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Nayankara

The document discusses the nayankara system of the Vijayanagara Empire, where military chiefs called nayakas governed territories and collected taxes, maintaining armies to support the empire in exchange. Over time, many nayakas established independent kingdoms, contributing to the collapse of the central imperial structure.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
71 views2 pages

Nayankara

The document discusses the nayankara system of the Vijayanagara Empire, where military chiefs called nayakas governed territories and collected taxes, maintaining armies to support the empire in exchange. Over time, many nayakas established independent kingdoms, contributing to the collapse of the central imperial structure.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
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Nayankara System

The rayas and the nayakas Among those who exercised power in the empire were

military chiefs who usually controlled forts and had armed supporters. These chiefs

often moved from one area to another, and in many cases were accompanied by

peasants looking for fertile land on which to settle. These chiefs were known as

nayakas and they usually spoke Telugu or Kannada.

Many nayakas submitted to the authority of the kings of Vijayanagara but they

often rebelled and had to be subdued by military action. The amara-nayaka 1

system was a major political innovation of the Vijayanagara Empire. It is

likely that many features of this system were derived from the iqta system of

the Delhi Sultanate.

The amara-nayakas were military commanders who were given territories to

govern by the raya. They collected taxes and other dues from peasants,

craftspersons and traders in the area. They retained part of the revenue for personal

use and for maintaining a stipulated contingent of horses and elephants. These

contingents provided the Vijayanagara kings with an effective fighting force with

which they brought the entire southern peninsula under their control. Some of the

revenue was also used for the maintenance of temples and irrigation works. The

1
Amara is believed to be derived from the Sanskrit word samara, meaning battle or war. It also resembles the
Persian term amir, meaning a high noble
amara-nayakas sent tribute to the king annually and personally appeared in

the royal court with gifts to express their loyalty. Kings occasionally asserted

their control over them by transferring them from one place to another. However,

during the course of the seventeenth century, many of these nayakas established

independent kingdoms. This hastened the collapse of the central imperial

structure.

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