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Bangalore-Banagalore
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Bangalore/Karnataka
History-Bangalore

Several
speculations have been made about how the name "Bangalore"
came about. Based on information from the Gazetteer of India,
Karnataka State, Bangalore District section, the name "Bangalore"
is an anglicised version of "Bengalooru," a word in
the local Kannada language that was given to a town. The story
goes that this word was derived from the phrase "bende
kaalu ooru," which translates into "the town of
boiled beans." It is said that King Ballala of the
Hoysala dynasty lost his way in the jungle while on a hunting
expedition. Tired and hungry, he encountered a poor, old woman
who offered him the only food she had - some boiled beans.
Grateful to her, the king named the place "bende kaalu
ooru." However, historical evidence shows that "Bengalooru"
was recorded much before King Ballala's time in a 9th century
temple inscription in the village of Begur. "Bengalooru"
still exists today within the city limits in Kodigehalli area
and is called "Halebengalooru" or "Old
Bangalore."
Kempe
Gowda marks the four corners of the city
Another historical figure instrumental in shaping the city of
Bangalore is a feudal lord who called himself Kempe Gowda, and
who served under the Vijayanagara Kings. Hunting seemed to be
a favourite past time in those days. During one of his hunting
bouts, Kempe Gowda was surprised to see a hare chase his dog.
Either his dog was chicken hearted or the hare was
lion-hearted one does not know, but the episode surely made an
impression on the feudal lord. He told himself this is a place
surely for heroes and heroics, and he referred to Bangalore
from then onwards as "gandu bhoomi" (heroic place).
Kempe Gowda I, who was in charge of Yelahanka, built a mud
fort in 1537. With the help of King Achutaraya, built the
little towns of Balepet, Cottonpet, and Chickpet, all inside
the fort. Today, these little areas serve as the major
wholesale and commercial market places in the city. Kempe
Gowda's son's erected the four watch towers to mark the
boundaries of Bangalore which are traceable even today and
they stand almost in the heart of the present city. A hundred
years later the Vijayanagara Empire fell, and in 1638, it was
conquered by Mohammed Adil Shah, the Sultan of Bijapur.
Power
shifts from Sultans to Marathas to British
In 1638, Bangalore was conquered by Bijapur Sultan and ruled
for next 50 years. Later it was captured by Mughals who held
it for 3 years. In 1687, the Mughal Sultan of Sira province
sold Bangalore to king Chikkadevaraja Wodeyar of Mysore for 3
lac pagodas, who built a second fort to the south of that
built by Kempegowda I.
In 1759, Hyder Ali received Bangalore as a jagir from Krishna
raja Wodeyar II. He fortified the southern fort and made
Bangalore an army town.
When Tipu Sultan died in the 4th Mysore war in 1799, the
British gave the kingdom, including Bangalore back to Krishna
raja Wodeyar III. The British Resident stayed in Bangalore. In
1831, alleging misrule by Krishna raja Wodeyar III, the
British took over the administration of the Mysore Kingdom.
Under the British influence, Bangalore bloomed with modern
facilities like the railways, telegraphs, postal and police
departments. In 1881, the British returned the city to the
Wodeyars. Diwans like Mirza Ismail, and sir Vishweshwarayya
were the pioneers to help Bangalore attain its modern outlook.
With the direct rule of the British Commissioners based in
Bangalore, it became the State Administrative HQ. The destiny
of Bangalore thus took a historic turn, making it eventually a
major city of India and one of the fastest growing in the
world.
After independence, Bangalore's choice as a state capital was
only logical. Mysore had too many associations with the royal
family to be the capital of a new state with an elected Chief
Minister and a nominated Governor. Finally, for an enlarged
Karnataka, Bangalore was more central and better linked with
the major cities of the country.
Today, Bangalore is booming, and a look at some of its
nicknames says why: "India's Silicon Valley,"
"Fashion Capital of India," "The Pub City of
India," and on. Home to well over 6 million people, and a
base for 10,000 industries, Bangalore is India's fifth largest
city and the fastest growing city in Asia.
Important
Historical Dates
-
BC
(-) Stone Age implements, Roman coins & burial grounds
unearthed.
-
850
AD 'Bengalooru' appears on Mauryan empire milestone
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1015
Chola Empire takes over City
-
C.1120
Veera Ballala II calls it 'Benda Kalooru' or 'Town of
Boiled Beans' (after a poor woman feeds him beans in the
forest)
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1537
Kempe Gowda I designs City as it exists today. (KG II
builds the 4 towers)
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1638
Shahaji Bhonsle (Shivaji's father) captures City for Adil
Shah who gifts it to him
-
1640
Shivaji marries Bangalore girl
-
1687
Aurangzeb's army captures City
-
1690
Sells it to the Wodeyars for 3 lakhs!
-
1759
Wodeyar gifts it to Hyder Ali who builds Lal Bagh
-
1791
Cornwallis defeats Tipu but returns City to him
-
1799
Tipu dies. City returned to Wodeyar
-
1800
Bangalore GPO opened
-
1809
Cantonment established
-
1812
St. Mark's Cathedral built
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1831
British take-over administration
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1853
Sunday declared weekly holiday
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1859
1st train steams out of City
-
1864
Sankey builds Cubbon Park
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1867
Attara Kacheri built
-
1887
Bangalore Palace built
-
1898
The great plague. (Another plague-the 1st telephone rings)
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1903
1st motorcar pollutes city
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1905
India's 1st electric bulb lit in Bangalore City Market
-
1909
Indian Institute of Science built
-
1940
1st flight Bangalore/Bombay
-
1948
Deccan Herald launched
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1954
Vidhana Soudha built
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