Devanahalli Fort
Devanahalli Fort is a historic fortress situated in Devanahalli town, Bangalore Rural district, Karnataka, India, originally erected as a mud fort in 1501 by the chieftain Malla Byre Gowda with the consent of Vijayanagara emperor Devaraya II.[1][2] The structure remained under Gowda's descendants until the mid-18th century, when it was seized in 1749 by Nanjarajaiah, Dalwai of the Kingdom of Mysore, before passing into the control of Hyder Ali, who reconstructed it as a stone citadel to bolster regional defenses.[1][3] Spanning approximately 20 acres in an oval layout oriented eastward, the fort features robust granite walls, twelve semi-circular bastions equipped for artillery, and arched entrances adorned with intricate cut-plasterwork designed to accommodate mounted troops.[1][2] It gained prominence as a military outpost under Hyder Ali and his son Tipu Sultan, who briefly renamed the town Yusufabad, and is traditionally recognized as the site near which Tipu Sultan was born in 1750.[2][3] The fort's strategic role culminated in its capture by British forces under Lord Cornwallis in 1791 during the Third Anglo-Mysore War, marking a pivotal shift in regional power dynamics.[1][3] Today, preserved as a protected monument by the Archaeological Survey of India, it encapsulates layers of architectural evolution from Vijayanagara-era fortifications to Mysore Sultanate enhancements, including internal temples such as the Venugopalaswamy shrine.[3]