Venkateswara Temple, Tirumala – Under
Matli Chiefs
The Matli chiefs were among the most important of the
feudatory dynasties connected with this district. They belonged to the
Devachoda family. They ruled from Matli in Rayachoti Taluk in Kadapa district,
their rule over the eastern half of the Kadapa district comprising parts of
Badvel, Siddhavattam, Kadapa, Pullampet or Rajampot taluks, with the
Anantarajapuram near Rajempet as their capital. They come to the forefront when
the Vijayanagara Empire was at its zenith. They had acquired sufficient status
to enter into matrimonial alliances with the imperial house itself. They stood
firmly by the rulers of the fourth or the Aravidu dynasty and helped to
continue the great traditions of the Vijayanagara Empire in diverse spheres.
The first ancestor of the family was Bommaraja. He had
three sons namely, Somaraja, Timmaraja and Mangaraja. Somaraja had five sons. Of
all these chiefs, Varadaraja, the son-in-law of Sri Krishnadevaraya, functioned
as the virtual ruler. An epigraph at Tirupati (AD 1544) registers his gift of 312
rekhai-pon (gold coins). This was made use of by the Temple Authorities for the
improvements of tanks and channels in the temple villages. The next Matli chief
of importance was Kumara Anantaraja exercised authority over the territory
lying between the hills of Tirupati and Ahobilam.
He was a great scholar, he deeply attached to the Vishistadwaitha
School of Ramanuja but was however, tolerant of other schools of thought. Considerable
light is thrown on the varied achievements of Kumara Ananta in two epigraphs of
(AD 1628) noted on the walls of the Pathala Mandapam at Alipiri. He founded
about a dozen free feeding houses for the benefit of pilgrims proceeding on
foot between Setu and the Himalayas. Tirupati was one among the places where
such a house was established. Tirupati itself, he constructed Gali- gopuram
(the tower on the top of the front hill) on the path way with a flight of
steps.
The other inscriptions at Tirupati reveal that the major
works for which Kumara Ananta was responsible at Tirupati included the big
outer gopuram (tower) of the temple of Govindaraja with seven storeys and the
second gopuram at the foot of the hills called the Kotta Gopuram through which
the pathway to Tirumala runs. His numerous other offerings to the shrine
included a crown set with gems". He made many gifts to the temple at Srikalahasthi
also. Finally, Mijumla marched against his principality and after occupying it
entrusted its administration to Triambaka Sankaraju Pant. With this, the
administration of the Matlis in the district came to an end.
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