Hosdurg Fort

{{Short description|Fort in Kanhangad, Kerala, India}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2019}}

File:Hosdurg fort vijayan rajapuram.jpg

Puthiyakotta(which translates to ‘New Fort’), also known by its former name Hosdurg Fort, is a fort in Kanhangad which is part of Kasaragod district in Kerala state.{{Cite web |title=Hosdurg Fort {{!}} Incredible India |url=https://www.incredibleindia.org/content/incredible-india-v2/en/destinations/bekal/hosdurg-fort.html |access-date=2023-07-23 |website=www.incredibleindia.org}} Puthiyakotta with its round bastion looks imposing from a distance. Somashekara Nayaka from the Keladi Nayaka dynasty of Ikkeri built this fort.

The place is made well known by the Nithyanandasram with 45 caves.{{Cite book |url=https://www.google.co.in/books/edition/Kerala_with_Lakshadweep/yJJuAAAAMAAJ |title=Kerala with Lakshadweep |date=2005 |publisher=Outlook Publishing |isbn=978-81-89449-01-8 |page=81 |language=en}} To the south-west of the fort is a temple that was also built by the Nayaks. The temple, dedicated to Shiva, is named the Poonkavanam Karpooreswara Temple.{{Cite web |title=Hosdurg Fort, builty by Ikkeri Nayakas at Kasaragod {{!}} Forts in Malabar districts |url=https://www.keralatourism.org/ |access-date=2025-07-05 |website=www.keralatourism.org |language=en}}

History

Hosdurg Fort, also known as Puthiyakotta ("New Fort") was constructed in the early 18th century by Somashekara Nayaka of the Keladi Nayaka dynasty to consolidate their control over northern Kerala after defeating the Kolathiri chieftains.{{cite web |title=Puthiya Kotta (Hosdurg) |website=Kerala State Archaeology Department |url=https://www.archaeology.kerala.gov.in/pages/puthiya-kotta-hosdurg/192 |access-date=2025-07-05}} The fort’s strategic hilltop location allowed the Nayakas to monitor coastal trade routes and defend against regional rivals. A square watchtower and seven round bastions provided observation and overlapping fields of fire.{{cite web |title=Hosdurg Fort: A Timeless Landmark in Kanhangad, Kerala |website=FlyCNN |url=https://flycnn.com/malabar/malabar-destinations/malabar-forts/hosdurg-fort/ |access-date=2025-07-05}} In 1763, Hyder Ali’s forces overran the region, and later, following his defeat in 1799, the East India Company assumed control, using the fort as a local administrative post until its decline in the mid‑19th century.{{cite web |title=Hosdurg Fort – Tales of the forgotten past |website=Kerala Tourism |url=https://www.keralatourism.org/kerala-article/2020/hosdurg-fort-tales-forgotten-past/1037 |access-date=2025-07-05}}

Architecture

Hosdurg Fort (Puthiyakotta) occupies a low hillock and is constructed almost entirely of finely dressed laterite stones set in lime mortar, characteristic of Keladi Nayaka military works of the 18th century. Its roughly square plan is strengthened at each corner by imposing round bastions that once supported battlements and provided overlapping fields of fire. A massive rectangular watchtower rising from the southeastern rampart and reached by a stone‑hewn ramp commands panoramic views, while broad wall‑walks link the bastions and enabled rapid troop movements around the perimeter. Internally, vestiges of vaulted chambers and stone‑flagged courtyards hint at the fort's dual role as a defensive stronghold and administrative centre under the Keladi Nayakas.{{cite web |title=Hosdurg Fort |website=DTPC Kasaragod |url=https://www.dtpckasaragod.com/destination/hosdurg-fort |access-date=2025-07-05}}

See also

References

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{{Coord|12.309297|N|75.093801|E|source:mlwiki_region:IN_type:landmark|format=dms|display=title}}

{{Tourism in Kerala}}

Category:Forts in Kerala

Category:Buildings and structures in Kasaragod district

Category:Forts of the Keladi Nayaka Dynasty