Khammam Fort Explained

Khammam Fort
Partof:Stambhadri Hills
Location:Khammam, Telangana, India
Pushpin Map:India Telangana
Pushpin Map Caption:Location in Telangana
Pushpin Label Position:left
Type:Hill Fort
Coordinates:17.245°N 80.1467°W
Builder:Musunuri Nayaks
Materials:Stone, Limestone mortar
Height:867m (2,844feet)
Used:Tourism
Condition:Declared Protected Monument by Archaeological Survey of India in 2005.Mostly Destroyed.
Ownership:Government of India
Open To Public:Yes
Controlledby:

Independent rulers

Occupants:Musunuri Nayaks -

Krishna Deva Raya of Tuluva Dynasty, Shitab Khan -

Qutb Shahi dynasty-

Aurangazeb of the Mughal Empire -

Asaf Jahi Dynasty -

Battles:Musunuri Nayaks, Gurijala Nayaks, Qutub Shahis, Aurangazeb, Sri Krishnadevaraya and Local Rulers
Events:Stambhadri Sambaralu,1000 Year Celebrations of Khammam Khilla

Khammam Fort is a fort in the city of Khammam, Telangana, India constructed by Musunuri Nayaks. It served as an impregnable citadel during various regimes of different dynasties, including the Musunuri Nayaks, Qutb Shahi’s and Asaf Jahis. The fort was situated in a very vast area in the heart of the City of Khammam. It was notified as a protected monument by the Archaeology Department several decades ago. Despite decades of neglect, the historical edifice, which once flourished with regal opulence, presents its alluring charm due to its architectural splendor.

Etymology

The historical records show that the earlier name was "Kambham mettu" or "Stambhadri".[1] "Mettu" means hill or highland in the Telugu language. The name was also anglicised as "Commomet" and "Khammammet".khammam fort is also called as killa

Construction

The Khammam Fort was built by Musunuri Nayaks. Several inscriptions were discovered in the surrounding areas of Khammam and Krishna districts of Musunuri Nayaks. Khammam slowly became an independent territory within the kingdom of Kakatiyas for Musunuri Nayaks. 75 Telugu speaking feudatories of the region under the leadership of Musunuri Nayaks fought for 10 long years to unify the Telugu land and succeeded in repulsing the Delhi Sultanate forces under Malik Maqbul (Khan-e-Jahan Tilangani) out of their country.

Architecture & Significant Features

Culture

This fort appears to be a replicate the cultures of both Hindu and Muslim rulers who ruled this fort city.

The Lakshmi Narasimha swami temple in Brahmin bazar, Sri Ramalingeshwara temple is one of the oldest shivalayam (Shiva temple) are some of the oldest Hindu temples in Telangana and are older than the fort itself.

During the Qutb shahi dynasty, many new places of worship have been constructed in and around the fort such as the Khilla masjid.

Encroachments

The fort, once mighty bastion of royal dynasties, continues to face further encroachment threat due to lack of proper monitoring mechanism. Large settlements occupied the areas in and around the fort due to the lack of proper monitoring of encroachments. Destruction of the granite hill and construction of houses continues till today around the fort area.

Development

Recently Minister for Roads & Buildings Tummala Nageswara Rao has mooted the proposal to set up solar streetlights at the fort well before the next Independence Day celebrations in 2017.[3]

See also

References

http://www.namasthetelangaana.com/TelanganaNews-in-Telugu/khammam-fort-khammam-telangana-tourism-1-15-354124.html

http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/telangana/khammam-fort-heritage-in-peril/article6835132.ece

http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/telangana/historic-khammam-fort-set-to-get-back-its-sheen/article6837735.ece

Notes and References

  1. https://www.telangana.gov.in/about/districts/khammam Khammam
  2. Web site: Khammam Fort: Heritage in peril. 2015-01-29. 2016-07-09.
  3. News: Historic Khammam fort set to get back its sheen. 2015-01-30. The Hindu. en-IN. 0971-751X. 2016-07-09.