Rebellion Kapaya Nayaka (1333–1368) led a larger rebellion against the Tughluq rule, driving it out of Warangal in 1336. According to the Kaluvacheru grant of Anithalli, a female member of the
Panta Reddi clan in 1423, Kapaya Nayaka was assisted by 75 Nayakas. The grant also states that Prolaya Vema Reddi was one among these 75 Nayakas. Muhammad bin Tughluq, who became the Sultan of Delhi in 1324, witnessed numerous rebellions starting in 1330, first in the immediate vicinity in the Ganga-Yamuna doab, which caused a famine in Delhi, and rebellions within ranks in Ma'bar (
Madurai) and Bengal. It is possible that Kapaya Nayaka advanced in the direction of Warangal in this period, acquiring some of its territory. Consequently, Telangana was also counted among the rebellious territories. In 1334–35, the Sultan marched on Deccan in an attempt to quell the rebellions, but his army was struck by some kind of epidemic and the Sultan himself fell gravely ill. He was forced to retreat to Delhi via Daulatabad. It is said that about a third of his army perished due to the epidemic.
Ferishta narrates that, around this time, Kapaya Nayaka approached the
Hoysala ruler
Veera Ballala III for assistance in evicting the Sultanate from Warangal. After consideration, assistance was offered. Historian
R. C. Majumdar characterizes it as a 'national revolt' backed up by a regular army. Governor
Malik Maqbul found himself unable to withstand the rebellion and fled to Delhi. Ferishta states that Kapaya Nayaka and Ballala III then jointly marched on the newly declared
Madurai Sultanate and divested it of its outlying territories, in particular
Tondaimandalam. 's
Vedasāraratnāvaḷi, a two part treatise on the essence of Vedas that was written for the Endowments Department of the
Government of Andhra Pradesh. These details matches with near accuracy with mentions in Indian Epigraphic reports.
Rule Kapaya Nayaka took control of Warangal from Malik Maqbul in 1336 and thus also of a wider swathe of eastern Telangana that was governed from there. He also tried to support other rebels in the surrounding areas, although in the case of aid given to
Alauddin Bahman Shah, the outcome was that his fellow rebel turned on him. Several military engagements with
Bahman Shah followed over a period of years, during which Kapaya Nayaka had to cede various forts and territories, including
Golconda (near modern Hyderabad). His weakened position was exploited by the
Reddis of Kondavidu and the
Recherla Nayakas, the latter of whom killed him in battle at Bhimavaram near Warangal in 1368. Despite his supposed opposition to the Dehlavi Sultans, Kapaya Nayaka continued using the
Kush Mahal built by the Sultans in Warangal and adopted the Persianised title "Sultan of the Andhra country" (''''). In 1361, he gifted to the Bahmani Sultan
Mohammed Shah I the
Turquoise throne of Warangal, made during the Delhi rule, as part of a treaty agreement. After the death of Kapaya Nayaka, his allied Nayakas are said to have returned to their own towns, and the period of the Musunuri family ended. The Recherla Nayakas became the dominant power in the Telangana that lasted till 1435. ==See also==