Origin According to the Garavapadu inscription and Pakhal inscription of Ganapati Deva, the Kakatiya rulers traced their ancestry to a legendary chief or ruler named
Durjaya, who was a descendant of the
Early Chola king
Karikala. Many other ruling dynasties of Andhra also claimed descent from Durjaya. Nothing further is known about this chief. Most of the Kakatiya records do not mention the
varna (social class) of the family, but the majority of the ones that do, proudly describe them as
Shudra. Examples include the Bothpur and Vaddamanu inscriptions of Ganapati's general Malyala Gunda
senani. The Kakatiyas also maintained marital relations with other Shudra families, such as the
Kotas and the
Natavadi chiefs. This indicates that the Kakatiyas were likely of Shudra origin. A few copper-plate inscriptions of the Kakatiya family describe them as belonging to the
Kshatriya (warrior) varna. These inscriptions primarily document grants to
Brahmans, and appear to be inspired by the genealogies of the
Imperial Cholas. For example, the
Motupalli inscription of Ganapati counts legendary
solar dynasty kings such as
Rama among the ancestors of Durjaya, the progenitor of the Kakatiya family. The Malkapuram inscription of Visvesvara Sivacharya, the preceptor of Kakatiya rulers Ganapati Deva and Rudrama Devi, also connects the Kakatiyas to the solar dynasty (Sūryavaṃsa). The term "Kshatriya" in these panegyric records appears to signify the family's warrior-like qualities rather than their actual varna.
Relationship to the Rashtrakutas According to an interpretation of the Mangallu and the
Bayyaram inscriptions, the Kakatiyas were not just
Rashtrakuta vassals, but also a branch of the Rashtrakuta family. The 956 CE Mangallu inscription was issued by the
Vengi Chalukya prince Dānārnava, at the request of the Kakatiya chief
Gunda IV. The inscription names Gundyana's ancestors as Gundiya-Rashtrakuta (
Gunda III) and Eriya-Rashtrakuta (
Erra). This suggests that Gunda IV was a Rashtrakuta general, and not a Vengi Chalukya subordinate, as assumed by earlier historians. The
Bayyaram tank inscription, which records the construction of the
Dharma-kirti-samudra tank by Ganapati's sister Mailama (or Mailamba), provides another genealogical list. The similarities of names mentioned in the Mangallu and Bayyaram inscriptions lists indicate that both of these refer to the same family: The significance of the suffix "Rashtrakuta" in the names of the early Kakatiya chiefs is debated. According to one theory, the suffix only implies that these chiefs were Rashtrakuta's subordinates. This theory is based on the fact that the phrase
Rashtrakuta-kutumbinah appears in several Rashtrakuta-era copper-plate inscriptions, and refers to the officers and subjects of the Rashtrakuta kingdom. According to another theory, the suffix implies that the Kakatiyas were a branch of the Rashtrakuta family because the term
Rashtrakuta-kutumbinah was used for officers employed by the Rashtrakuta administration, not feudatory chiefs: the early records of the Kakatiya chiefs describe them as
samantas (feudatory chiefs). The
Kazipet Darga inscription of
Durgaraja states that his father
Beta II was born in the family of
Samanta Viṣṭi. Historian P.V.P. Sastry theorises that "Viṣṭi" is a corruption of
Vrishni, the name of a clan from which some Rashtrakutas claimed descent. He notes that some chiefs of Rashtrakuta origin adopted the title "Viṭṭi-narayana", which means "as great as Narayana (
Krishna) of the Vitti (Vrishni) family. Sastry further proposes that the term "Voddi", which appears in the phrase
Voddi-kula ("Voddi family") in the Mangallu inscription may be same as "Viṣṭi". Sastry also believes that the early Kakatiya chiefs followed
Jainism, which was also patronized by the Rashtrakutas, thus strengthening the view that the two dynasties were connected (see
Religion section below). The Kakatiyas seemed to have adopted the mythical bird
Garuda as their royal insignia, as attested by the Ekamranatha temple inscription of Ganapati-deva, the
Palampet inscription of the Kakatiya general
Recharla Rudra, and Vidyanatha's
Prataparudriya. The Bayyaram tank inscription calls the Kakatiya chief Beta I (son of Gunda IV)
Garudamka-Beta, and "Garuda" here appears to refer to the family's emblem. In Hindu mythology, Garuda is the
vahana of god
Vishnu. The Rashtrakutas and some other dynasties of Deccan claimed descent from the
Vrishni clan (associated with Vishnu's
avatar Krishna) and had adopted Garuda as their royal insignia. According to Sastry, this corroborates the theory that the Kakatiyas were associated with the Rashtrakuta family. Sastry further speculates that the Kakatiyas may have adopted the Garuda symbol because of Jain influence: the
yaksha of the Jain
tirthankara Shantinatha is represented by the Garuda symbol. However, when the Kakatiyas switched their allegiance to the
Chalukyas of Kalyani, they also adopted the
varaha symbol used by the Chalukyas. Based on Ganapati-deva's Garavapadu inscription, which names
Karikala Chola among the family's ancestors, epigraphist C.R.K. Charlu theorised that the Kakatiyas were a branch of the
Telugu Chodas. However, no other Kakatiya record mentions Karikala, and unlike the Telugu Chodas, the Kakatiyas did not claim to belong to the
Kashyapa-
gotra. Therefore, Sastry dismisses Charlu's theory as untenable.
Early feudatory chiefs The regnal years of the early members of the Kakatiya family are not certain. The earliest known Kakatiya chief is Venna or Vanna (r. c. 800-815), who claimed descent from
Durjaya, legendary
chieftain of ancient Andhra. According to Kakatiya inscriptions, he ruled from a town called Kakati, because of which his family was called Kakatishas ("lords of Kakati"). Not much is known about his successors Gunda I and Gunda II, who ruled during c. 815-865 CE. The Bayyaram tank inscription compares his successors - Gunda I, Gunda II, and Gunda III - to the three Ramas (
Parashurama,
Dasharatha-Rama, and
Balarama). The c. 956 CE Mangallu inscription suggests that the Kakatiyas came to the
Telugu-speaking region as commanders of the Rashtrakuta armies. The earliest of these was Venna's son
Gunda III, who died during
Krishna II's invasion of the
Vengi Chalukya kingdom around 895 CE. Krishna II captured the Kurravadi (possibly present-day
Kuravi) region from the Vengi Chalukyas, and probably appointed Gunda III's son
Erra as a governor there. Not much is known about Erra's son Betiya. As a Rashtrakuta vassal, Betiya's son
Gunda IV (r. c. 955-995) helped the Vengi Chalukya prince Danarnava ascend the throne after a succession dispute. In 973 CE, after the collapse of the Rashtrakuta empire and the murder of Danarnava, he attempted to carve out an independent principality at
Kuravi. The Mudugonda Chalukyas, whom he had displaced from Kuravi, sought help from the
Kalyani Chalukyas, who had usurped the power from the Rashtrakutas. The Kalyani Chalukya forces probably defeated and killed Gunda IV. His son
Beta I (r. c. 1000-1052 CE) accepted the Kalyani Chalukya suzerainty and received from them the fief of Anumakonda (modern Hanamakonda), which later became the Kakatiya capital. He distinguished himself in the Chalukya campaigns against the Cholas, during the reign of
Someshvara I.
Prola I (r. 1052-1076), the son of Beta I, participated in various Chalukya military campaigns, consolidated the Kakatiya control around Anumakonda by defeating local chiefs, and obtained Anumakonda as a hereditary fief. The Chalukya king granted his son
Beta II (r. 996-1051) the Sabbi-1000 province (the historical Sabbi-nadu region with 1000 villages, centred around
Vemulavada). He was succeeded by his sons, first Durga-raja and then Prola II (r. c. 1116–1157). After the decline of the Rashtrakuta power, the Kakatiyas served as vassals of the
Kalyani Chalukyas. After the decline of the Chalukya power in the 12th century, they assumed sovereignty by suppressing other Chalukya subordinates in the Telangana region.
As sovereigns Prataparudra I The 1149 Sanigaram inscription of Prola II is the last known record of the Kakatiyas as vassals. The 1163 Anumakonda inscription of
Rudradeva alias Prataparudra I is the earliest known record that describes the Kakatiyas as a sovereign power. According to Sastry, Prataparudra I reigned between around 1158 – 1195, while Sircar gives the dates 1163–1195. He was also known as Rudra Deva, Kakatiya Rudradeva, Venkata, and Venkataraya He was the son of Prola II, who had made efforts to assert greater Kakatiya influence on territories in the eastern parts of the declining Western Chalukyan empire and who died in a battle fought against the
Velanati Choda ruler
Gonka II around 1157/1158 while doing so. It was during Prataparudra's reign, in 1163, that the Kakatiyas declared an end to their status as
feudatory chiefs of the Chalukyas. It is notable that inscriptions were henceforth written using the Kakatiya chiefs' vernacular Telugu rather than the
Kannada language that had prevailed until that point. Mahadeva succeeded Prataparudra I as king, reigning probably from 1195 to 1199.
Ganapati Just as the Yadava and Hoysala dynasties took control of linguistically related areas during the 13th century, so too did the Kakatiyas under the rule of Ganapati. He is also known as Ganapathi Deva and, according to Sastry, reigned between 1199 and 1262; Sircar gives regnal dates of 1199–1260. He significantly expanded Kakatiya lands during the 1230s when he launched a series of attacks outside the dynasty's traditional Telangana region and thus brought under Kakatiya control the Telugu-speaking lowland delta areas around the Godavari and Krishna rivers. The outcome in the case of all three dynasties, says historian Richard Eaton, was that they "catalysed processes of supralocal identity formation and community building". The Kakatiya capital at Orugallu, established in 1195, was not forgotten while Ganapati expanded his territory. He organised the building of a massive
granite wall around the city, complete with ramps designed for ease of access to its
ramparts from within. A moat and numerous
bastions were also constructed. Ganapati was keen to bolster the dynasty's economy. He encouraged merchants to trade abroad, abolishing all taxes except for a fixed duty and supporting those who risked their lives to travel afar. He created the man-made
Pakhal Lake.
Rudrama Devi .
Rudrama Devi, also known as Rudramadevi, reigned around 1262–1289 CE (alternative dates: 1261–1295 CE) and is one of the few queens in Indian history. Sources disagree regarding whether she was the widow of Ganapati or his daughter.
Marco Polo, who visited India probably sometime around 1289–1293, made note of Rudrama Devi's rule and nature in flattering terms. She continued the planned fortification of the capital, raising the height of Ganapati's wall as well as adding a second earthen
curtain wall in diameter and with an additional -wide moat. A fragmentary
Kannada language inscription also states that the Kakatiya general Bhairava defeated the Yadava army probably in or after 1263 CE, which may be a reference to his repulsion of
Mahadeva's invasion. A coin of Mahadeva bears the Kakatiya emblem
varaha with the Yadava symbols; this varaha may have been stuck on Mahadeva's coins to mark the Kakatiya victory. Rudrama was married to Virabhadra, an
Eastern Chalukyan prince of
Nidadavolu who had been selected for that purpose by her father. Having no son as an heir, Rudrama abdicated in favour of her grandson when it became apparent that the expansionist
sultan Alauddin Khalji was encroaching on the Deccan and might in due course attack the Kakatiyas.
Prataparudra II The earliest biography of Rudrama Devi's successor,
Prataparudra II, is the
Prataparudra Caritramu, dating from the 16th century. His reign began in 1289 (alternative date: 1295) and ended with the demise of the dynasty in 1323. which was a disaster due to the resistance of the Kakatiya army in the
Battle of Upparapalli. In 1309 the
Gujarati general,
Malik Kafur, in an attempt to force Prataparudra into acceptance of a position subordinate to the sultanate at Delhi. Kafur organised a month-long
siege of Orugallu that ended with success in February 1310. Prataparudra was forced to make various symbolic acts of obeisance designed to demonstrate his new position as a subordinate but, as was Alauddin's plan, he was not removed as ruler of the area but rather forced thereafter to pay annual
tribute to Delhi. It was probably at this time that the
Koh-i-Noor diamond passed from Kakatiya ownership to that of Alauddin, along with 20,000 horses and 100 elephants. In 1311, Prataparudra formed a part of the sultanate forces that attacked the
Pandyan empire in the south, and he took advantage of that situation to quell some of his vassals in
Nellore who had seen his reduced status as an opportunity for independence. Later, though, in 1318, he failed to provide the annual tribute to Delhi, claiming that the potential for being attacked on the journey made it impossible. The succeeding Sultan Mubarak Shah responded by sending another of his Gujarati generals,
Khusrau Khan, to Orugallu with a force that bristled with technology previously unknown in the area, including
trebuchet-like machines. Prataparudra had to
submit once more, with his obeisance on this occasion being arranged by the sultanate to include a very public display whereby he bowed towards Delhi from the ramparts of Orugallu. The amount of his annual tribute was changed, becoming 100 elephants and 12,000 horses. The new arrangements did not last long. Taking advantage of a revolution in Delhi that saw the Khalji dynasty removed and
Ghiyasuddin Tughlaq installed as sultan, Prataparudra again asserted his independence in 1320. Tughlaq sent his son,
Jauna Khan, to defeat the defiant Kakatiya king in 1321. Khan's army was riven with internal dissension due to rumours of the king's death, which caused many officers to leave the army. This caused the siege on this occasion to last much longer — six months, rather than the few weeks that had previously been the case. The attackers were initially repulsed and Khan's forces retreated to regroup in Devagiri. Prataparudra celebrated the apparent victory by opening up his grain stores for public feasting. Khan returned in 1323 with his revitalised and reinforced army and, with few supplies left, Prataparudra was
forced into submission after a five-month siege. The unprepared and battle-weary army of Orugallu was finally defeated, and Orugallu was renamed Sultanpur. It seems probable, from combining various contemporary and near-contemporary accounts, that Prataparudra committed suicide near the
Narmada River while being taken as a prisoner to Delhi. ==Characterization==