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MAD RAS (Chennai) ki, aa name ela vacindooo....


shamsher_007

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18 minutes ago, shamsher_007 said:

MADRAS ni purvam chenna pattanam ani piliche vallu, Tywin baa cheppindi correst, but nenu vinna version konchem different ga undi, entante, english ppl, aa sambar galla athi chestalu chusi u MAd RASCALs ani pilichevallata, danne vaadukalo MADRAS ani rupantharam chendindhi ani  oka talk.

haha.. nijam aa?  thadaka14.gif

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22 minutes ago, Balibabu said:

yw_graphic_story_p_1557230g.jpg 

 

Madras in South India was a port town ideally situated on the Coromandel Coast off the Bay of Bengal.

The city as we know it today started as an English settlement in Fort St. George.

The land was ruled by the Vijayanagaras and they appointed chieftains known as Nayaks who ruled different regions in the province, almost independently.

Damarla Venkatadri Nayaka was the chieftain of the area of present day Chennai when the British East India Company arrived to set up its trade and other commercial activities.

The British, looking for a new settlement along the coast, secured a Grant by Damarla Venkatadri Nayaka giving over to the EIC a three-mile long strip of land in the fishing village of Madrasapatnam.

On August 22, 1639, the deed was signed by EIC’s Francis Day accompanied by his interpreter Beri Thimmappa and superior Andrew Cogan.

In February of 1640, Day and Cogan proceeded to the land to start a new English factory and build a fort as allowed by the Grant which was for a period of two years.

On the expiry of the Grant, a new Grant was issued in 1645 by the new Raja, Sri Rangarayulu, empowering the Company to expand its property by attaching an additional piece of land thus laying the foundation for the expansion of Madras into its present form.

The English fortified their settlement following which the crumbling Portuguese and Dutch settlements joined them.

In 1646, Golkonda forces under Mir Jumla conquered Madras and massacred or sold into slavery much of its Christian inhabitants and their allied Indian communities.

Though in the late 17 century, plague, genocide and racial violence reduced the population dramatically and almost destroyed the town, the city was rebuilt with new English and European settlers.

In 1687, after the fall of Golkonda, the area came under the control of the Mughals, who granted the rights of the EIC in Madras and the city developed and expanded.

The city was subsequently attacked by the French and Hyder Ali, the Sultan of Mysore, in the First Anglo-Mysore War, but the British regained control to fend off further attacks and eventually drove away the French, the Dutch and the Danes.

In the 18 century with the development of a harbour in Madras led the city to become an important centre for trade between India and Europe.

During World War I, Madras was the only Indian city to be bombarded by the German light cruiser SMS Emden.

Post-Independence, Madras became the capital city of the State of Tamil Nadu.

Madras was rechristened in 1998 as Chennai (from Chennapatnam, which was a nearby town named by Damarla Venkatadri Nayaka in honour of his father, Damarla Chennappa Nayakudu) when some other Indian cities were also being renamed.

gp

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30 minutes ago, Balibabu said:

yw_graphic_story_p_1557230g.jpg 

 

Madras in South India was a port town ideally situated on the Coromandel Coast off the Bay of Bengal.

The city as we know it today started as an English settlement in Fort St. George.

The land was ruled by the Vijayanagaras and they appointed chieftains known as Nayaks who ruled different regions in the province, almost independently.

Damarla Venkatadri Nayaka was the chieftain of the area of present day Chennai when the British East India Company arrived to set up its trade and other commercial activities.

The British, looking for a new settlement along the coast, secured a Grant by Damarla Venkatadri Nayaka giving over to the EIC a three-mile long strip of land in the fishing village of Madrasapatnam.

On August 22, 1639, the deed was signed by EIC’s Francis Day accompanied by his interpreter Beri Thimmappa and superior Andrew Cogan.

In February of 1640, Day and Cogan proceeded to the land to start a new English factory and build a fort as allowed by the Grant which was for a period of two years.

On the expiry of the Grant, a new Grant was issued in 1645 by the new Raja, Sri Rangarayulu, empowering the Company to expand its property by attaching an additional piece of land thus laying the foundation for the expansion of Madras into its present form.

The English fortified their settlement following which the crumbling Portuguese and Dutch settlements joined them.

In 1646, Golkonda forces under Mir Jumla conquered Madras and massacred or sold into slavery much of its Christian inhabitants and their allied Indian communities.

Though in the late 17 century, plague, genocide and racial violence reduced the population dramatically and almost destroyed the town, the city was rebuilt with new English and European settlers.

In 1687, after the fall of Golkonda, the area came under the control of the Mughals, who granted the rights of the EIC in Madras and the city developed and expanded.

The city was subsequently attacked by the French and Hyder Ali, the Sultan of Mysore, in the First Anglo-Mysore War, but the British regained control to fend off further attacks and eventually drove away the French, the Dutch and the Danes.

In the 18 century with the development of a harbour in Madras led the city to become an important centre for trade between India and Europe.

During World War I, Madras was the only Indian city to be bombarded by the German light cruiser SMS Emden.

Post-Independence, Madras became the capital city of the State of Tamil Nadu.

Madras was rechristened in 1998 as Chennai (from Chennapatnam, which was a nearby town named by Damarla Venkatadri Nayaka in honour of his father, Damarla Chennappa Nayakudu) when some other Indian cities were also being renamed.

GP man

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1 hour ago, Tywin_Lannister said:


The land in which the city now sits once belonged to the Vijayanagara Empire and its most famous ruler was Sri Krishna Devaraya. Chennai is the shortened neame of what was originally called Chennapattnam, a name given to the area because it was leased out and later ceded to the British by a local chieftan of the Vijayanagara empire named "Damarla Chennapa Nayakudu (Naidu)" of Sri Kalahasti. The chieftan was a Telugu.
 
Chennapattnam literally means "The city of Chennappa". The English name Madras is most widely believed to have been derived from the name of a famous Portugese Church built for Mother Mary "Madre De Deus" (The Mother of God) and dedicated to St. Thomas (Madre De Deus was anglicised to "Madras" by the British). This church is now called "San Thome" and is located in Mylapore, at the southern end of Marina Beach.

Lannister pillalu yela unnaru ba ? 

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7 minutes ago, Tywin_Lannister said:

Dwarf RCT is under trial.

yendhuku ba vaadi mida antha kopam. Accept him for what he is man. 

Shae ni vodileyyi ba, nee manchi kosame chepthunna

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10 minutes ago, mastercheif said:

yendhuku ba vaadi mida antha kopam. Accept him for what he is man. 

Shae ni vodileyyi ba, nee manchi kosame chepthunna

A true man does what he will, not what he must

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1 hour ago, shamsher_007 said:

MADRAS ni purvam chenna pattanam ani piliche vallu, Tywin baa cheppindi correst, but nenu vinna version konchem different ga undi, entante, english ppl, aa sambar galla athi chestalu chusi u MAd RASCALs ani pilichevallata, danne vaadukalo MADRAS ani rupantharam chendindhi ani  oka talk.

lol

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6 hours ago, i_sudigadu said:

lol

ippatiki ade antaru kada man whites, ofc la south indian ante, ohh r u MADRASI ani. 

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