
thumb|Chennakeshava Temple commissioned by Vishnuvardhana, Vesara architecture at Belur thumb|upright|The Hoysaleshwara Temple at Halebidu was financed by Ketamalla and Kesarasetti, rich merchants who dedicated it to King Vishnuvardhana and his queen Shantaladevi thumb|upright|Kappe Chennigaraya Temple built by queen Shantala Devi thumb|upright|Relief of King Vishnuvardhana and queen Shantala Devi, in the Chennakeshava Temple at Belur.
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thumb|Chennakeshava Temple commissioned by Vishnuvardhana, Vesara architecture at Belur thumb|upright|The Hoysaleshwara Temple at Halebidu was financed by Ketamalla and Kesarasetti, rich merchants who dedicated it to King Vishnuvardhana and his queen Shantaladevi thumb|upright|Kappe Chennigaraya Temple built by queen Shantala Devi thumb|upright|Relief of King Vishnuvardhana and queen Shantala Devi, in the Chennakeshava Temple at Belur.
Vishnuvardhana or Bittideva () was a king of the Hoysala Empire in what is today the state of Karnataka, India. He ascended the Hoysala throne after the death of his elder brother Veera Ballala I in 1108. Originally a follower of Jainism and known as Bitti-deva, he is particularly remembered for his military campaigns against the Cholas, who were responsible for the destruction of Jain Basadis (Jain temple complexes) around Talakadu. He led the counter against the Chola's general Adiyamma near Talakadu and recovered lost territory. After this victory the King earned the title "Talakadugonda" and made significant land grants to Jain Basadis at Shravanbelgola and Kambadahalli. According to historian Coelho, the Hoysalas gained the dignity of the kingdom due to the efforts of Vishnuvardhana, whose rule was filled with "glorious" military campaigns. According to historians Sen, Chopra and Sastri, Vishnuvardhana was a "great soldier" and an "ambitious monarch". He later came under the influence of Ramanujacharya, and began supporting Vaishnavism. Ramanujacharya gave him the name "Vishnuvardhana". His queen Shantala Devi and his family however remained devotees of Jainism.
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via Wikidata · CC0
via Wikidata · CC0
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).