Sira Taluk
Sira | |
---|---|
City and Taluk | |
Sira Taluk Location in Karnataka, India | |
Coordinates: 13°44′42″N 76°54′32″E / 13.745°N 76.909°E | |
Country | India |
State | Karnataka |
District | Tumakuru[1] |
Languages | |
• Official | Kannada |
Time zone | UTC+5:30 (IST) |
PIN | 572 137 |
Vehicle registration | KA-06, 64. |
Sira is a taluk of Tumkur district in the state of Karnataka, India. Its headquarters, Sira city lies on the NH 48 (earlier NH 4)
History
Sira was politically and militarily an important region of south India prior to the British Raj. Sira Province was ruled by the Bijapur Kings from 1638 to 1687. The "Suba" or Province of Sira of the Mughal Empire with its capital at Sira town lasted from 1687 to 1757. The Marathas wrested the province from Mughals and held it from 1757 to 1759, when the Mughals regained it. In 1761, Haidar Ali whose father Sheikh Fateh Mohammed occupied an important position in the local Mughal Army declared his independence from the Mughal Empire and declared himself the 'Nawab' of the province. He called himself 'Nawab Haider Ali Bahadur' but lost the province to the Marathas from 1766 until 1774 when his son Tipu Sultan, captured it for him.[2]
See also
References
- ↑ "Bangalore is now Bengaluru". November 2014.
- ↑ [Mysore: A Gazetteer Compiled for the Government, Volume I, Mysore in General]
Bibliography
- List showing protected monuments Archaeological Survey of India, Bangalore circle, (For Sira, see Sl. No: 198 & 199)
- "Large nesting colony of Painted storks identified near Sira (Karnataka)" Ameen Ahmed, Myforest (Quarterly Journal of Karnataka Forest Department), March 1999
- "Plea to protect fort in Sira" (Deccan Herald, Bangalore, 19 May 2008)