Savanur ಸವಣೂರು Savanuru |
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town | |
Location in Karnataka, India | |
Coordinates: 14°58′23″N 75°19′58″E / 14.97306°N 75.33278°ECoordinates: 14°58′23″N 75°19′58″E / 14.97306°N 75.33278°E | |
Country | India |
State | Karnataka |
District | Haveri district |
Area | |
• Total | 5.49 km2 (2.12 sq mi) |
Elevation | 573 m (1,880 ft) |
Population (2001) | |
• Total | 35,563 |
• Density | 6,477.78/km2 (16,777.4/sq mi) |
Languages | |
• Official | Kannada |
Time zone | IST (UTC+5:30) |
PIN | 581 118 |
Telephone code | 08378 |
Vehicle registration | KA-27 |
Website | www |
Savanur is a town and taluk headquarters of Savanur Taluk in Haveri District of Karnataka state, India.
Savanur was one of the princely states of British India, under the Bombay Presidency, and later the Deccan States Agency. Its Muslim rulers, styled “Nawab” descended from Abdul Karim Khan, an Afghan in the service of the Mughal Empire, who received a grant near Delhi in 1672. His successors ruled over extensive territories almost independently for over a century. However, Savanur was located between the increasing power of the Marathas and the equally powerful Nizam of Hyderabad, Hyder Ali and Tipu Sultan, which gradually eroded away Savanur’s territory. By the second half of the eighteenth century, more than half of Savanur had been ceded to the Marathas. By the end of the century, Tipu Sultan had annexed the remainder. With the death of Tipu Sultan in 1799, independence returned to Savanur with about a third of its original territory. Thereafter, Savanur slowly drifted towards British suzerainty. After the destruction of the Maratha Confederacy in 1818, Sanavor accepted protection from British India.
The final ruling Nawab of Savanur, Abdul Majid Khan II, succeeded as a minor at the age of two years, and had been carefully raised and educated by his British overseers. He traveled widely and mixed with people in all walks of life in India and abroad. He returned to assume power determined to modernize his state, engaging in a furious program of building modern schools, dispensaries, government offices, courts, palaces, jails, irrigation tanks, and roads. In the short period of thirty-five years of his active rule, this little state advanced beyond anything achieved in the previous three centuries. The advent of Indian independence in 1947 and the withdrawal of the British caused the Nawab great sadness. Once the transfer formalities were completed, he retired to his private mansion at Dharwad, never setting foot in Savanur again. After his death in 1954, local authorities, out of sincere respect for a distinguished gentleman held in high regard almost universally, buried him in his beloved Savanur.