Accession Shortly after the death of his father Maharaja Chamarajendra Wadiyar X on 28 December 1894, Krishnaraja Wodeyar IV, still a boy of eleven, ascended the throne on 1 February 1895. His mother Maharani Kemparajammanni Devi ruled as
queen regent until Krishnaraja Wodeyar IV took over on 8 February 1902. The yuvaraja was invested as the Maharaja of Mysore, with full ruling powers, by
George Curzon, the
Governor-General of India, on 8 August 1902 at a ceremony at
Jaganmohana Palace.
Government Mysore became the first Indian state to have a representative assembly,
Mysore Representative Assembly, a democratic forum in 1881. During the maharaja's reign, the assembly was enlarged and became
bicameral in 1907 with the creation of the
Mysore Legislative Council, a house of elders which introduced much new legislation for the state.During the maharaja's reign, the Kingdom of Mysore witnessed development in a range of fields. Mysore became the first Indian state to generate hydroelectric power in
Asia, and Bangalore was the first Asian city to have street lights, first lit on 5 August 1905. Princes from other sections of India were sent to Mysore for administrative training.
Reforms The maharaja worked towards alleviating poverty and improving rural reconstruction, public health, industry and economic regeneration, education and the fine arts. He abolished child marriage (for girls below the age 8), gave special importance for girls' education, and offered scholarship for widowed women. At a time when support for domestic products was pivotal for India's self-reliance and eventual independence from British India, the maharaja encouraged
spinning at scale, for which Gandhi greatly praised him.
Education and arts Krishnaraja Wodeyar IV set up numerous educational infrastructures and institutions. Krishnaraja Wadiyar was the first chancellor of
Banaras Hindu University (whose co-founder he also was) and the
University of Mysore (whose founder he was). The latter was the first university chartered by an Indian province. The
Indian Institute of Science at
Bangalore, which was initiated during his mother's tenure as regent, functionally started during his reign in 1911 with a gift of 371 acres (1.5 km2) of land and a donation of funds. The maharaja was a patron of Indian music, both Carnatic and Hindustani, and Western classical music. He was an accomplished musician and, like his predecessors, patronised fine arts. The maharaja was a connoisseur of
Carnatic and
Hindustani music himself. He played eight
musical instruments:
flute, violin, saxophone, piano,
mridangam, nadaswara,
sitar, and
veena. Members of the
Agra Gharana, including Nattan Khan and Ustad
Vilayat Hussain Khan, were guests of the maharajah at Mysore, as were
Abdul Karim Khan and
Gauhar Jan.
Barkatullah Khan was a palace musician from 1919 until his death in 1940. Asthana Vidwan Kadagathur Seshacharya has written various works and is famous for his contributions towards Sanskrit and Kannada literature. The maharaja also composed many poems in Kannada himself. == Contributions ==