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| An inscription found near Begur, reveals that the district
was a part of the Ganga Dynasty until 1004 and was known
as Benga-val-oru, the "City of Guards" in old
Kannada. The Cholas of Tamil Nadu ruled over the city
from 1015 to 1116 until the town came under the rule of
the Hoysala Empire. Modern Bangalore was founded by a
feudatory of the Vijayanagara Empire, Kempe Gowda I, who
built a mud fort in the proximity of modern Bangalore
in 1537. Kempe Gowda referred to the new town as his "gandu
bhoomi" or "Land of Heroes".Within the
fort, the town was divided into petes or markets. The
town had two main streets: Chickkapete Street ran east-west
and Doddapete Street ran north-south. Their intersection
formed Doddapete square — the heart of Bangalore.
Kempe Gowda's successor, Kempe Gowda II, built four famous
towers that marked Bangalore's boundary. During the Vijayanagara
rule, Bangalore was also referred to as "Devarayanagara"
and "Kalyanapura" ("Auspicious City").
Kempe Gowda, the founder of Bangalore
The Vidhana Soudha is the seat of Karnataka's Legislative
assembly
An 1898 map of the Kingdom of Mysore depicting the location
of Bangalore.After the fall of the Vijayanagara Empire,
Bangalore's rule changed hands several times. It was
captured by the Maratha chief Shahaji Bhonsle prior
to a Mughal invasion. The Marathas sold Bangalore to
Chikkadevaraja Wodeyar (1673-1704) of Mysore for 300,000
rupees in 1687. The city became part of the Kingdom
of Mysore when the Mughal emperor Aurangzeb leased Bangalore
to Chikkadeva Raja Wodeyar in 1689. After the death
of Krishnaraja Wodeyar II in 1759, Haider Ali, Commander-in-Chief
of the Mysore Army, proclaimed himself the de-facto
ruler of Mysore. The kingdom later passed on to Haidar
Ali's son Tippu Sultan, known as the Tiger of Mysore.
Bangalore was eventually incorporated into the British
East Indian Empire after Tippu Sultan was defeated and
killed in the Fourth Anglo-Mysore War (1799). The British
returned administrative control of the Bangalore "pete"
to the Maharaja of Mysore, choosing only to retain the
Cantonment under their jurisdiction. Under British rule,
Bangalore was incorporated into the Madras Presidency.
The Kingdom of Mysore relocated its capital from Mysore
city to Bangalore in 1831. Two important developments
during this period contributed to the rapid growth of
the city: the introduction of telegraph connections
and a rail connection to Madras in 1864.
South Parade (now Mahatma Gandhi Road) during colonial
times.In the 19th century, Bangalore essentially became
a twin city, with the "pete", whose residents
were predominantly Kannadigas, and the Bangalore Cantonment,
whose residents were mostly migrants from Tamil Nadu.
Bangalore was hit by a plague epidemic in 1898 that
dramatically reduced its population. New extensions
in Malleswaram and Basavanagudi were developed in the
North and South of the Pete. Telephone lines were laid
to help co-ordinate anti-plague operations, and a health
officer was appointed to the city in 1898. In 1906,
Bangalore became the first city in India to have electricity,
powered by the hydroelectric plant situated in Shivanasamudra.
Bangalore's reputation as the Garden City of India began
in 1927 with the Silver Jubilee celebrations of the
rule of Krishnaraja Wodeyar IV. Several projects such
as the construction of parks, public buildings and hospitals
were instituted to beautify the city. After Indian independence
in August 1947, Bangalore remained in the new Mysore
State of which the Maharaja of Mysore was the Rajpramukh.
Public sector employment and education provided opportunities
for Kannadigas from the rest of the state to migrate
to the city. Bangalore experienced rapid growth in the
decades 1941–51 and 1971–81 , which saw
the arrival of many immigrants from northern Karnataka
and Kodagu. By 1961 Bangalore had become the sixth largest
city in India, with a population of 1,207,000. In the
decades that followed, Bangalore's manufacturing base
continued to expand with the establishment of private
companies such as Motor Industries Company (MICO; a
subsidiary of Robert Bosch GmbH), which set up its manufacturing
plant in the city. Bangalore experienced a boom in its
real estate market in the 1980s and 1990s, spurred by
capital investors from other parts of the country who
converted Bangalore's large plots and colonial bungalows
to multistorey apartments. The establishment of multinational
companies such as ANZ Bank and Citibank as well as international
fast food chains such as Pizza Hut and Kentucky Fried
Chicken (KFC) in the 1990s continued to expand foreign
investment in Bangalore. The city witnessed one of its
largest media events ever when it hosted the 1996 the
Miss World beauty pageant, which was seen by over two
billion viewers worldwide. Many of these developments
were met with opposition from groups fearing the loss
of the city's national and linguistic identity. Widespread
protests organised against the Miss World contest by
women's organisations led to the arrests of about 1,000
protesters. In 1996 farmer activists attacked and damaged
the KFC outlet in Bangalore, accusing it of "representing
western food habits which are not needed in India".
Through the 1990s the state government promoted large-scale
development projects such as the construction of sports
stadia and exclusive apartment complexes, which resulted
in the demolition and resettlement of poorer settlements
to distant peripheral locations. In the mid-1990s, Bangalore's
economy grew many fold because of the software boom.
Contrastingly, employment opportunities in almost all
other sectors, in the city's manufacturing industries,
declined. This was due to rampant and uncontrolled globalisation,
liberalisation and privatisation
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