Page:Haidar Ali and Tipu Sultan.djvu/72

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been validated.
68
HAIDAR ALÍ

in Coorg, owing to the oppressive exactions of the Bráhman officials whom Haidar had appointed to collect the revenue, and whom the people of the country cordially detested. The landholders rose in every direction, and invested Merkára, but Haidar marched a strong force immediately into the province, and suppressed the rebellion with little difficulty, hanging without remorse all its leaders.

In 1776 the young Rájá Chámráj died. Haidar adopted the strange expedient of collecting together all the young scions of the house, and then throwing before them a variety of playthings and ornaments, watched the result. One of the children, named also Chámráj, attracted by the glitter of a jewelled dagger, seized it in one hand and with the other grasped a lime, whereupon Haidar facetiously remarked that that was the real Rájá, and accordingly ordered him to be installed as the future ruler[1].

Haidar's next expedition was to succour the Pálegár of Bellary, on the north-east frontier of Mysore; that chief having renounced his allegiance to Basálat Jang, who despatched a corps under M. Lally to besiege him. Haidar, marching with the extraordinary celerity which distinguished all his movements, reached Bellary in five days. He completely surprised the attacking party, and immediately seized the fort, which was unconditionally surrendered to him, while Lally

  1. This boy was the father of the late Mahárájá Krishnaráj, who, after a long rule of sixty-eight years, died at a venerable age in 1868, having been put on the throne of his ancestors in 1799.