An Imperial Capital : Vijayanagara

Question

Explain the striking features about the location of Vijayanagara, its water resources and its fortifications.

OR

Explain how during 16th and 17th centuries agriculture was organised around two major seasonal cycles by giving examples of different crops.

Answer

Location and Water Requirements-

(i) Vijayanagara is the natural basin formed by the river Tungabhadra which flows in a north-easterly direction.

(ii) The surrounding landscape is characterised by the stunning hills of granite forming a girdle around the city.

(iii) Streams flowed down to the river from the rocky outcrops.

(iv) Embankment were built along these streams to create reservoirs of varying Sizes.

(v) Kamlapuram tank was source of water for irrigation as well as the needs of the royal centre.

(vi) The most prominent water works included the Hiriya Canal that drew water from the canal and supplied it for irrigation.

Fortifications:

(i) Abdur Razzaq was impressed by the fortifications of Vijayanagara.

(ii) He mentioned seven lines of forts.

(iii) These encircled not only the city but also the agricultural lands and forests.

(iv) The walls linked the hills surrounding the city.

(v) Stone blocks were used in construction.

(vi) Significance of the fortifications that it enclosed the agricultural tracts.

(vii) Second line of fortification went around the inner core of the urban complex.

(viii) A third line of fortification surrounded the royal centre within which each set of major building was surrounded by its own high walls.

(ix) There were well guarded gates.

OR

Agriculture was organised around two major seasonal cycles:

(i) Agriculture was organized around two major seasonal cycles, the Kharif (autumn) and the Rabi (spring). 187

(ii) This would mean that most regions, except those terrains that were the most arid or inhospitable, produced a minimum of two crops a year (do-fasla),

(iii) Whereas some, where rainfall or irrigation assured a continuous supply of water, even gave three crops.

(iv) This ensured an enormous variety of produce. For instance, we are told in the Ain that the Mughal provinces of Agra produced 39 varieties of crops and Delhi produced 43 over the two seasons. Bengal produced 50 varieties of rice alone.

(v) Crops such as cotton and sugarcane were jins-i kamil par excellence. Cotton was grown over a great swathe of territory spread over central India and the Deccan plateau, whereas Bengal was famous for its sugar.

(vi) Such cash crops would also include various sorts of oilseeds (for example, mustard) and lentils.

(vii) This shows how subsistence and commercial production were closely intertwined in an average peasant’s holding.

(viii) During the seventeenth century several new crops from different parts of the world reached the Indian subcontinent.

(ix) Maize (makka) , for example, was introduced into India via Africa and Spain and by the seventeenth century it was being listed as one of the major crops of western India.

(x) Vegetables like tomatoes, potatoes and chillies were introduced from the New World at this time, as were fruits like the pineapple and the papaya.

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Some More Questions From An Imperial Capital : Vijayanagara Chapter

Discuss whether the term “royal centre” is an appropriate description for the part of the city for which it is used

What does the architecture of buildings like the Lotus Mahal and elephant stables tell us about the rulers who commissioned them?

What are the architectural traditions that inspired the architects of Vijayanagara? How did they transform these traditions?

What impression of the lives of the ordinary people of Vijayanagara can you cull from the various descriptions in the chapter?

On an outline map of the world, mark approximately Italy, Portugal, Iran and Russia.Trace the routes the travellers mentioned on p.176 would have taken to reach Vijayanagara.

Find out more about any one of the major cities which flourished in the subcontinent during c. fourteenth-seventeenth centuries. Describe the
architecture of the city. Are there any features to suggest that these were political centres? Are there buildings that were ritually significant? Is there
an area for commercial activities? What are the features that distinguish the urban layout from that of surrounding areas?

Visit a religious building in your neighbourhood. Describe, with sketches, its roof, pillars and arches if any, corridors, passages, halls, entrance, water supply, etc. Compare these features with those of the Virupaksha temple. Describe what each part of the building is used for. Find out about its history.

Give a brief description of Lotus Mahal, situated in the Royal Centre in the Vijayanagara empire.

Mention two characteristic features of the temple complexes in Vijayanagara.

Mention any two ceremonies performed on the occasion of Mahanavami dibba.