History of Sulthan Bathery, which Kerala BJP chief wants renamed as Ganapathyvattam
- April 12, 2024
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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History of Sulthan Bathery, which Kerala BJP chief wants renamed as Ganapathyvattam
Subject: History
Section: Modern India
Context:
- Sulthan Bathery, a municipal town in Wayanad, the Lok Sabha constituency of Rahul Gandhi, is home to a temple that was partly destroyed by Tipu Sultan and used as a store for arms.
More on news:
- The name Sulthan Bathery emerged as part of [Tipu Sultan’s] invasion.
Where does the name Ganapathyvattam come from?
- Sulthan Bathery, one of the three municipal towns in Wayanad (the other two are Mananthavady and Kalpetta), has a stone temple that was once known as Ganapathyvattam.
- The temple, built in the prevalent architectural style of the Vijayanagar dynasty, was constructed by Jains who migrated to Wayanad from areas in present-day Tamil Nadu and Karnataka in the 13th century.
- The temple was partly destroyed during the invasions of Tipu Sultan, the ruler of Mysore in the second half of the 18th century.
- Between 1750 and 1790, today’s northern Kerala was invaded several times by the rulers of Mysore, Hyder Ali and his son Tipu.
- It remained abandoned for nearly 150 years.
- Later, it was taken over by the Archaeological Survey of India, which declared it as a monument of national importance.
Geography of Sultan Bathery:
- Sultan Bathery is a town in the mountainous Wayanad region of Kerala, South India.
- It takes its name from the ancient Bathery Jain Temple on the edge of town, which was used as an ammunition battery by Tipu Sultan’s army in the 1700s.
- In the Ambukuthi Hills to the southwest, Neolithic carvings are preserved on the walls of Edakkal Caves.
What is the history of “Sultan Bathery”?
- The armies of Tipu destroyed temples and churches, and forced many in the path of the invasion to flee in order to escape forced religious conversion.
- Tipu Sultan used the Maha Ganapathy temple in Sulthan Bathery as a battery or store for weapons for his army in the Malabar region (today’s North Kerala, including Wayanad).
- This led to the British recording Ganapathi Vattam as “[Tipu] Sultan’s Battery”, and the name survived as Sulthan Bathery.