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At Present days
Today, the erstwhile Cantonment area of Bangalore comprising Ulsoor, Shivajinagar, Benson Town, Richard’s Town, Frazer Town, Austin Town, Richmond Town, Cox Town, Murphy Town and others still boast a large Tamil populace , .Tamil-speaking people are largely found in the districts of Bengaluru Urban, Bangalore Rural.According to Indian Express news,Out of 1.67 lakh voters in Shivajinagar, 92,000 are Tamil speaking people. .
Largest ethnolinguistic minority in Bangalore city
In 1991, Tamils constituted the largest ethnolinguistic minority in Bangalore city making up 21.38% of the total population. Today, Tamil speakers form an estimated 25-30 percent of the population of Bangalore city. As of 1971, Tamil formed the second-largest mother tongue in Bengaluru .
Southern Karnataka
Tamil-speaking people are largely found in the districts of Bengaluru Urban, Bangalore Rural, Mysore, Mandya, Kolar, Ramanagara and Chamarajanagar in southern Karnataka.In Karnataka, Tamils form 3.46% of the total population of the state. Almost 5 million Tamils live outside Tamil Nadu, inside India. There has been a recorded presence of Tamil-speaking people in Southern Karnataka since the 10th century.
Thigala
The Thigala (or Tigala) are a Tamil social group found in Tamil Nadu and Karnataka, and particularly the city of Bangalore.
Mahabharatha and Bengaluru Karaga
At this time, Draupadi, the Pandava's wife, took the form of Shakthi devi. She created a huge army of soldiers called the Veerakumaras. After defeating the Asura, the soldiers asked Shakthi Devi to stay back with them. Though she had to go back, she promised them that she would come to stay with them every year during the first full moon of the first month of the Hindu calendar
Kempe Gowda
He built the Bangalore fort and the town in 1537 A D. And moved his capital from Yelahanka to the new Bangalore. Some believe that Kempe Gowda, the founder of Bangalore city, was a Vanniyakula Kshatriya from Kanchipuram district.Yelahanka is referred Illaipakka Nadu in the Tamil Incription,10th century Chola temple,Domlur,Banglore.
References
- Tamil area (PDF). p. 5.
- "discoverbangalore".
- "Indian Express". Indian Express.
- "REUTERS". REUTERS. Mon Feb 5, 2007.
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(help) - P. Padmanabha. Census of India, 1971. Manager of Publications. pp. 668–669.
- "censusindia".
- Smriti Srinivas (2004). "The Settlement of Tamil speaking Groups". Landscapes of Urban Memory. Orient Blackswan. pp. 100–102. ISBN 9788125022541.
- People of India. p. 1423.
- Cite error: The named reference
bangaloremirror.com
was invoked but never defined (see the help page). - Landscapes of Urban Memeory: The Sacred and the Civic in India's High-tech City.
- "History of the temple Incription".