-
Kengal Hanumanthaiah (14
February 1908 – 1
December 1980), also
spelt as
Kengal Hanumanthaiya, was the
second Chief Minister of
Karnataka (then, Mysore...
- the
observation of wildlife. It is also an
Aboriginal sacred site,
called Kengal. The Rock Post
Office opened on 1
September 1890.
Prior to 1919, the town...
-
Kengal Shreepada Renu (born 8
November 1958) is an
Indian politician. He is the
grandson of
Kengal Hanumanthaiah, the most
revered politician in Karnataka...
-
Kengal Hanumanthaiah Ministry was the
Council of
Ministers in Mysore, a
state in
South India headed by
Kengal Hanumanthaiah of the
Indian National Congress...
-
administered the oath of
office to the
members (including the then
Chief Minister Kengal Hanumanthaiah), and then
conducted an
election to the post of speaker, which...
- of
India under Jawaharlal Nehru in 1963-64.
Later former Chief Minister Kengal Hanumanthiah won this
constituency three consecutive times. Post Emergency...
- The
Kengal Hanumanthaiya Memorial Trust is a non-profit
Charitable Trust that is
dedicated to the
ideals of
Kengal Hanumanthaiya, the
first elected Chief...
-
Hotel Management, the Dr. T.
Thimmaiah Institute of Technology, and the Sri
Kengal Hanumanthaiya Law College, Don
Bosco Technical Institute. The
famous Tamil-language...
- Diwakar,
Koujalgi Srinivasarao,
Srinivas Rao Mangalvedhe, A. J. Doddameti,
Kengal Hanumanthaiah,
Gorur Ramaswamy Iyengar, S Nijalingappa, T Mariyappa, Subramanya...
- from the
Ramanjaneya Temple near the
Kengal Hanumanthaiah Kalaa Soudha,
which was
built during the time of
Kengal Hanumanthaiah, the then
chief minister...