C.V. Runganada Sastri was born in a poor Hindu family from a village near
Chittoor in the then
North Arcot district in the year 1819. His father, Anantharama, was reputed to be one of the greatest
Sanskrit scholars of the day, in the manner of his grandfather and great-grandfather, but initially could not afford to have him educated. Runganada Sastri began his education at home. By the time he was eight, he had become proficient in Sanskrit. The turning point in Sastri's life came with the arrest of his father for non-payment of land rent when the former was barely twelve years old. Sastri pleaded before the District Judge Casamajor requesting his father's temporary release from prison in order to participate in an annual religious ceremony offering himself as security on his father's behalf. Moved, Casamajor not only released Sastri's father but himself undertook to educate the boy. C.V. Runganada Sastri was initially tutored in private by Casamajor and a Chittoor missionary H. Groves. Within six months, Sastri was able to read and write English. Under Groves' tutorship, Sastri evinced keen interest in
mathematics and soon advanced to the study of
astronomy. To further Sastri's studies, Casamajor sent Sastri to
Madras in 1836 after persuading his parents with great difficulty. Runganada Sastri studied at Bishop Corrie's Grammar School from 1836 to 1839 and the High School (later,
Presidency College, Madras) from 1839 to 1842, graduating with honours in 1842. His was a famously skilled class, with his friends, classmates, and pupils including the future
Sir K. Seshadri Iyer, who would who govern
Mysore as Diwan, and mentor Sastri's future son-in-law
Sir C.P. Ramaswami Iyer; the future
Raja Sir T. Madhava Rao, to whom he was tutor, who would successively govern
Travancore,
Baroda, and
Indore as Diwan; Madhava Rao's cousin
R. Raghunatha Rao, who would also govern as Diwan of
Indore; another future Diwan of Travancore,
V. Ramiengar;
T. Muthuswami Iyer, who would become the first Indian justice of the High Court; Ramiengar's
Vembaukum clan-cousin V. Sadagopacharlu, the first Indian advocate before the Court and member of the Madras Legislative Council; and P. Padasiva Pillai, who would become Supreme Justice of the High Court in Travancore, among others. == Early career ==