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Data

Name: kakatiya dynasty

Type: Cluster

Start: 1164 AD

End: 1323 AD

Statistics

All Statistics: All Statistics

Icon kakatiya dynasty

If you are looking for the page with the statistics about this nation you can find it here: All Statistics

The cluster includes all the forms of the country.

The cluster includes the following incarnations of the same nation:

  • Kakatiya dynasty
  • Kakatiya Dynasty (Delhi Sultanate)
  • Establishment


  • January 1164: Early Kakatiya rulers served as feudatories to Rashtrakutas and Western Chalukyas for more than two centuries. They assumed sovereignty under Prataparudra I in 1163 CE by suppressing other Chalukya subordinates in the Telangana region.
  • Chronology


    Interactive Chronologies with maps are available in the section Changes Navigation

    1. Conquests of Simhana II


    Expansion during the rule of Simhana II of the Seuna.

  • January 1207: A 1206 inscription shows that by that year the Yadavas had conquered a part of the present-day Bijapur district.
  • January 1221: By 1220, Seuna Dynasty ruler Simhana had completed his conquest of the area to the north of the Tungabhadra River.

  • 2. Further events (Unrelated to Any War)


  • January 1241: Ganapati Deva significantly expanded Kakatiya lands during the 1230s when he launched a series of attacks outside the dynasty's traditional Telangana region and thus brought under Kakatiya control the Telugu-speaking lowland delta areas around the Godavari and Krishna rivers.

  • January 1251: Jatavarman Sundara I ascended the Pandya throne in 1251 CE. He led his army to the Chola country (even as far as Nellore), to Sri Lanka and to south Kerala.

  • January 1269: Establishment of the Kakatiya Empire.

  • January 1295: The founder of the Kampili Kingdom was a Hoysala commander, Singeya Nayaka-III (1280-1300 AD), who declared independence after the Muslim forces of the Delhi Sultanate defeated and captured the territories of the Seuna Yadavas of Devagiri in 1294 CE.

  • January 1301: During the 14th century, the Sambuvarayas, a dynasty in the Tondaimandalam region, gained power as the Telugu Cholas, Hoysala, and Pandya kingdoms declined. They ruled independently in this period.

  • March 1310: Kakatiya ruler Prataparudra was forced to make various symbolic acts of obeisance designed to demonstrate his new position as a subordinate to Delhi but, as was Alauddin's plan, he was not removed as ruler of the area but rather forced thereafter to pay annual tribute to Delhi.

  • January 1313: By 1312 the Pandya control over south Kerala was also lost.

  • January 1318: In 1318, the Kakatiya failed to provide the annual tribute to Delhi.

  • January 1319: Kakatiya ruler Prataparudra had to submit once more to Delhi, with his obeisance on this occasion being arranged by the sultanate to include a very public display whereby he bowed towards Delhi from the ramparts of Orugallu.

  • January 1321: Prataparudra again asserted his independence in 1320.

  • January 1322: Delhi prince Ulugh Khan plundered Arangal and Tilang.

  • February 1322: Delhi forces leave Arangal and Tilang.

  • Disestablishment


  • January 1324: Another attack by Delhi Sultan Ulugh Khan in 1323 saw stiff resistance by the Kakatiyan army, but they were finally defeated. The Kakatiya dynasty was annexed.
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