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Unmasking the Myth of Tipu Sultan: Evidence, Kerala’s Trauma, and India’s Historiography Crisis

This essay evaluates Sandeep Balakrishna’s Tipu Sultan—The Tyrant of Mysore, testing popular claims about Tipu Sultan against primary sources from Kerala and the Mysore Sultanate. It contrasts narratives of progressive reform with documented evidence of violence, coerced conversion, and economic collapse in Malabar. The analysis also interrogates the “freedom fighter” label by examining Tipu’s alliances…
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Nori Narasimha Sastry’s Mastery: Research-Rich Telugu Novels that Illuminate Dharma and History

Nori Narasimha Sastry’s historical novels unite rigorous research with the civilizational vision of Sanatana Dharma, earning a readership that places his prose alongside classical Telugu works. By pairing Srinatha with the bhakti poet Potana in Kavidvayamu and portraying Dhurjati within the Vijayanagara milieu, he balances devotional interiority with institutional history. His mature use of Champu,…
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Kavisārvabhaomuḍu: Kannada–Telugu Synergy, Nori’s Vision, and the Kavitrayamu Legacy

Kavisārvabhaomuḍu illuminates the deep Kannada–Telugu literary continuum by pairing Nori Narasimha Sastry’s majestic Telugu prose with Shatavadhani Dr. R. Ganesh’s authoritative Kannada translation. The work anchors readers in shared metrical traditions—Ragaḷe, akkara, kanda, sīsa, vr̥tta—alongside the Champu mode and the exacting art of Avadhāna. Set against epochs shaped by robust Dharmic dialogue and external political…
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Jayadeva of Vidarbha: Discover the Timeless Brilliance of Candraloka in Sanskrit Poetics

Jayadeva, the renowned 12th-century Sanskrit scholar from Vidarbha, is celebrated for the Candraloka, a foundational text in Sanskrit poetics. Situated in an age of artistic and intellectual efflorescence, his work unites theory and practice with exceptional clarity. The Candraloka’s accessible structure and illustrative verses made it a mainstay of traditional pedagogy across India. In a…
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How Sita Ram Goel Reframed Indian Historiography: Shivaji, Nehru, and the Mughal Myth

Sita Ram Goel’s Shaktiputra Shivaji offers a concise yet rigorous meditation on Indian historiography, foregrounding Shivaji as an indigenous state-builder. Drawing inspiration from Dennis Kincaid’s The Grand Rebel, it rejects simplistic Western misconceptions that fixate on the Mughals as Britain’s chief adversaries. The analysis critiques overreliance on marital alliances to explain “indigeneity,” urging methodological consistency…
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Kumara Vyasa (Naranappa): Architect of the Kannada Mahabharata and a Beacon of Dharma

Kumara Vyasa (Naranappa) crafted the iconic Kannada Mahabharata, the Karnata Bharata Kathamanjari, blending poetic elegance with moral inquiry. Situated in the cultural radiance of the Vijayanagara era, his work remains central to Kannada literature and living performance traditions like Gamaka and Yakshagana. The narrative’s Bhamini Shatpadi meter and nuanced characterizations of Krishna, Arjuna, Karna, and…
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Discover the Transformative Legacy of S.L. Bhyrappa
