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MYSORE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V19, Page 117 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MYSORE  ,

capital of the state of Mysore, India, TO m . S.W. of Seringapatam on the Mysore State railway . Pop . (19or), 68,11x . The city, which is spread over an
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area of about 71 sq. m., has its nucleus at the
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foot of the Chamundi hill, in a valley formed by two parallel ridges
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running north and south . The fort stands in the south of the
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town, forming a quarter by itself; the ground-plan is quadrangular, each of the sides being about 450 yds. long . The old palace of the maharaja within the fort, built in an extravagant style of
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Hindu architecture, was partly destroyed by fire in 1897, whereupon a new palace was built on the same site . The
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principal
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object of
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interest hi the old palace was the
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throne, which is said to have been presented to Chikka Deva Raj by the emperor Aurangzeb . The houses of the
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European residents are for the most
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part to the east of the town . The residency or government house was built in i8o5 . The
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building afterwards used for the
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district offices was originally built by Colonel Wellesley (duke of Wellington) for his own occupation . The domed building for the public offices in Gordon Park, the Maharaja's College, the Victoria Jubilee Institute, and the law courts are conspicuous .

Mysore, though the dynastic capital of the state, was superseded by Seringapatam as the seat of the

court from 1610 to 1799, and in 1831, on the
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British occupation, the seat of administration was removed to
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Bangalore .

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