The Wadiyars claim descent from the
Hindu deity
Krishna. Legend has it that they arrived from
Dvārakā. However, historians like P. V. Nanjaraj Urs, Shyam Prasad, Nobuhiro Ota,
David Leeming, and Aya Ikegame instead suggest that the Wadiyars were local feudal lords who purported
Puranic ancestry and claimed to be the direct descendants of the
Lunar Dynasty.
Vassal fiefdom The Wadiyar dynasty started when
Yaduraya, a garrison leader (
poleygar), was made the prefect of Mysore and the surrounding regions by his overlord
Harihara II of the
Vijayanagara Empire in 1399. With this, Yaduraya assumed the title Raja and the honorary surname Wadiyar. He and his successors ruled the fiefdom of Mysore as rajas under the vassalage of the
Vijayanagara Empire until around 1553.
Independent kingdom The Vijayanagara Empire
disintegrated in 1565. With the fall of the empire, Mysore became an independent kingdom, the first independent king being
Timmaraja Wodeyar II, the great-great-great-grandson of the founding ruler Yaduraya. Thimmaraja's nephew
Raja Wodeyar I expanded the borders of the kingdom. In 1610, he moved the capital from Mysore to nearby island town of
Srirangapattana on the river
Kaveri, which provided strategic protection against military attacks. Raja Wadiya's cousin and successor down the line
Kanthirava Narasaraja I expanded the frontiers of the kingdom to
Trichy in present-day
Tamil Nadu. The kingdom reached its peak under Kanthirava's grand-nephew
Devaraja Wodeyar II, who reformed the administration of the kingdom by dividing it into 18 departments (called
chavadis); he also introduced a coherent system of taxation. File:Rajawodeyar.jpg|Maharaja Raja Wadiyar who started
Mysore Dasara File:Kanthirava.jpg|Maharaja Kanthirava Narasaraja I was referred to
ranadheera (valiant on the battlefield)
During Hyder Ali and Tipu From 1760 to 1799, the rule of the Wadiyar dynasty was essentially nominal, with real power firmly in the hands of the Commander-in-chief and later self-proclaimed sultan,
Hyder Ali, and his son and successor
Tipu. The two, ruling the sultanate from
Srirangapattana, expanded the kingdom aggressively. File:"Hyder Ali," a steel engraving from the 1790's (with modern hand coloring).jpg|Hyder Ali, the commander-in-chief who usurped power File:TipuSultan1790.jpg|Ali's son
Tipu, the Sultan of Mysore File:Indian Mysore Kingdom 1784 map.svg|The Kingdom of Mysore under Tipu
Independent kingdom in a subsidiary alliance After
Tipu's defeat in the
Siege of Srirangapattana during the
Fourth Anglo-Mysore War in 1799, the
British restored the Kingdom to the Wadiyars under a subsidiary alliance that required an annual payment as tribute. The capital was moved back to
Mysore. The four-year-old infant prince
Krishnaraja Wodeyar III, adopted son of the previous ruler
Chamaraja Wadiyar IX, was anointed as the
Maharaja of Mysore. In 1831, on a specious plea of non-payment by Krishnaraja Wodeyar III, the kingdom was placed under
Mysore Commission that lasted from 1831 to 1881.
Mark Cubbon and
L. B. Bowring were among the well-known commissioners of the period. In 1868, upon Krishnaraja Wodeyar III's demise, his five-year-old grandson
Chamaraja Wadiyar X became the heir to the throne. When in 1881 he attained the age of majority, through an act of parliament, the British once again transferred power back to the Wadiyars. The maharaja changed the English spelling of their royal name from Wodeyar to Wadiyar. He established the
Mysore Representative Assembly; the first of its kind in
Princely India. Chamaraja Wadiyar X's son and successor
Krishnaraja Wadiyar IV earned great fame as a saintly king, and his kingdom was hailed as
Ramarajya by
Mahatma Gandhi–as an ideal kingdom comparable to the one ruled by Lord
Rama. Krishnaraja Wadiyar IV's nephew, successor, and the last reigning king of the Wadiyar dynasty,
Jayachamarajendra Wadiyar, ruled from 1940 until 1950. Upon
India's independence from the British crown in 1947, Jayachamarajendra Wadiyar ceded his kingdom to the new provisional
Dominion of India but continued as Maharajah until India became a Republic in 1950. File:Krishnaraja Wadiyar III, Maharaja of Mysore.jpg|Maharaja
Krishnaraja Wadiyar III during his latter years File:Gold pagoda of Krishnaraja Wodeyar.jpg|Golded coins during Krishnaraja Wadiyar III depicting
Shiva holding his attributes of a trident and a deer, with his consort
Parvati seated on his lap. The obverse reads:
Sri Krishnaraja in
Sanskrit File:Chamarajendra Wadiyar X with his children.jpg|Maharaja
Chamaraja Wadiyar X with his children File:Maharajah of Mysore and Princes 1887.jpg|Crown prince Yuvaraja
Krishnaraja Wadiyar IV with two other Indian princes File:Maharani Vani Vilasa with grandson Jayachamarajendra Wadiyar.jpg|Rajamate
Kempananjammanni Devi with grandson and future king
Jayachamarajendra Wadiyar Dissolution of the kingdom Jayachamarajendra Wadiyar became the
rajapramukh of the renamed
Mysore State from 1950 to 1956. After the reorganisation of Indian states on a linguistic basis in 1956, he was appointed
Governor of the integrated Mysore State (present
Karnataka State), a post which he held until 1964. He was then appointed
Governor of Madras (now
Tamil Nadu) for two years. The
Indian Constitution continued to recognise him as the Maharajah of Mysore until 1971, when titles and privy purses of maharajas were abolished by the
Government of India under
Indira Gandhi. The maharajah died in 1974. His only son
Srikantadatta Narasimharaja Wadiyar became the head of the family; he was a
member of the Indian Parliament. Upon Srikantadatta Wadiyar's demise 2013, his widowed wife Devi Pramoda Wadiyar adopted
Yaduveer Wadiyar, who was anointed as the maharaja of Mysore and the head of the family in 2015. File:Jcrw1.jpg|
Jayachamaraja Wadiyar with
Elizabeth II File:Srikanta Wadiyar of Mysore.jpg|
Srikantadatta Wadiyar holding a private
durbar during a
Dasara festival File:Yaduveer Krishnadatta Chamaraja Wadiyar.JPG|
Yaduveer Wadiyar, the present head of the Wadiyar dynasty == Residences ==