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* Hiriya Bettada Chamaraja Wadiyar I ( 1423 – 1459 )
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Hiriya and Chamaraja
Bettada and Chamaraja
* Bettada Chamaraja Wadiyar V ( 1576 – 1578 )< ref > According to Court Historian and Chief Editor of Mysore Gazeeteer-Mr C. Hayavadana Rao, this Ruler's name as Bettada Devaraja Wadiyar.
Chamaraja and Wadiyar
The four year old boy ( Mummudi ) Krishna Raja Wadiyar III, son of the last Wadiyar King Khasa Chamaraja Wadiyar VIII, was anointed as the King of Mysore.
But in 1868, the British Parliament upheld the King's plea and decided to restore the Kingdom back to his adopted son Chamaraja Wadiyar IX.
Mummudi adopted Chamaraja Wadiyar X as his legal heir in 1865 and when British refused to accord recognition and restore the Kingdom to him, he took the campaign to the British Parliament where under immense pressure from many Parliamentarians, British Government accepted the adoption and agreed to restore the Kingdom to the adopted son on his coming of age.
Krishnaraja Wadiyar IV died without children and as his brother had predeceased him, His son, Jaya Chamaraja Wadiyar was crowned in.
Following the failure of heirs male, Krishnaraja Wadiyar decided to adopt as heir his grandson, Chamaraja.
Krishnaraja Wadiyar III died on 27 March 1868, and Chamaraja Wadiyar ascended the throne at the royal palace, Mysore, on September 23, 1868.
Chamaraja Wadiyar was a great patron of arts and music, his court boasted of artists like Veena Subbanna, Veena Seshanna, K. Vasudevacharya, Veena Padmanabiah, Mysore Karigiri Rao and Bidaram Krishnappa among others.
Chamaraja and –
The Mahishūru Fort was constructed in 1524 by Chamaraja Wodeyar III ( 1513 – 1553 ), who passed on the dominion of Puragere to his son Chamaraja Wodeyar IV ( 1572 – 1576 ).
Wadiyar and I
Wadiyar and –
The Kingdom of Mysore came under the British during the reign of King Krishnaraja Wadiyar III ( 1799 – 1868 ).
I and 1423
In 1423 the army of Alphonse of Aragon captured Marseille, and in 1443 they captured Naples, and forced its ruler, King René I of Naples, to flee.
He was abbot of Inchcolm Abbey ( in the Firth of Forth ) from 1418, was one of the commissioners for the collection of the ransom of James I, King of Scots, in 1423 and 1424, and in 1433 one of the embassy to Paris on the business of the marriage of the king's daughter to the dauphin.
Ferdinand I ( June 2, 1423 – January 25, 1494 ), also called Don Ferrante, was the King of Naples from 1458 to 1494.
As the same time he assumed his charge of chancellor for the bailo Benedetto Emo ( summer 1421-summer 1423 ), with diplomatic missions: at end 1421 he accompanied Emo during an embassy to the Ottoman Sultan Murad II, who was the candidate supported by Venice for the succession of the late Sultan Mehmed I, the Byzantines, by contrast, supporting the pretender Mustafa.
The late-Gothic collegiate church which Duke Ernest I ( 1392 – 1438 ) had erected in 1423 was changed into a Benedictine monastery by Duke Albert III in 1455, and filled with monks from Tegernsee Abbey.
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