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Vijaya Raja Wodeyar (Adi Yaduraya; 20 January 1371 – October 1423), also known as Yaduraya Wodeyar, was the first raja of Mysore from 1399 until his death in October 1423.[2][3] The Vijayanagara emperor Harihara II installed Yaduraya as his vassal and as a dedicated ruler of Mysore principality in 1399 to suppress the opposition of the Dalavays. The Dalavays were a decommissioned clan of royal fighters, advisers, and ministers who were active in the Vijayanagara Empire before, during, and after Harihara II and Yaduraya.[citation needed]
| Yaduraya Wodeyar | |
|---|---|
| Raja of Mysore | |
| Reign | 11 April 1399 – October 1423 |
| Predecessor | Position established |
| Successor | Chamaraja Wodeyar I (son) |
| Born | 20 January 1371[1] Srirangapatna, Vijayanagara Empire |
| Died | October 1423 (aged 52) Puragiri, Mysore |
| Issue | Chamaraja Wodeyar I |
| House | Wodeyar |
References
edit- ↑ "Annual Report Of The Mysore Archaeological Department, For The Year 1935". Internet Archive. University of Mysore. 26 September 2015. Retrieved 9 January 2026.
- ↑ Simmons, Caleb (1 July 2022). Singing the Goddess into Place: Locality, Myth, and Social Change in Chamundi of the Hill, a Kannada Folk Ballad. State University of New York Press. pp. 61–70, 181–187. ISBN 978-1-4384-8867-7.
- ↑ Palace, Mysore; Talwar, H. T. (1994). Arms & Armoury of the Mysore Palace. Directorate of Archaeology & Museums in Karnataka. p. 7.