Hinduism retaining certain Jaina practises.[1][20] The Gangadikara Vokkaligas have as many as 40 exogamous clans called Bedagu.[1][18][23] They speak Kannada and the castemen mostly use 'Gowda' as a surname.

Morasu Vokkaliga

The Morasu Vokkaligas are found mostly in the Bangalore, Kolar, Tumkur and Chitradurga districts of Karnataka. The Baramahal Records [24] of the Madras Presidency state that the Morasu Vellala got their name because they originally inhabited Morasu Nadu which is the eastern province of Mysore. Edgar Thurston [2] (Castes and Tribes of India Volume 5) also states that the eastern province of Mysore consisting of Bangalore and kolar districts is known as Morasu Nadu. According to J. Pinkerton the Morasu Vokkalu are an original people of Karnata [25]

The ancestors of Kempe Gowda I of the Yelahanka Nadaprabhus (the founder of Bangalore city and himself a Morasu Vokkaliga) are recorded to have migrated to these districts from Alur of Kanchi around the 15th century under Rana Bhaire Gowda, who built the fort at Devanahalli.[26] In Kanchi, they were known as Morasu Vellala since they had migrated from Morasu Nadu which is identified as the eastern province of Mysore.

According to Edgar Thurston [2] (Castes and Tribes of India Volume 5) the Kongu region was ruled by a series of twenty eight kings before being conquered by the Cholas of Tanjore, citing the earliest portion of the Kongu Chronicle - Kongu Desa Rajakkal (a manuscript in The Mackenzie Collection) which gives a series of short notices of the reigns of all the kings who ruled the country from the start of the Christian era till its conquest by the Cholas. These kings belonged to two distinct dynasties: the earlier line of the Solar race which had a succession of seven kings of the Ratti tribe, and the later line of the Ganga race.

The ganga race itself claimed to be a branch of the Solar race.[citation needed]

According to Burton Stein, the region of modern day Bangalore and Tumkur districts was known as Morasu Nadu, dominated by the Morasu Vokkaligas.[27] In fact Hosur which borders Bangalore claims to have been called Murasu Nadu during the Sangam Age [28] and has a significant population of Morasu Vokkaligas.

The sect has both Kannada and Telugu speaking groups, the four main sub-divisions being the Musuku, Hosadevru (Beralu), Palyadasime and Morasu proper which is again divided into three lines called Salu viz. Kanu salu,Nerlegattada salu, Kutera salu. The Musuku sect is so-called because the bride wears a veil or 'Musuku' during the wedding ceremony.[16] Another section call themselves Hosadevara Vokkaligas and follow a custom known as Hosadevaru in the month of August/October every year.[1] They speak Kannada language and use Gowda as their surname while few of the families use Reddi as surname and Palyadasime sections, fashion themselves as Reddi an honorific said to have been derived from the word Raatta or Ratti (from Sanskrit "Rāt", i.e. king) a title dating back to the Rashtrakuta Dynasty. There are 70 odd exogamous clans among the Morasu Vokkaligas.[1]

Namadhari Gowdas

The Namadhari Vokkaliga group is the second largest Vokkaliga sub-group.[7] Found mainly in the 'Malnād' region of Karnataka in the districts of Shimoga,Hassan, Chickamagalur, Kodagu and Dakshina Kannada though they have spread to the Karāvaļi and Bayalu Seemae also. (Karnataka is divided into three Seemaes or geographical areas: starting from the coastline called Karāvaļi, The Western Ghats called Malnād and the plain lands called Bayalu Seemae).

Though originally said to belong to 18 root families or Balis the vast Namadhari population encompasses numerous sub-sects and folds. Like most Vokkaligas, they have Shaiva and Vaishnava folds. It is said that the Namadhari Gowdas acquired their name after they were re-converted to Hinduism during the time of the Hoysala King Vishnuvardhana, by the celebrated Srivaishnava Acharya, Ramanuja and they started wearing the Srivaishnava Nama or Tilaka. The Namadhari Gowdas who had earlier been converted to Jainism (which had gained popularity in Karnataka during the period of the Western Gangas) thus came to be Vaishnavas and ardent followers of Tirupati Timmappa. To this day they retain vestiges of Jain traditions. For instance, some Namadhari sub-sects are still strictly vegetarian (a majority of Vokkaligas being non-vegetarian) and in most families, while honouring their ancestors, a separate vegetarian offering of food called Jaina Ede is made.

Kunchitiga Vokkaliga

The Kunchitiga Vokkaligas are found mainly in Tumkur and Chitradurga districts of Karnataka. They are also found in large numbers in the cities of Mysore and Bangalore. Those in the cities have been known to be agriculturist, warriors,traders and businessmen since olden days.[1] The Kunchitigas have a reputation for being traditionally inclined. They attribute their name to a legend of origin according to which, the progenitor of their community promised a Kuruba Gowda, a man of the shepherd caste to name the community after a Kuncha or brush (which the Kuruba Gowda carried to weave blankets) in honour of the service he had rendered them, during their flight from a 'Northern' country. They are said to have 16 'Moola Gotras' or root families from which separated about 48 'Kulas' or exogamous clans.[1][19] The kunchitiga gowdas are also found in parts of Theni, Madurai, Dindugal, Coimbatore, Dharmapuri & Krishnagiri Districts of Tamil Nadu.

Kodagu Gowda

The Kodagu Gowda (Kodagu, Dakshina Kannada Gowda) communities, as their name indicates, hail mostly from those districts. They are also called Tuluva Gowdas.[29] They speak the Are Bhashe or Gowda Kannada dialect of Kannada. They are said to have 10 Kutumba and 18 Balis as their primordial root families, from which arose around a Nooru Mane or hundred families. They are mostly Vaishnavite and worship 'Tirupati Timmappa' and 'Sabbakka' (Sharada of Sringeri).[30] Concerning the Vokkaligas in the district of Coorg, Rev.G.Richter, in Gazetteer of Coorg (1870) lists the Tulu Gowdas (Vokkaligas in Kodagu and Dakshin Kannada) who migrated to Coorg (Kodagu) and Mangalore-Udupi (Dakshina Kannada-Udupi) region from Mysore region under the Canarese (Kannada) speaking peoples.

Prominent personalities

Some prominent Vokkaliga personalities are: Krishna Byre Gowda, Current Karnataka Agriculture Minister, Kempe Gowda I, founder of Bangalore, H. D. Deve Gowda, former Prime Minister of India & Chief Minister of Karnataka, K.C. Reddy,first Chief Minister of Karnataka, Kengal Hanumanthaiah former Chief Minister of Karnataka and Visionary of The Majestic Vidhana Soudha, Kadidal Manjappa former Chief Minister of Karnataka, D.V. Sadananda Gowda, former Chief Minister of Karnataka, H. D. Kumaraswamy, former Chief Minister of Karnataka, B. Saroja Devi, south Indian Famous Film Actress, Nagathihalli Chandrashekar, Kannada film Director, Jaggesh Actor, [[[Devaraj]] Actor,!Prajwal Devaraj Actor, K. C. N. Gowda, famous Kannada film producer, Kuvempu First Jnanapeetha Award Winner in Kannada and Rashtrakavi H. N. Nage Gowda, Poet, H. L. Nage Gowda, author, Dr. K. Chidananda Gowda, Vice Chancellor of Kuvempu University, Dr.M.H.Marigowda, Father of Horticulture in India Tirumakudalu Chowdiah, Violinist and Grandfather of Dr.M.H.Ambareesh, V. G. Siddhartha, founder of Cafe Coffee Day, Arjun Halappa, men's hockey player, Dodda Ganesh, Indian pace Bowler, Vikas Gowda, Athlete, USA, Divya Spandana, Actress, Present MP from Mandya,S. M. Krishna, former Chief Minister of Karnataka, former Governor of Maharahstra and Ex-MEA of India, Poornachandra_Tejaswi, Famous Environmentalist and Writer and son of Kuvempu, Girisha Hosanagara Nagarajegowda, 2012 London Paralympic High Jump Silver Medallist from India, D. K Shivakumar, MLA & Present Minister for Energy in Karnataka, Shobha Karandlaje, Ex-Minister for Energy in Karnataka, Rajeev GowdaIndian politician and an academician, Professor of Economics and Social Sciences at IIM-B, national spokesperson for the INC, Director at the Central Board of RBI and former Chairperson of the Centre for Public Policy

External links

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k H.V. Nanjundayya and Diwan Bahadur L.K. Ananthakrishna Iyer (1931). The Cultivators. University Of Mysore.
  2. ^ a b c Edgar Thurston and K. Rangachari (1909). Castes and Tribes of Southern India. Government Press, Madras.
  3. ^ a b Benjamin Lewis Rice (1897). Mysore A Gazetteer Compiled for Government. Archibald Constable & Co. Westminster.
  4. ^ Francis Buchanan (1870). A Journey from Madras through the countries of Mysore, Canara and Malabar (vol II). Balmar & Co., London.
  5. ^ [1]
  6. ^ James Manor (1978). Political Change in Indian State, Mysore(1917-1955).
  7. ^ a b c d e f Dr. Ambalike Hiriyanna (1999). Malenadina Vaishnava Okkaligara Samskruti. Kannada Pustaka Pradhikara, Government of Karnataka.
  8. ^ a b Rev.Ferdinand Kittel (1894). A Kannada-English Dictionary. Basel Mission Book & Tract Depository, Mangalore.
  9. ^ a b c Kannada Nighantu. Kannada Sahitya Parishat, Bangalore. 1970.
  10. ^ John Vincent Ferreira (1965). Totemism in India. Oxford University Press.
  11. ^ a b Henry Whitehead (1921). The Village Gods of Southern India. Association Press (Y.M.C.A),Calcutta.
  12. ^ Hebbalalu Velpanuru Nanjundayya (1906). The Ethnographical Survey of Mysore. Government Press, Mysore.
  13. ^ Benjamin Lewis Rice, R.Narasimhacharya (1894–1905). Epigraphia Carnatica. Government Central Press,Bangalore & Mysore.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date format (link)
  14. ^ http://www.classicalkannada.org/DataBase/KannwordHTMLS/CLASSICAL%20KANNADA%20RELIGION%20HTML/MAJOR%20CASTES%20OF%20KARNATAKA.htm
  15. ^ Dr. Ganapati Gowda (2011). Grama Okkaligara Samsrutika Ananyate Mattu Samakaleena Sandarbhagalu. Kannada University, Hampi.
  16. ^ a b c Dr. Suryanath. V. Kamath (1988). Karnataka State Gazetteer. Government Press,Bangalore.
  17. ^ Vokkaligara Directory. Vokkaligara Sangha, Bangalore. 1999.
  18. ^ a b Dr. Bhavani Banerjee (1966). Marriage and Kinship of the Gangadikara Vokkaligas of Mysore. Deccan College Postgraduate and Research Institute, Poona.
  19. ^ a b Dr.B. Pandukumar (2007). 1600 Varshagala Vokkaligara Itihasa. Vedavati Prakashana, Bangalore.
  20. ^ a b Kumar Suresh Singh (2003). People of India, Volume XXVI, Part 2. Anthropological Survey of India.
  21. ^ E.Stanley (1962). Economic Development and Social Change in South India. University of Manchester Press, Manchester.
  22. ^ a b B.Sheik Ali (1976). History of the Western Gangas. University Of Mysore.
  23. ^ http://www.karunadu.gov.in/gazetteer/GazetteerMandya2009/Chapter-3.pdf
  24. ^ Govt Press (1907). Baramahal Records of the Madras Presidency. Govt Press.
  25. ^ John Pinkerton (1814). collection of voyages and travels digested by j Pinkerton. London.
  26. ^ Phalaksha (1999). Introduction to Karnataka History. Shashi Prakashana, Tumkur.
  27. ^ Burton Stein (1987). Vijayanagara. Cambridge University Press,Cambridge and New York.
  28. ^ http://www.krishnagiri.tn.nic.in/history.htm
  29. ^ L.A. Krishna Iyer (1969). The Coorg Tribes and Castes. Jonshon (Reprint).
  30. ^ Dr. Kodi Kushalappa Gowda (1976). Gowda Kannada. Annamalai University.