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Vishnuvardhan

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Wiktionary-logo-en-v2 Image: Wikimedia Commons. Dan Polansky based on work currently attributed to Wikimedia Foundation but originally created by Smurrayinchester / CC BY-SA 4.0

Overview

Vishnuvardhan, also rendered as Vishnuvardhana, is an Indian name borne by several historical rulers, modern public figures, and creative works. The name has been used across centuries in different parts of the Indian subcontinent, from early medieval dynasties in the Deccan and Karnataka to contemporary figures in Indian cinema and sport. This article serves as a disambiguation guide to the principal usages of the name.

Key facts

Name Vishnuvardhan / Vishnuvardhana
Type Disambiguation
Domains Indian history, Indian cinema, Indian sport
Regions associated Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Malwa (central India), northern India
Historical span 6th century CE to present

People

Modern figures

  • Vishnuvardhan (actor) – a leading actor in Kannada cinema.
  • Bharathi Vishnuvardhan – an actress in Kannada cinema.
  • Vishnuvardhan (director) – a Tamil film director.
  • Vishnu Vardhan (tennis) – an Indian professional tennis player.

Historical rulers

  • Vishnuvardhan (ruler) – a 6th-century ruler of Malwa in central India, associated with Yasodharman.
  • Vishnuvardhana (Varika king) – a ruler in northern India during the Gupta era.
  • Kubja Vishnuvardhana – a 7th-century monarch and founder of the Eastern Chalukya dynasty.
  • Vishnuvardhana II – a 7th-century monarch of the Eastern Chalukyas.
  • Vishnuvardhana IV – an 8th-century monarch of the Eastern Chalukyas.
  • Vishnuvardhana – a 12th-century king of the Hoysala Empire, in the present-day Indian state of Karnataka.

Films

  • Vishnuvardhana – a 2011 Indian Kannada-language comedy thriller film.

Significance

The recurrence of the name Vishnuvardhan across dynasties such as the Eastern Chalukyas and the Hoysalas reflects its prestige in early medieval South Indian polity, while its continued use in modern Kannada and Tamil cinema and Indian sport indicates its enduring cultural resonance. The name is particularly closely associated with Karnataka, where both the Hoysala king Vishnuvardhana and several twentieth- and twenty-first-century cultural figures bearing the name have been prominent.

References