- Aliya Rama Raya
Rama Raya, (1542-1565 CE) popularly known as "Aliya" Rama Raya, was the progenitor of the "Aravidu" dynasty of
Vijayanagar Empire . This dynasty, the fourth and last to hold sway over theVijayanagara Empire , is often not counted as a ruling dynasty of that empire, for reasons delineated below. Rama Raya patronised the Sanskrit scholar Rama Amatya.Career
"Aliya" Rama Raya and his brother Aliya Tirumala Raya were sons-in-law of the great Vijayanagara emperor Krishna Deva Raya. The word "Aliya" means "son-in-law" in the
Kannada language. Along with another brother Venkatadri, the Aravidu brothers rose to prominence during the rule of Krishnadevaraya.Rama Raya was a successful army general, able administerator and tactful diplomat who conducted many victorious campaigns during the rule of Krishnadevaraya. After the demise of his illustrious father-in-law, Rama Raya, as a member of the family, began to wield great influence over the affairs of the state. Krishna Deva Raya was succeeded in 1529 by his younger brother
Achyuta Raya , upon whose demise in 1542, the throne devolved upon his nephewSadashiva Raya , then a minor. Rama Raya appointed himself regent during the minority ofSadashiva Raya . After Sadashiva Raya came of age to rule, Rama Raya kept him a virtual prisoner.During this time he became virtual ruler having confined Sadashiva Raya. Rama Raya removed many loyal servants of the kingdom and replaced them with officers who were loyal to him. He also appointed two Muslim commanders, the Gilani brothers who were earlier in the service of the Sultan Adil Shah as commanders in his army, a mistake that would cost the empire the final
Battle of Talikota .ultanate affairs
During his rule, the Deccan Sultanates were constantly involved in internal fights and requested Rama Raya on more than one occasion to act as a mediator, enabling Rama Raya to push north of Krishna river and expand his domains utilizing the disunity of the Deccan Sultans. He also suppressed revolts of the chieftens of
Travancore andChandragiri . Some scholars have criticised Rama Raya for interfering in the affairs of the Sultans too much, but scholars likeDr. P.B. Desai have ably defendedhis political affairs indicating that Rama Raya did whatever he could to increase the prestige and importance of the Vijayanagar empire, ensuring no single Sultanate would rise above the others in power hence preventing a difficult situation for Vijayanagar empire. In fact Rama Raya had interfered in Sultanate affairs only upon the insistence of one Sultan or the other, just the way the Sultans had acted as parelys between Rama Raya and Achyuta Raya in earlier years. When the Nizam of Ahmednagar and Qutbshah of Golconda sought Rama Raya's help against Bijapur, Rama Raya secured the Raichur doab for his benefactors. Later in 1549 when the Adilshah of Bijapur and Baridshah of Bidar declared war on Nizamshah of Ahmednagar, Ramaraya fought on behalf of the Ahamednagar ruler and secured the fort of Kalyana. In 1557 Ramaraya allied himself with Ali Adilshah of Bijapur and Baridshah of Bidar when the Sultan of Bijapur invaded Ahmednagar. The combined armies of the three kingdoms defeated the partnership between Nizamshah of Ahmednagar and the Qutbshah of Golconda.This situation of Vijayanagar ruler constantly changing sides to improve its own position made the Sultanates form an alliance. Intermarraige between Sultanate families helped solve internal differences between Muslim rulers. This consolidation of Muslim power in the northern Deccan resulted eventually in the Battle of Talikota.Battle of Talikota
Main|Battle of Talikota
Rama Raya remained loyal to the legitimate dynasty until it was finally extinguished by war. In 1565, it was Rama Raya, as the pre-eminent general of theVijayanagar army, who led the defense against the invading army of Deccan Sultans (i.e. Husain Nizam Shah, Ali Adil Shah and Ibrahim Qutb Shah) in the battle ofTalikota . This battle which seemed an easy victory for the large Vijayanagar army was a disaster following the surprise capture and death of Aliya Rama Raya who led the forces, a blow from which it never recovered. The city ofVijayanagara was thoroughly sacked by the invaders and the inhabitants were massacred. The royal family was largely exterminated.Vijayanagara , once a city of fabled splendour, the seat of a vast empire, became a desolate ruin, now known by the name of a sacred inner suburb within it,Hampi .Aravidu Dynasty In the wake of this disaster, Rama Raya was killed in the battlefield and his brother Aliya Tirumala Raya fled from the battle to Vijayanagar. He carried the major portion of the wealth of the Empire along with the puppet king Sadashiva Raya to Penugonda and tried to re-establish order in the empire. Later he shifted his capital to Chandragiri. With the massacre of nearly all other prominent members of the royal family, and given the prestige that Rama Raya had long enjoyed at court and among the nobility, it soon came to pass that his family inherited by default the position held hitherto by the royal family. Thus was the "Aravidu" dynasty of emperors born.
The position of emperor however was an empty one, as the
Vijayanagara Empire had "de facto" ceased to exist. The major fuedatories ofVijayanagara , such asMysore andMadurai ,Keladi Nayaka of Shimoga, soon began to exert their independence in the period of anarchy that followed the rout of 1565, while various Muslim adventurers carved out their own fiefs under the nominal suzerainty of the Muslim overlords, being at first the Bahmani Sultans and later theMughals .While the later "Aravidu" dynasty rulers never actually wielded power over the erstwhile empire, they nevertheless enjoyed immense prestige in the land, and often received homage from the great satraps of the empire. They were always treated with much honour and ceremony even by major rulers, such as the Kings of
Mysore andMadurai . Even to this day, the "Raya of Anegundi" who belongs to the "Aravidu" dynasty enjoys honour among the princes ofIndia .outh India in the post-
Vijayanagara periodThe five
Bahmani sultanate s that had united for the single purpose of layingVijayanagara waste were soon at odds with each other, and were unable to establish their authority much beyond the vicinity of the erstwhile capital city. They were soon extinguished by the Mughal's under the leadership ofAurangzeb , who spent nearly the whole of his long life attempting in vain to add theDeccan andSouth India to his empire. This effort, andAurangzeb 's religious bigotry, drained theMughal empire of both resources and support, and theMughal empire crumbled into anarchy upon the death ofAurangzeb in 1707.The
Marathas were the primary cause for this sudden decline of theMughal empire .Chhatrapati Shivaji 's spiritual preceptor, Swamy Samarth Ramdas, had been deeply moved by the ruins ofVijayanagara . Shivaji himself was deeply impressed by the resistance offered by the Vijayanagar Empire to Muslim rule in South India. Samarth Ramdas played a critical part in motivating the youngShivaji to dream of "Swaraj".The Marathas under the leadership ofChhatrapati Shivaji were successful in ousting from the land those forces that had caused the collapse and ruin ofVijayanagara , and thePeshwa s extended theMaratha empire all the way to Delhi within 150 years of Talikota.The main powers in South India in the post-
Vijayanagara period were rulers ofMadurai ,Mysore Travancore ,Shimoga ,Chitradurga , theMarathas , including the rulers ofKolhapur andThanjavur and the Mughals, represented by the rulers of Hyderabad andArcot . They were gradually either co-opted or supplanted by the British who held sway until the Independence of India in 1947.References
* Dr. Suryanath U. Kamat, Concise History of Karnataka, 2001, MCC, Bangalore (Reprinted 2002)
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