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Karnataka

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Karnataka

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Hampi in Karnataka, India, is famous for its ruined temples. Hampi was at its height in the 14th century, when it was the capital of one of the largest Hindu empires in the country's history. Sculptures in the city depict scenes from the Indian epics Rāmāyana and Mahābhārata.
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This is one of several temples at Badami, in the state of Karnataka, southwest India. Badami was the capital of the Chalukya empire, founded in the 6th century BC by Pulakeshin I. The free-standing temples are examples of their pioneering architectural style, but the site is most famous for the four cave temples carved into the sandstone hills.

State in southwest India; area 191,773 sq km/74,044 sq mi; population (2001 est) 52,734,000, of which the majority is Hindu. The capital is Bangalore, and Mangalore is a port. The state has a western coastal plain; inland the forested Western Ghats rise to heights of 1,250 m/4,000 ft. Industries include the mining manganese, chromite, iron ore, bauxite, mica, copper, and India's only sources of gold (from the Kolar fields) and silver. The state is extensively forested, and products include teak and most of the world's supply of sandalwood. The Tungabhadra dam provides hydroelectricity, and irrigates up to 500,000 ha/1.23 million acres in Karnataka and Andrha Pradesh. Agricultural products include rice on the coastal western plain; inland millet, groundnuts, rice with irrigation; cotton in the north; and coffee and tea on the slopes of the Western Ghats. The language is Kannada. Famous people from the state include Haidar Ali and Tipu Sultan.

Settlements dating back to 3,000 BC have been identified. Later, various dynasties including the Kadambas took control, and in the 16th century the state was part of the Vijayanagar empire. In 1610 Seringapatam was made capital of the Hindu dynasty of Mysore. Hyder Ali usurped the throne in the mid-18th century, but British intervention restored the old dynasty in 1799. Mysore developed an advanced form of government, in many respects ahead of the British provinces. After independence it became a state of the Union of India, with the maharajah as rajpramukh (princely governor). In 1956 the state was enlarged to meet the demand of the Kannada-speaking people for their own state. Its name was changed to Karnataka in 1972.


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Mr Yergolkar is in charge of the field station of the National Institute of Virology at Bangalore and is responsible for providing year-round arboviral diagnoses in Karnataka State.
191-93) Kohli's discussion of West Bengal in Democracy and Discontent (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1990), but doesn't address his comparisons of how political institutions and economic development affect outcomes in Gujarat and Tamil Nadu, as well as Bihar and Karnataka.
After consultations with three southern Indian States, Karnataka was initially chosen.
 
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