TELANGANA ISSUE
By ram_new2006
@ram_new2006 (23)
India
3 responses
@ambience (67)
• Canada
20 Dec 06
No I dont think it is a goodidea to make Telanagana a separate state..Doing this will cause harm to both the halves..the telanaga half and the other half..Development will slow down and there will be fierce competition for everything and politicians willtake people fora ride..In the middle ofallthis ..general public is squashed..making them kind of "na ghar ka na ghat ka"
@justvenkys (1357)
• India
20 Dec 06
I dont think so, if it is given as an other state only kcr willbe benifitted but not the people. To the people to be benifitted u have to provide some funds and give better education and improve theit living conditions
@ramya186 (949)
• India
20 Dec 06
Telangana region has been ruled by many great dynasties like Sathavahanas, Chalukyas, Kakatiyas, Mughals, Qutubshahis and Asafjahis. The Kakathiyas impressions on architecture are found still to this day. The Sathavahanas ruled over Telangana for about 400 years from the 2nd century B.C. to beyond the 2nd century A.D. Sathavahanas were also called Salivahanas and Satakarnis. In the 3rd century B.C., Simukha, the founder of the Sathavahana dynasty, unified the various Andhra principalities into one kingdom and became its ruler. (271 B.C. -- 248 B.C.) Satakarni II, the sixth ruler of the dynasty (184 B.C.) was an able ruler who extended his kingdom to the west. He ruled for a period of 56 years. Pulumavi I brought renewed strength and glory to their kingdom. The only silver lining in this dynasty was the excellent literary work, Gathasaptasati, of Hala, the 17th Satavahana king. Dharmapuri in Karimnagar was the capital city for many years.
Among Kakathiyas, Prataparudra, grandson of Rani Rudramamba Devi was a great ruler who succeeded his grandmother in A.D.1295 and ruled till A.D.1323. He pushed the western border of his kingdom up to Raichur in present day Karnataka. He introduced many administrative and social reforms. He divided the kingdom into 75 Nayakships, which was later adopted and developed by the Vijayanagara Rayas.