In the rain-soaked hill country of Karnataka’s Malnad, Keladi Rani Chennammaji faces an imperial demand that would have broken most kingdoms: surrender Rajaram, Chhatrapati Shivaji’s son, to Aurangzeb. She refuses—and then defends that refusal, outmanoeuvring invasion and safeguarding her guest’s passage.
Her reign begins in crisis. The kingdom’s sovereign, Somashekhara Nayaka I—her husband—suffered a tragic decline and was murdered, triggering intrigue and a scramble for legitimacy that she had to quell before she could govern.
Drawing on Gazetteer synthesis, primary chronicles, and community memory, The Balija Queen of Malnad follows Chennammaji beyond the famous asylum episode into the harder labor of rule: restoring order, reorganizing military preparedness, managing the temple and treasury, and holding together a coastal–inland political economy where treaties, monopolies, arrears, and cannon belonged to the same calculus.
K.N. Kumar offers a Balija-centred reading without propaganda—treating identity as capability and asking the sharper question: how did a mid-sized hill kingdom preserve sovereignty, commerce, and continuity when an intrusive empire came calling?