Hoysala Vinayaditya
Hoysala Vinayaditya |
---|
Hoysala Kings (1026–1343) | |
Nripa Kama II | (1026–1047) |
Hoysala Vinayaditya | (1047–1098) |
Ereyanga | (1098–1102) |
Veera Ballala I | (1102–1108) |
Vishnuvardhana | (1108–1152) |
Narasimha I | (1152–1173) |
Veera Ballala II | (1173–1220) |
Vira Narasimha II | (1220–1235) |
Vira Someshwara | (1235–1263) |
Narasimha III | (1263–1292) |
Veera Ballala III | (1292–1343) |
Harihara Raya (Vijayanagara Empire) |
(1342–1355) |
Vinayaditya (r. 1047 – 1098 CE), an able Jain king of the Hoysala Empire,[1] who distinguished himself as an able feudatory of the Kalyani Chalukyas during his long reign. He helped bring many small Malnad chiefs like the Kongalvas, Chengalvas, Santharas of Humcha Shimoga and the Kadambas of Bayalnadu (Vainadu) under control. After the complete disappearance of the Gangas during Chola occupation of Gangavadi, Vinayaditya brought some small portions of Gangavadi under his control. He was either a brother-in-law or father-in-law of Chalukya Someshvara I.
Notes
- ↑ Kamath (1980), p.124
References
- Suryanath U. Kamath, A Concise History of Karnataka from Pre-historic Times to the Present, Jupiter books, MCC, Bangalore, 1980 (Reprinted 2001, 2002) OCLC: 7796041
Preceded by Nripa Kama II |
Hoysala 1047–1098 |
Succeeded by Ereyanga |
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