Hampi : a story in stone
Publication details: Eminence Designs, Mumbai, ©2009Description: 196 pages : chiefly color illustrations, maps ; 34 cmISBN:- 8190382160
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Anant National University Central Library | Tourism | 934 GOB (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 005451 |
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Realms of gold
Introduction: discovering Hampi
Early history: the Sangama Dyynasty
Later History: the Saluva and Tuuva Dyynasty
Abandonment and rediscovery of Hampi
Urban core and royal centre of the city
Sacred centre and Suburbs of the city
Palaces and markets
The Mahanavami festival
Religious life
Courtly culture and architecture
Maps
1 Landscape & legend
2 Fortifications & waterworks
3 Temples & shrines
4 Palaces & pavilions
5 Hampi Today
Glossary
Select Bibliography
The ruins of Vijayanagara, the City of Victory, known better today as Hampi, on the right bank of the Tungabhadra river in northern Karnataka, constitute one of the most extensive and spectacular historical sites lo be found anywhere in India. Capital of the largest of all Southern India kingdoms for more than 200 years, from the early 14th century onwards, Hampi was developed by its Hindu rulers into a magnificent showpiece of imperial authority, attracting visitors from all over India, as well as from the Middle East and Europe. However, in 1565 the armies of the sultanate kingdoms of the Deccan, to the north of Hampi, sacked the city. Attempts to reoccupy the capital were unsuccessful, and thereafter it rapidly decayed. Visiting British and French officers documented the ruins during the 19th century, but clearance and conservation had to wait until the 20th century.
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