Thursday, 11 February 2016

Jnanapeeta award winners ( Kannada )

Jnanapita Award Winners from Karnataka

Jnanpith, the country’s highest literary award was instituted in 1965. Karnataka has won the maximum number of awards till to date, With 36 years of history of this award Kannada bagged seven of them with an average of one in 5 years. Even after present rule, if a language gets the award it is not eligible to get next three years. Kannada literature, which one of the oldest, Indian languages is very much enriched by these icons, whose writings over a range of genres translated into several Indian languages and foreign languages, provide the Kannada world with their fabulous feast of writings.

















Chandrashekara Kambara




KUVEMPU



Kuppalli Venkatappa Puttappa

Kuppalli Venkatappa Puttappa (Kuvempu), the first ever inner of the Jnanpith award from Karnataka,was born on December 29, 1904, in Hirekodige and brought up in Kuppalli, both villages in Shimoga district. He came to Mysore for his school education and joined Maharaja's College for his B.A. degree. He got his M.A. in Kannada in 1929 and started his career as a lecturer in Kannada at Maharaja's College in the same year. He then became a professor and a principal, and retired as the Vice-chancellor of the University of Mysore.

He strode the world of modern Kannada literature like a colossus, starting a whole new school of thought in poetic tradition and bringing unprecedented glory to Kannada in the linguistic and literary sphere of India. His creativity took Kannada poetry to a new peak and immortalized him in the hearts and minds of generations of poets to come, and he brought a new sense of pride to the Kannada-speaking masses at large.

Kuvempu was highly prolific as a poet and produced over 30 major collections of poems in a period spanning five decades. But his creative intellect also expressed itself brilliantly in his various plays, novels and critiques. He also created significant children's literature and translations. Honours and awards 'sought' Kuvempu unceasingly. He chaired the 1957 Kannada Sahitya Sammelana at Dharwad and was conferred honorary D.Litt. by the University of Mysore and by the Karnataka, Bangalore and Gulbarga universities, Padmavibhushana by the Govt. of India and the 'Rashtrakavi' title by the Govt. of Mysore. He won the Central Sahitya Academy award in 1955 (for his epic Ramayana Darshanam), the very first Pampa award in 1988 of Karnataka and of course, the ultimate recognition of literary work in India-the Jnanpith award-for his magnum opus Ramayana Darshanam in 1969. Having lived the life of a true Vishwa Manava-the world citizen conceived and propounded by him-for 9 fulfilling decades, he passed away in 1994. His ever lasting contribution to Kannadiga's is our Nada Gete, "Jaya Bharata Jananiya Tanujaate".

D.R. BENDRE

Dattatreya Ramachandra Bendre

Dattatreya Ramachandra Bendre, the second Jnanpith award recipient from Karnataka, was born on Jan 31, 1896, in Dharwad. Having lost his father at a very young age, Bendre grew up under the guardianship of his uncle and completed his B.A. at the famous Fergusson College in Pune. He got his M.A. in 1934 and worked as a teacher in different schools in different areas. His poem Narabali (Human Sacrifice) got him 3 years' imprisonment at the Hindalga jail, after which he remained unemployed for more than 5 years. He then joined Masti's monthly journal Jeevana as its honorary editor and went on to work in several more schools and colleges before joining the D.A.V. College of Sholapur as professor of Kannada. He remained in this position for 12 years till his superannuation at age 60. But, even after retirement, he continued to work in several places and his was indeed a highly chequered career which exposed him to untold hardships in family life. But, amidst it all, his poetic genius never failed to flower and in fact, his adversities proved to be an ever-lasting source of inspiration and philosophy for his unique brand of poetry.

Bendre composed close to 30 collections of poems, but also produced many memorable plays, short stories, critiques and translations, and he wrote in Marathi too. Bendre's outstanding contributions to literature were recognized in various forms and on various forums. He was elected the President of the 27th Kannada Sahitya Sammelana of Shimoga in 1943; awarded honorary doctorate by the University of Mysore and the Karnataka University; elected Fellow of the Central Sahitya Academy in 1969; honored with the Central Sahitya academy’s award for his poem “Aralu Maralu” and awarded the supreme literary prize of Jnanpith in 1974 for his anthology of poems Naku Thanthi . Word wizard Bendre passed away on October 26, 1986, after playing a historical role in keeping the rich traditions of Kannada poetry alive for over 5 decades. Dr. Vaman Bendre, a renowned poet, critic and translator of Kannada and Marathi literature and son of D.R. Bendre, has authored a biography of his father titled Bendre Jeevana Parichaya.

SHIVARAM KARANTH


Shivaram Karanth

Kota Shivaram Karanth, the third Jnanpith award recipient from Karnataka, was born on October 10, 1902, at Kota in Dakshina Kannada district. He had his primary education in Kundapur and his college education at the Government College, Mangalore. The vastness and variety of Karanth's life and works defy any definition. Novels, short stories, plays, encyclopedias, translations, satires, travelogues, essays, biographies, critiques, works on folklore, art and sculpture, philosophy and science no sphere of knowledge and no form of literature was alien to his creativity.

Indeed, none else could have deserved so briquettes such as "Mobile Encyclopedia" and "Bhargava of the Coast" more richly than Karanth. He shunned the beaten track and set his own path in an uncompromising pursuit of truth, based on constant experimentation and exploration. He believed in the plentitude of life and wanted people to experience every aspect of it and share such experiences with others. This was why he did not find any branch of knowledge too big or too small per se, for his cultivation. In fact, he found these branches to be different paths to explore the same truth, and was himself very familiar with every one of them. For Karanth, life was never different from writing and his rich life easily and effectively translated into equally rich literature.

MASTI VENKATESHA IYENGAR


Masti Venkatesha Iyengar

Masti Venkatesha Iyengar, Karnataka's fourth recipient of the prestigious Jnanpith award was one of the tradition-makers of Kannada literature. He was born on June 6, 1891, in Masti village of Kolar district. By the sheer strength of his intelligence and industry, Masti built a distinguished academic career for himself, passing the MCS examination in 1913 and securing M.A. in 1914. As a civil servant, he held various positions of high responsibility in different parts of Karnataka, before retiring voluntarily in 1943. His long and diverse career of 3 decades was marked by total dedication to public service and exceptional administrative ability. And his wealth of experience as a bureaucrat gave immense inspiration for his literary works. His pseudonym Srinivasa is as popular as his native village Masti, in Kannada literary circles today. Masti, in fact, started composing stories right in his student days. His first published work 'Kelavu Sanna Kathegalu' became the first noted work in the history of modern Kannada short stories. A master story-teller, Masti had a unique relationship with this genre of literature and was therefore aptly called the "Brahma of Kannada Stories", "Forefather of Short Stories". His works carry the best elements of literature in story form and with their inimitable language, narrative style and richness of theme and realities, powerfully relate to the readers. His story Subbanna, based on the life of a musician is a good example of this and it has been translated into several Indian and foreign languages. Channabasava Nayaka and Chikkaveera Rajendra, both historical novels, are the best examples of the fertility of Masti's literary gifts. Masti also penned quite a number of poems on different philosophic, aesthetic and social themes which give us an insight into his versatile creative personality. He also composed and translated several important plays and authored several works in English, wrote biographies-including the 3-volume autobiography 'Bhava' and edited the monthly journal 'Jeevana' from 1944 - 1965 which was a memorable era in Kannada journalism.

In terms of quality, quantity, depth and diversity Masti's works present a true challenge to any researcher. He has written more than 120 books in Kannada and more than 17 books in English, over a period of 7 decades, giving abundant inspiration to generations of literary talents in Kannada. Masti's output naturally attracted fellowships, awards, doctorates, presidentships and honors and recognition in numerous other forms.

The most notable of them were, of course, the Jnanpith award which came to him in 1983, in recognition of his historical novel Chikkaveera Rajendra as an important literary work of post-Independent India. After leading an exemplary and complete life in which he succeeded in placing Kannada brilliantly on the literary atlas of India, Masti passed away in 1986 at the age of 95.

V.K. GOKAK


Vinayaka Krishna Gokak

Vinayaka Krishna Gokak, the fifth person to win the Jnanpith award from Karnataka, was born on August 9, 1909. He had his primary and high school education in Savanur, got his B.A. in 1929 and M.A. in 1931. In 1931, he began his professional career as an Assistant Professor in Fergusson College, Pune and became the principal of D.E.Society's Willington College, Sangli, after finishing his advanced studies with distinction, at Oxford, in 1936. But, soon he gave up his principalship following an incident that hurt his self-esteem, and the resultant unemployment set him on a path of serious introspection. In 1946, he went to Rajasthan and set up a college in its desert region and in 1949, with the reorganization of Indian states, his services in Rajasthan got transferred to the Government of Bombay and he became the principal of Karnataka College, Kolhapur, in 1952. He steadily grew in his academic career there on, and attained a peak with his appointment as the Vice-chancellor of the Bangalore University in 1966.

The main phase of his literary career and his life itself began in 1925 when he was swayed by the magnetic force of the towering figure of Kannada poetry D.R.Bendre, like many other young poets of his time. Seeing his knowledge of English literature, and his talents in English poetry, Bendre prophesied "if Gokak allows his talents to blossom in Kannada, his own poetry as well as Kannada will have a great future." Thus with Bendre as his Kavya Guru, Gokak embarked upon a unique career in the world of Kannada letters, a career in which he made unparalleled contributions to poetry (including composition of the epic Bharatha Sindhurashmi), drama, criticism and various other forms of literature, apart from producing many scholarly works in English.

The literary distinction of Gokak naturally attracted scores of awards and honors. Of these, mention must be made of his Presidentship of the 40th Kannada Sahitya Sammelana in 1958, honorary doctorates from the Karnataka University and the Pacific University of the USA, the 1961 Central Sahitya Academy award for his 'Dyava Prithivi' and of course, the highest award for literary excellence in India-the Jnanpith award-for his monumental contributions to Kannada literature, in 1990.

Gokak saw not only peaks of glory but also a peculiar complexity of happiness and sorrow at many turning points of his life, a complexity that became a characteristic mark of all his works. He passed away on April 28, 1992.

U.R. ANANTHA MURTHY


U.R. Anantha Murthy

Born in 1932, at Melige, a remote Village in Tirthahalli Taluk, in Shimoga District. Dr. Udupi Rajagopala Acharya Anantha Murthy had his early Sanskrit education in a traditional Patashala. He completed his graduation and Post-graduation from the University of Mysore in 1956. Later in 1966 he earned a PhD (English & Comparative Literature) from the University of Birmingham, U.K. He began his career as a Lecturer in English in 1956 & continued till 1963. During the period from 1970-80 he served as the Reader in English at Mysore University. He has served as a visiting Professor at a number of foreign and Indian universities. During the period 1987 to 1990 he served as the Vice-Chancellor of Mahatma Gandhi University, Kottayam. Besides, he has also served as the Chairman of the National Book Trust of India at Delhi in 1992-93, Indian Institute of Social Sciences in 1998 and The Film and Television Institute of India at Pune in 2002. He was the President of the Sahitya Academy from 1993 to 1998.

He has been the winner of a number of awards both from the Government and also Academies for his invaluable contributions in different fields. Notable are the 'Jnanapeeta Award won in 1994 and the Padma Bhushana in 1998. Besides these, the other important awards are the Literary Distinction, awarded by the Government of Karnataka in 1984. Karnataka Sahitya Academy In conferred the Fiction Award and Award for Literary Achievement, the year 1983 & 1984 respectively. He won the Masti Award in Literature in the year 1994. He is also the winner of the Ganakrishti Award for Literary distinction, Kolkatta for the year 2002. Besides these awards mentioned above he has been the winner of a number of awards from the, Karnataka Film Development Corporation for best stories like Samskara, Ghatashradda, Bara etc., at different periods. Seminars, Lectures, Tours. Since 1974 to this present day he has undertaken innumerable tours, attended thousands of Seminars and has given a number of lectures on various topics.

His lectures were on varied topics such as on politics, culture, literature, Art and a number of other present day issues. In Kannada Literature Mr. Murthy's works can be classified into stories, poems, novels and essays. His works like Endendu Mugiyada Kathe (1955) Mauni, (1967), Prashne (1962), Akasha Mattu Bekku (1983), Mooru Dasakada Kathegalu (collected stories), 1989, Suryana Kudure (1995), Aidu Dashakada Kathegalu, (Collected Stories) 2001 are stories. His poems like Mithuna (1992), Ajjana Hegala Sukkugalu (1989), 15 Padyagalu (1967), Eeevareginal Kavithegalu (collected poems) 2001, Eeevareginal Kavithegalu (collected poems) 2001 are famous. His novels include Samskara, (1965) which has been translated into English, Russian, French, Hungarian, German, Swedish, Hindi, Bengali, Malayalam, Marathi, Urdu,Tamil and Gujerati, Bharathipura (1974), Divya (2001) and others.

Mr. Murthy's contribution to English language is no way less compared to Kannada. Many of his works in Kannada have been translated to English by different authors. For instance, 'Initiation' is a Kannada story translated by Gary Wills, 'Avasthe' a novel, translated by Shanthinath Desai, 'Bhava', & 'Twenty Vacanas from Sunya Sampadane' is a set of twenty poems translated from Kannnada by Judith Kroll, 'Bharathipura' a novel has been translated by P. Srinivasa Rao.

GIRISH KARNAD


Girish Karnad

Girish Karnad, the seventh and latest Jnanpith award winner from Karnataka, was born in Maharashtra on May 19, 1938. He got his bachelor's degree from the Karnataka University in 1958 and then proceeded on a fellowship to study at Oxford where he secured his M.A. degree in 1963.

Karnad is internationally known as a playwright, but is also a highly talented film-maker, a versatile actor, an able cultural administrator, a noted communicator and a person of wide accomplishments and interests. Based on his serious explorations of folklore, mythology and history, the subject of his plays reflect the problems and challenges of contemporary life, and endeavor to forge a link between the past and the present. The creative intellectual that he is, he obviously views the subjects of his plays from his own perspective, develops them in the crucible of his own imagination and personal experiences, and employs them as a medium to communicate his own-independent and original-feelings, thoughts and interpretations.

Karnad's play Hayavadana won the Central Sangeeth Natak Academy award and the Kamaladevi Chattopadhyaya award in 1978. In 1993, his play Nagamandala was premiered in Minneapolis in the USA. It was later staged, and became widely popular, across the world. His other famous works (in Kannada) are Yayati, Tughalak, Anjumallige, Hittina Hunja, Taledanda, Agni mathu Male and Tippuvina Kannasugalu. He has translated his plays from Kannada into English and Tughalak into German and Hungarian as well.

As for films, Karnad has been director, actor and screenplay writer for many famous Kannada movies including Samskara, Vamsha Vriksha, Kadu and Kanooru Heggadithi, and several Hindi movies. Samskara won the best film award, Vamsha Vriksha got national and state awards and many of his films have won medals and awards. He has also made a number of documentaries and tele-serials.

Karnad has also served as director of the Film and Television Institute of India and Chairman of the Central Sangeeth Natak Academy and the National Academy of Performing Arts. He was a visiting professor at the University of Chicago in 1987-88 and as an intellectual, has presented his thought-provoking views and ideas on culture and allied topics on many national and international forums. He has always taken a leading part in movements and crusades concerning social and cultural.


Chandrashekhara Kambara


Chandrashekhara Kambara (born January 2, 1937) is a prominent poet, playwright, folklorist, film director in Kannada language and the founder-vice-chancellor of Kannada University in Hampi. He is known for his effective usage of North Karnataka dialect of Kannada language in his plays and poems and is often compared with D.R. Bendre.

Dr. Kambara's plays mainly revolves around folk or mythology interlinked with contemporary issues, inculcating modern lifestyle with his hard-hitting poems and has became a pioneer of such literature. His contribution as a playwright is significant not only to Kannada theatre but also to the Indian theatre in general as he achieved a blend of the folk and the modern theatrical forms.

He has been conferred with many prestigious awards including the Jnanpith Award in 2011 for the year 2010, Sahitya Akademi Award, the Padma Shri by Government of India, Kabir Samman, Kalidas Samman and Pampa Award. After his retirement, Kambara was nominated Member of Karnataka Legislative Council, to which he made significant contributions through his interventions.

kannada Jnanapeeta award winners


Dams in Karnataka

The Hemavathi is a river in Karnataka, an important tributary of river Kaveri.
The Hemavathi River starts in the Western Ghats at an elevation of about 1,219 metres  near Ballala rayana durga in the Chikmagalur District of the state of Karnataka, in southern India. It flows through Tumkur, Hassan District where it is joined by its chief tributary, the Yagachi River, and then into Mysore district before joining the Kaveri near Krishnarajasagara. It is approximately 245 km long and has a drainage area of about 5,410 km².
Hemavati Dam and Reservoir
Hemavathy Dam is constructed across the river Hemavathy, an important tributary of the river Kaveri. The dam is located in Gorur, near the city of Hassan in Karnataka. Built in 1979, the reservoir has been serving multiple purposes of providing water supply for drinking and other purposes and for irrigation of the agricultural land of the nearby villages. The dam is 58 meters in height, and 4692 meters long, impounding a reservoir of 8502 hectares 
The Shettihalli Rosary Church, which was submerged during the construction of the dam can be seen only when the dam height is low during the summer months. The church was constructed by French Missionaries in the 1860s, and has a mighty and magnificent structure in the Gothic Architecture. In 1960, when the government decided to build the dam, the church was abandoned. When the water level is low, sometimes coracles are used to go inside the church. 
Hemavathy Dam is a large reservoir covering a catchment area of 2,810 sq km. With a length of 4,692 meters and a height of 58.5 meters the reservoir has gross storage capacity of 1,050.63 mcm. The reservoir has 6 large radial spillway gates.



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The Tungabhadra Dam is constructed across the Tungabhadra River, a tributary of the Krishna river. The dam is near the town of Hospet in Karnataka. It is a multipurpose dam serving irrigation, electricity generation, flood control, etc. This is a joint project of erstwhile Hyderabad state and erstwhile Madras Presidency when the construction was started; later it became a joint project of Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh after its completion in 1953. The main architect of the dam was Dr Thirumala Iyengar, an engineer from Madras.
The dam creates the biggest reservoir on the Tungabhadra River with 101 tmcft of gross storage capacity at full reservoir level (FRL) 498 m MSL, and a water spread area of 378 square kilometres. The dam is 49.39 meters high above its deepest foundation. The left canals emanating from the reservoir supplies water for irrigation entirely in Karnataka state. Two right bank canals are constructed — one at low level and the other at high level serving irrigation in Karnataka and Rayalaseema region of Andhra Pradesh. Hydropower units are installed on canal drops. The reservoir water is used to supply water to downstream barrages Rajolibanda and Sunkesula located on the Tungabhadra River. The identified water use from the project is 220 tmcft by the Krishna Water Disputes Tribunal. Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh got 151 tmcft and 79 tmcft water use entitlement respectively.
The Almatti Dam (ಆಲಮಟ್ಟಿ ಅಣೆಕಟ್ಟು) is a hydroelectric project on the Krishna River in North Karnataka, which was completed in July 2005. The target annual electric output of the dam is 560 MU (or GWh).
The Almatti Dam is the main reservoir of the Upper Krishna Irrigation Project. The 290 MW power station is located on the right side of the Almatti Dam. The facility uses vertical kaplan turbines five 55MW generators and one 15MW generator. Water is released in to the Narayanpur reservoir after using for power generation to serve the downstream irrigation needs.
During the initial stages of the project, estimated costs were projected as Rs.14.70 billion, but following the transfer of project's management to the Karnataka Power Corporation Limited (KPCL), the estimated cost was reduced by over fifty percent to Rs. 6.74 billion. The KPCL eventually completed the project at an even lower cost of Rs. 5.20 billion. The entire dam was finished in less than forty months, with construction ending in July 2005. The dam is located on the edge of Bijapur and Bagalkot districts. Geographically, it is located in the Bijapur district, but large areas of Bagalkot district have also been submerged due to filling of the reservoir. The dam holds a gross water storage capacity of 123.08 TMC at 519 meters MSL.
The full reservoir level of Almatti dam was originally restricted to 519 meters MSL by the supreme court of India.The Krishna River conflict between Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, and Maharashtra was resolved by the Brijesh Kumar Tribunal and the dam was authorised to be raised to the height of 524 meters MSL with nearly 200 TMC gross storage capacity.

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Major & Minor Dams in Karnataka (above 20 m height)
Sl.No.
District
Dam Name
Completion Year
River
Nearest city
Basin
Height (m)
Length (m)
Purpose
1
Bijapur
2000
Krishna
Basavana Bagevadi
Krishna
52.24
1564.83
Hydroelectric,Irrigation
2
Gulbarga
1998
Amarja
Aland
Krishna
31.85
960
Irrigation
3
Shimoga
1964
Vrushbhavathi
Sagar
Krishna
20.77
881
Irrigation
4
Shimoga
1936
Kumudavathy
Shikarpur
Krishna
21.33
1600
Irrigation
5
Bellary
1988
Krishna /T.Bhadra
Sandur
Krishna
21.29
278
Irrigation
6
Ramanagara
2004
Arkavathy
Kanakapura
Cauvery
29.685
720
Irrigation
7
Dharwad
1991
Bedthi
Kalghatgi
West flowing rivers from Tapi to Tadri
21.43
773.31
Irrigation
8
Uttara Kannada
1974
Bachanki Nala
Mundgod
West flowing rivers from Tapi to Tadri
23.31
777.24
Irrigation
9
Bidar
1973
Local
Aurad
Godavari
22.39
389
Irrigation
10
Gulbarga
1988
Kal
Chincholi
Krishna
30.02
485
Irrigation
11
Belgaum
Bellary Nalla
Belgaum
Krishna
36.55
440.6
Irrigation
12
Gulbarga
2001
Bennithora
Chitapur
Krishna
31.39
2340
Irrigation
13
Chikmagalur
1965
Bhadra
Tarikere
Krishna
76.81
1708
Hydroelectric,Irrigation
14
Uttara Kannada
1979
Kali
Haliyal
West flowing rivers from Tapi to Tadri
30.45
1024.8
Hydroelectric
15
Tumkur
1892
Suvarnamuki SS VI
Chiknayakanhalli
Krishna
24
39.6
Irrigation
16
Ramanagara
1943
Vrishabhavathy
Ramanagaram
Cauvery
22.85
2286
Irrigation
17
Shimoga
1985
Chakra
Hosanagara
West flowing rivers from Tadri to Kanyakumari
84
570
Irrigation
18
Gulbarga
1973
Sarnala
Chincholi
Krishna
28.65
926.54
Irrigation
19
Chamarajanagar
1958
Chickkahole
Chamrajnagar
Cauvery
27.53
756
Irrigation
20
Uttara Kannada
1974
Bedthi
Mundgod
West flowing rivers from Tapi to Tadri
20.74
830.8
Irrigation
21
Ramanagara
1979
Arkavathy
Kanakapura
Cauvery
22.3
516
Irrigation
22
Kodagu
1985
Chiklihole
Somvarpet
Cauvery
25.3
464.8
Irrigation
23
Chikkaballapura
1987
North Pennar
Gauribidanur
Pennar
20.92
337
Irrigation
24
Uttara Kannada
1964
Dharma Nala
Mundgod
Krishna
23.25
1448.2
Irrigation
25
Uttara Kannada
1991
Tattihalla Nala
Haliyal
West flowing rivers from Tapi to Tadri
22.78
962.77
Irrigation
26
Bellary
1970
Krishna /T.Bhadra
Kudligi
Krishna
23.15
1104
Irrigation
27
Gulbarga
2002
Gandorinala
Gulbarga
Krishna
24.27
1813.5
Irrigation
28
Tumkur
1987
Suvarnamuki SS VI
Chiknayakanhalli
Krishna
22.25
1020
Irrigation
29
Uttara Kannada
2000
Sharavathi
Honavar
West flowing rivers from Tadri to Kanyakumari
62
421
Hydroelectric
30
Chamarajanagar
1980
Gundal
Kollegal
Cauvery
31.55
1219
Irrigation
31
Shimoga
1979
Haihole
Shimoga
Krishna
21
688
Irrigation
32
Kodagu
1982
Harangi
Somvarpet
Cauvery
53
845.8
Hydroelectric,Irrigation
33
Yadgir
1973
Hattikuni stream
Yadgir
Krishna
22.88
923
Irrigation
34
Hassan
1979
Hemavathy
Hassan
Cauvery
58.5
4692
Irrigation
35
Bangalore
1896
Arkavathy
Bangalore North
Cauvery
14.78
1560
Water Storage
36
Belgaum
1977
Ghataprabha
Hukeri
Krishna
62.48
10183
Hydroelectric,Irrigation
37
Shimoga
1988
Hulicalnala
Hosanagara
42
412
Hydroelectric
38
Dharwad
1984
Hulikere Nala
Dharwad
West flowing rivers from Tapi to Tadri
21.75
637
Irrigation
39
Bellary
1979
Tungabhadra
Sandur
Krishna
28.65
550
Irrigation
40
Chikmagalur
1968
Jambadahalla
Tarikere
Krishna
31.7
838.1
Irrigation
41
Belgaum
1961
Shiruguppi
Chikodi
Krishna
21.64
676.16
Water Storage
42
Mysore
1974
Kabini
Heggadadevankote
Cauvery
59.435
2732.4
Hydroelectric,Irrigation
43
Uttara Kannada
1997
Kalinadi
Karwar
West flowing rivers from Tapi to Tadri
40.5
2313
Hydroelectric
44
Raichur
1975
Kanakanala
Sindhnur
Krishna
20.12
975.65
Irrigation
45
Ramanagara
1946
Kanva
Channapatna
Cauvery
22.57
1422
Irrigation
46
Bidar
1989
Karanja
Bhalki
Godavari
28.1
3480
Irrigation
47
Uttara Kannada
2000
Kalinadi
Supa
West flowing rivers from Tapi to Tadri
52.1
534
Hydroelectric
48
Mandya
1931
Cauvery
Pandavapura
Cauvery
42.62
2621
Irrigation
49
Shimoga
1964
Sharavathy
Sagar
West flowing rivers from Tadri to Kanyakumari
61.26
2749.29
Hydroelectric
50
Gulbarga
2001
Mullamari
Chincholi
Krishna
24.46
1546
Irrigation
51
Haveri
1908
Kumadavati
Hirekerur
Krishna
32.87
950
Irrigation
52
Belgaum
1972
Malaprabha
Parasgad
Krishna
43.13
154.52
Hydroelectric,Irrigation
53
Ramanagara
1993
Arkavathy
Magadi
Cauvery
38.71
362.2
Irrigation
54
Chamarajanagar
1977
Cauvery
Gundlupet
Cauvery
25
661.4
Irrigation
55
Shimoga
1988
Varahi
Hosanagara
West flowing rivers from Tadri to Kanyakumari
59
580
Hydroelectric
56
Tumkur
1940
Shimsha Valley
Kunigal
Cauvery
22.4
1609
Irrigation
57
Belgaum
2005
Markandeya
Hukeri
Krishna
47
475
Irrigation
58
Raichur
2003
Maskinala
Lingsugur
Krishna
29.88
814
Irrigation
59
Davanagere
1928
Local Halla
Channagiri
Krishna
20.11
585
Irrigation
60
Bidar
1971
Local
Aurad
Godavari
22.03
487
Irrigation
61
Gadag
1994
Shirahatti Nala
Mundargi
Krishna
20.19
994
Irrigation
62
Kolar
1974
Naihole
Bangarapet
East flowing rivers between Pennar and Kanyakumari
22.7
197
Irrigation
63
Bijapur
1982
Krishna
Muddebihal
Krishna
29.72
10637.52
Hydroelectric,Irrigation
64
Bellary
1981
Narihalla
Sandur
Krishna
32.92
295
Irrigation
65
Dharwad
1955
Bedtinala
Kalghatgi
West flowing rivers from Tapi to Tadri
24.6
1158.25
Water Storage
66
Mysore
1959
Nugu
Heggadadevankote
Cauvery
43.58
637.65
Hydroelectric,Irrigation
67
Bangalore
1989
Arkavathy
Bangalore South
Cauvery
28.7
637
Irrigation
68
Belgaum
1962
Markandeya
Belgaum
Krishna
26.34
358.37
Water Storage
69
Bagalkot
1978
Rangasamudra
Badami
Krishna
23.8
317
Irrigation
70
Shimoga
1980
Savehaklu
Hosanagara
West flowing rivers from Tadri to Kanyakumari
53
633
Hydroelectric
71
Yadgir
1987
Soudagar Nala
Yadgir
Krishna
27.03
600
Irrigation
72
Uttara Kannada
1987
Kali Nadi
Supa
West flowing rivers from Tapi to Tadri
101
331.29
Hydroelectric
73
Chamarajanagar
1984
Chamrajnagar
Cauvery
25.9
1170.4
Irrigation
74
Shimoga
1964
Sharavathy
Sagar
West flowing rivers from Tadri to Kanyakumari
62.48
353.6
Hydroelectric
75
Mysore
1984
Taraka
Heggadadevankote
Cauvery
37.49
1272.5
Irrigation
76
Uttara Kannada
1979
Kali Nadi
Yellapur
West flowing rivers from Tapi to Tadri
44
1337.04
Hydroelectric
77
Bidar
1980
Local
Aurad
Godavari
23.36
780
Irrigation
78
Tumkur
1986
Jayamangali
Koratagere
Pennar
22
1017
Irrigation
79
Mandya
1000
Hebballa Valley
Pandavapura
Cauvery
24.384
118.8
Irrigation
80
Bangalore
1934
Arkavathy & Kumudavathy
Bangalore South
Cauvery
49.68
451.104
Water Storage
81
Koppal
1953
Tungabhadra
Koppal
Krishna
49.39
2443
Hydroelectric,Irrigation
82
Chamarajanagar
Uduthorehalla
Kollegal
Cauvery
40
1530
Irrigation
83
Bidar
1984
Mullamri
Basavakalyan
Krishna
28.4
810
Irrigation
84
Shimoga
2005
Tunga
Shimoga
Krishna
17.5
791.39
Hydroelectric,Irrigation,Water Storage
85
Chitradurga
1907
Vedavathy
Hosdurga
Krishna
43.28
405.4
Irrigation
86
Udupi
1989
Varahi
Kundapura
West flowing rivers from Tadri to Kanyakumari
39.6
244
Hydroelectric
87
Hassan
1984
Votehole
Belur
Cauvery
44.48
900
Irrigation
88
Hassan
2001
Yagachi
Belur
Cauvery
26.237
1280
Irrigation