Nelakondapalli Mandal
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Nelakondapally, also referred to as Nelakondapalli or Nela Kondapalli, is a town and headquarters of a
mandal A tehsil (, also known as tahsil, taluka, or taluk) is a local unit of administrative division in some countries of South Asia. It is a subdistrict of the area within a district including the designated populated place that serves as its administr ...
in Khammam district, Telangana, India. It is also an archaeological site important to early Buddhism and Hinduism, where excavations have discovered a major stupa site near an ancient manmade lake, another site where Buddhist and Hindu artwork were carved in pre-3rd century India, both sites also yielding hundreds of ancient rare coins with Shaiva and Vaishnava inscriptions from the dynasties of
Andhra Ikshvakus The Ikshvaku ( IAST: Ikṣvāku) dynasty ruled in the eastern Krishna River valley of India, from their capital at Vijayapuri (modern Nagarjunakonda in Andhra Pradesh) during approximately 3rd and 4th centuries CE. The Ikshvakus are also kn ...
and Vishnukundinas. Nelakondapally is also the birthplace of Bhakta Ramadasu.V.V. Krishna Sastry (1990), Recent Trends in Archaeology of Andhra Pradesh, Proceedings of the Indian History Congress, Vol. 51, pp. 771-772,


Location

Nelakondapalli is located 21 kilometers southwest of Khammam, 58 km east-southeast of
Suryapet Suryapet is a city in the Indian state of Telangana. It is a municipality and the headquarters of its eponymous district. The Government of India announced Suryapet to be developed under the Atal Mission for Rejuvenation and Urban Transformat ...
and close to the Telangana–Andhra Pradesh border. It is connected to the Indian national highway grid with NH365A, the link between Khammam to Kodad and
Kusumanchi Kusumanchi is a village in Khammam district of Telangana Telangana (; , ) is a state in India situated on the south-central stretch of the Indian peninsula on the high Deccan Plateau. It is the eleventh-largest state and the twelfth-most ...
. Nelakondapalli is not to be confused with Kondapalli, another different ancient town in the Deccan region. Historic Telugu and Sanskrit inscriptions mention Kondapalli, where the context clarifies whether they refer to Nelakondapalli or the other Kondapalli located over a hill and was once a hill-fort. In contrast,''Nela'' means land and Nelakondapalli was linked to major Deccan cities on one of the ancient trade roads connecting north, east and south India.PV Parabrahma Sastry (1995), ''Nelakondapalli'', Journal of The Andhra Historical Research Society, Volume XXXIX, Archaeology and Museums: Government of Andhra Pradesh, pages 13–15


History

Nelakondapalli was a major town in ancient history. This is evidenced by one of the largest Buddhist stupas discovered in the Deccan (''Dakhina'', ''Dakhinapatha'') region about 2 kilometers northeast of the contemporary village location, along with Satavahana era sites scattered around the village. Situated midst the farm fields and next to a large ancient manmade lake, this maha-stupa (mahachaitya) is co-located with brick lined vihara complex, wells,
cistern A cistern (Middle English ', from Latin ', from ', "box", from Greek ', "basket") is a waterproof receptacle for holding liquids, usually water. Cisterns are often built to catch and store rainwater. Cisterns are distinguished from wells by t ...
s. Near this site, archaeological excavations have also unearthed terracotta figurines, hundreds of coins from early Hindu dynasties, a bronze idol of Buddha and a small model ''
stupa A stupa ( sa, स्तूप, lit=heap, ) is a mound-like or hemispherical structure containing relics (such as ''śarīra'' – typically the remains of Buddhist monks or nuns) that is used as a place of meditation. In Buddhism, circumamb ...
'' carved in limestone. In addition to Buddhist artwork, inscriptions stones and inscribed articles from 5th to 12th-centuries have been discovered in Nelakondapalli suggesting that the site remained active and historically important to Telugu culture through the Western Chalukya, Eastern Chalukya of Vengi, and Kakatiya eras. Its importance is confirmed by literary references in Telugu and Sanskrit texts as ''(Nela)kondapalli-300'' or ''Kondapalli-300 Panugallu''. Kakatiya era inscriptions state that the local Recherla Reddi rulers made gifts to goddess temples here in the 12th century. Another inscription called the ''Nelakondapalli inscription of Krishnadevaraya'' is dated to the Vijayanagara Empire era, attesting to Nelakondapalli in the early 16th century. Most of the historic Buddhist and Hindu structures were missing by the 19th-century, including the Hindu temples mentioned in various inscriptions. A survey commissioned by the Nizam of Hyderabad in 1934 reported scattered temple ruins and a beheaded Nandi in Nelakondapalli. Archaeological excavations began after local farmers reported finding buried reliefs and statues. This initiative began in the 1970s and were completed in stages through the 1990s. The Nelakondapalli village is the birthplace of Bhakta Ramadasa who helped established the major Rama temple in Bhadrachalam, where textual records refer to Nelankondapally as Bhugiri.R.V.V. Durga Prasad and C. Chandramouli (2014), Census of India 2011 ANDHRA PRADESH: DISTRICT CENSUS HANDBOOK KHAMMAM, Series-29, Part XII-A, Government of India, pages 144–147, 166


Buddhist archaeological site

About 2 kilometers northeast of Nelakondapalli village is a large ancient manmade lake. Along it, midst the farms, are three sites locally known as Viratrajgadde, Erradibba and Byragulagutta. In the 1970s, the villagers accidentally stumbled upon portions of limestone panels and broken parts of a Buddha statue. They reported their findings to the state archaeological department – then under Andhra Pradesh, now Telangana. The state archaeology department undertook excavations between 1976 and 1985, over several seasons given the state's budget constraints. These excavations uncovered one of the largest stupas (54 feet high, 84 feet inner diameter, 138 feet outer diameter) with a ring and spoke architecture. The entire site is about 200 meters by 200 meters, includes brick lined foundation of east-west and north-south oriented vihara complexes. The unearthed foundation were in two layers, the older layer below the upper layer, likely a repair and reconstruction in a later century. In addition to the foundation, numerous coins, panels, statue parts, figurines, and wares were found in the upper strata from Ikshvaku and Vishnukundin era, similar to those found in many other parts of India. These findings suggest that the Nellakondapalli Buddhist site was likely a monastery on a trade route, likely in existence before the 1st century CE according to some scholars, and active till at least the 4th to 5th century.V.V. Krishna Sastry (1990), Annual Report Of The Dept Of Archaeology and Museums 1986-87, Andhra Pradesh Government, Hyderabad, pages 26–27 One of the inscribed votive stupa discovered during these excavations is dated by Himanshu Prabha Ray between the 3rd to 4th-century CE. According to Ray, the site should be dated to a bit later era based on the epigraphical evidence and the fact that ancient coins tended to remain in circulation for an extended periods of time. The Nelakondapalli site, states Ray, is of historic significance, and was one of many located along the trans-peninsular trade route of ancient Greater India, connecting the Krishna river valley to other parts of the Indian subcontinent. The other sites that traders and monks likely frequented via Nelakondapalli were Kondapur, Dhulikatta on their way to Ter and Paithan.


Satavahana site

Additional though limited excavations in and around Nelakondapalli has unearthed wares, coins, brick foundations, and similar evidence of a much larger ancient town where Buddhist and Hindu panels and artwork were produced. The discovery of hundreds of Satavahana coins which are commonly found in Deccan sites and of Ikshavaku coins that are rare in Telangana – southwestern parts of Nalgonda district being only other site – attests to Nelakondapallu's importance to the regional trade networks, economy and its ancient prosperity. Most of the major discoveries from the Nelakondapalli site have been relocated. A few inscribed pillars and broken parts are now in the modern era Hindu temples and a small village library. Larger, more sophisticated, and damaged Buddhist and Hindu statues and artworks from Nelakondapallii were moved to Vijayawada museum and other locations, though since the early 1990s, the regional tourism departments have printed marketing brochures showing Nelakondapalli site with Buddhist and Hindu artifacts.


Temples

There are several Hindu temples in the village, one mosque and one denominational church.


Bhaktha Ramadas

Nelakondapalli was the birthplace of 17th-century
Kancharla Gopanna Kancharla Gopanna ( te, కంచర్ల గోపన్న) ( – 1688), popularly known as Bhakta Ramadasu or Bhadrachala Ramadasu ( te, భద్రాచల రామదాసు), was a 17th-century devotee of the Hindu god Rama, a sain ...
, popularly known as '' Bhakta Ramadas''. He was the builder of the ''Sree Seetha Ramachandra Swamy'' temple at Bhadrachalam, one dedicated to Sita and Rama of the epic ''Ramayana'' fame. He was cherished by the Hindus of his time, and punished by the then Muslim officials. He was accused of misappropriation of revenue he collected in order to build the major Rama temple, instead of depositing it to the treasury of the Sultanate. He was then arrested under the orders of the Sultan of Golconda Abul Hasan Qutb Shah (Tana Shah, Tanishah). He served several years in Golconda Sultanate prison, where the Hindu god Rama appeared in a dream per a local legend. Gopanna was released from the prison when someone donated the disputed amount to the Sultan. Gopanna's contributions to Bhadrachalam and the regional Hindu community is commemorated every year in a festival at Nelakondapalli and Bhadrachalam as ''Bhakta Ramadasa Utsavalu''.


Educational institutions

* Ushodaya Vidyalayam * Vikas High School * Goutham concept school * Gouthami Junior college * Vasundhara Vocational Junior College * Govt Degree College, Nelakondapalli * Sri Chaitanya Junior College


Popular culture

Nelakondapalli is featured in the Telugu movie Rajanna, the character "Rajanna" played by Nagarjuna hails from this place.


References


External links


God, Trade and Worship: A Glimpse into the Religion of Early Āndhradeśa
P. Krishna Mohan Reddy (1998) {{Cities and towns in Khammam district Cities and towns in Khammam district Tourist attractions in Khammam district