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"It was a wonderful experience interacting with you and appreciate the way you have planned and executed the whole publication process within the agreed timelines.”
Subrat SaurabhAuthor of Kuch Woh PalThe book contains information from:
Great historians’ booksThe diary entries of foreign sailors who landed on the Indian coast Articles of foreign travelers who visited IndiaThe epigraphical publications of the archaeological survey of India, particularly the inscriptions on the monuments belonging to Vijayanagar dynasty and Kakathiya dynastyResearch articles about Kakathiyam, Kambili, Kammarastirams in Andra PradeshForgotten historical facts of Vijayanagara Empire and Madurai Nayak kingdoms, andSources gathered from many books of Authors like Kowsikan, Balakumaran and Kalki were key references to this bookThe great territory to the South of Vindhya-Satpura range is called the Deccan Plateau. The people who originated from Kakathiya were raised in Vijayanagara Empire in Hampi and its capital Vijayanagara and were spread all over south India as warriors and village headmen. This book gives simple history and timeline of those people.
The Battle of Talikota, the Battle of Thoppur and the Battle of Virinchipuram were the important historical events that caused the migration of Telugu people.
The famous Vaishnavites like Vyasa Thirtha, Ramanuja, Purandara Dāsa were influenced by Sri Krishnadevaraya to become a Vaishnavite. All the Telugu and Kannada people in Deccan followed their beloved king. This book also discusses the small deities existing in and around Coimbatore.
Devaraj Ramasamy
Devaraj Ramasamy belongs to the Telugu Kamma sector settled in Coimbatore. He is a voracious reader of Tamil books. His mother tongue is Telugu. He can speak Telugu but can’t read or write it. He can speak, read and write only in Tamil. When he asked his father about this, his father narrated the story of the Telugu people and their origins. He wanted to authenticate the story, so he tried to extract the historical footprints associated with facts and tales.
His first book was Thamizh Kaattum Vaazkkai, which speaks about Aathichudi. This is his second book, and he is also writing one about the awareness of crime and victims. Though his book talks about the Telugu community, he is a progressivist revolutionary thinker.
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