In the 1st century CE, power in the area lay with the
Andhrabhrtyas and
Satvahanas. In the 5th and 4th centuries BCE, Nanded was ruled by the
Nanda dynasty. In the 3rd century BCE (about 272 to 231 BCE), it was part of the
Maurya Empire under
Ashoka. Local irrigation practices and Nanded itself are recorded in the treatise,
Leela Charitra (late 1200s CE). Nanded was the birthplace of three Marathi poet-saints—Vishnupant Shesa, Raghunath Shesa, and Vaman Pandit Construction of
Kandhar Fort, located in
Kandhar, is attributed to the
Rashtrakuta king Krishna III of
Malkheda who ruled around 10th century CE. From 1636, Nanded was the centre of governance of Nizam State, which included parts of present-day
Telangana and
Karnataka, and was an imperial province of the
Mughal Badshah (emperor)
Shah Jahan. In 1657, Nanded merged into Bidah Subah.
Guru Nanak (1469 1539 CE) passed through Nanded on his way to
Sri Lanka.
Guru Gobind Singh (1666 1708 CE) arrived in Nanded with the
Mughal emperor Bahadur Shah I (1643 1712 CE) near the end of August in 1707 CE. When Bahadur Shah moved on to
Golconda, Guru Gobind Singh remained in Nanded. Guru Gobind Singh proclaimed he was the last (tenth) living guru and established the sacred text, the
Guru Granth Sahib as an eternal "living" leader. Guru Gobind Singh died without a
lineal descendant due to the
martyrdom of his four sons. In 1725, Nanded became part of
Hyderabad State. It was built on the site of Guru Gobind Singh's
cremation. The gurdwara is part of the
Hazur Sahib. After India
gained independence in 1947, the
Indian Armed Forces annexed Hyderabad and ended the rule of the Nizam in
Operation Polo, making Nanded part of the
new Hyderabad State. Nanded remained part of the Hyderabad state until 1956 when it was included in the
Bombay Presidency. On 1 May 1960,
Maharashtra state was created on a linguistic basis and the Marathi dominant Nanded district became part of Maharashtra.{{Cite web|publisher = maharashtra.gov.in (Government of Maharashtra)|title = Gazetteers Department – Bhir |url=http://www.maharashtra.gov.in/english/gazetteer/Beed/places_bhir_town.html ==Geography==