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If you’ve been to Bengaluru, you’re sure to have heard one name over and over again. Let me give you a little nudge: he Kempegowda International Airport, Kempegowda Bus Station, Kempegowda Nagar, Kempegowda Road.
So who is this omnipresent ‘Kempegowda’? Hiriya Kempegowda was a visionary local chieftain who is credited with founding Bengaluru in 1537. Over 475 years later, though, the revered ruler is ‘back in the news’ as he finds himself caught up in controversy.
But who really was Kempegowda? And how did he come to establish India’s future IT capital?
Besides his birth date, many other aspects of Kempegowda’s life remain shrouded in mystery. The birth year of the legendary chieftain, who owed allegiance to the Vijayanagar empire, is also under debate. Some say he was born in 1510, others 1513. But yes, he was born in Yelahanka, not far from Bengaluru’s present-day airport.
His father, Kempananje Gowda, was nobility. But there are no clear records of his mother’s or wife’s names. Kempegowda is said to have been just, humane and popular, ruling his neck of the Vijaynagara empire for 56 years.
For decades, historians had tried to locate Kempegowda's tomb in and around Bengaluru, but had no luck.
This search finally came to an end in March 2015, by accident.
The inscription on the tomb, which has been authenticated by other historians, says he died at the spot while returning from a battle fought at Kunigal, 70 km west of Bengaluru.
Bengaluru should thank Kempegowda for having a clear ‘vision’ of his capital – a city that would house a military cantonment, temples, water tanks, lakes, trees, roads and markets.
He took permission from Achyuta Deva Raya, the then Vijayanagara ruler, and laid the foundations of Bengaluru in 1537.
A few landmarks he built still stand today – the Nandi temple and Bengaluru fort.
Now, Moona remarks, "The tanks have disappeared, let alone the grid system."
Achyuta Deva Raya was happy with Kempegowda until he began to mint his own coins. The feudal chieftain was jailed for five years. Chastised, he was given back all his territory after he was released.
Many rulers from India’s rich history have been treated shoddily. A road here, a college there. But Kempegowda has been luckier in this regard. With tonnes of infrastructure named after him, Kempegowda is pretty well-etched into the mind-space of the city he founded.
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