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  1. Pazhassi, near Mattannur, Kingdom of Kottayam (present-day Kannur district, Kerala, India) Died: 30 November 1805 (aged 52) Mavila Thod, near Pulpally: Burial

  2. Dec 7, 2022 · Template:Keralahistory Pazhassi Raja (IPA: [pɐɻɐʃːi ɾaːd͡ʒɐ]) (3 January 1753 – 30 November 1805) was known as Kerala Varma and was also known as Cotiote Rajah and Pychy Rajah.

  3. The conflict was renewed in 1800 over a dispute on Wayanad and after a five-year-long war of insurgency, Pazhassi Raja was killed on 30 November 1805 in a gunfight at Mavila Thodu (small body of water), in the present-day Kerala-Karnataka border. Oops something went wrong: 403.

  4. Pazhassi Raja (3 January 1753 – 30 November 1805) was known as Kerala Varma and was also known as Cotiote Rajah and Pychy Rajah. He was a warrior Hindu prince and de facto head of the kingdom of Kottayam, otherwise known as Cotiote, in Malabar, India, between 1774 and 1805. His struggles with the British East India Company is known as the Cotiote War. He earned the epithet "Kerala Simham ...

  5. Sep 25, 2020 · Pazhassi Raja's end came close to Karnataka on the shore of a stream named Mavila or Mavila Thod,not far from Pulpally. Raja and party were caught by surprise and an intense but short fight followed.

  6. Pema Tötreng Tsal. Pema Tötreng Tsal (Tib. པད་མ་ཐོད་ཕྲེང་རྩལ་, Wyl. pad ma thod phreng rtsal ), 'Powerful Lotus of the Garland of Skulls', as Khenpo Chemchok explains, "is the secret name of Guru Rinpoche ". So, he adds, "when we call him by this name he cannot help but respond quickly." [1] Guru Rinpoche ...

  7. Sep 27, 2020 · Ramachandran's blog Hamlet in Monsoon on History, Politics, Spirituality and Polemics