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The Men who Would be King? The Politics of Expansion in Early Seventeenth-Century Northern Tamilnadu
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 November 2008
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These people, called badagàs, though of the same colour and quality as the other peoples of India, are more valiant and powerful in war; because, as I have said, they are a wealthy people, and of great chivalry, and behave with greater dignity than the others, and they have all their cities and towns sheltered and encircled all around with walls of mud or of stone, with their bulwarks, rather like our fortresses, in which too they differ from the other peoples of India, who in general do not live together and encircled in this manner.
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References
1 Cf. Krishnaswami, A., The Tamil Country under Vijayanagar (Annamalainagar, 1964), pp. 243–360;Google Scholar also Heras, H., The Aravidu Dynasty of Vijayanagara (Madras, 1927);Google ScholarRao, C. Hayavadana, Mysore Gazetteer, vol. II, pt III (Bangalore, 1930), pp. 2172–406.Google Scholar
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11 Kaifiyat of Cittiveli, pp. 190–201, 209–12 (FSVH, III, pp. 267–70, 281–2); on Rao, Jaggadeva, see Rao, C. H., Mysore Gazetteer, II, pp. 2437–8.Google Scholar
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47 See note 44 supra.
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