Hosahalli

Hosahali is one of twin-villages Mattur-Hosahali, on the banks of the Tunga River in Karnataka state, southern India. It lies in an agricultural region where the main crop is the Areca nut. It is known for Sanskrit, Veda, Gamaka (story-telling) and Sangeetha (Carnatic music). From above, the village appears as a "Paa Ni Pee Tha" (a seat with an extended hand). The village is situated a little over 5 km from Shimoga city and around 4 km from Gajanur Tunga Anicut (dam). Masti Venkatesha Iyengar, renowned writer in Kannada language, was born in Hosahalli.

Hosahalli
village
River Tunga during the monsoon
Country India
StateKarnataka
DistrictShimoga
Government
  TypePanchayat raj
  BodyGram panchayat
Languages
  OfficialKannada
Time zoneUTC+5:30 (IST)
ISO 3166 codeIN-KA
Vehicle registrationKA
Nearest cityShimoga
Lok Sabha constituencyShimoga
Websitekarnataka.gov.in

Temples

The village has several temples or religious sites.

  • Lord Channakeshava temple with an impressive Rajagopuram (royal temple tower) at its entrance.
  • Durgamaa temple at one end of the village.
  • Shri Rama mandiram is at the heart of the village where Bhajans (devotional singing) on Saturdays and festive days.
  • Mallikarjuna Swamy (Lord Shiva) temple on the bank of river Tunga
  • Varasiddhi Vinayaka Swamy (Lord Ganesha) temple
  • Mariyamma temple
  • Shastri temple

Institutions

Gayathri Veda Pathashaala is a residential vedic school which has a library of books about vedas and mythology. Students learn Krishna Yajurveda. Gamaka Kala Parishat (Academy for Gamaka art), Sankethi Sangeetha Sabha, and Geleyara Balaga are other institutions which occasionally conduct programmes in a village social building activity called Gamaka Bhavana. There is also a branch (shakha) of the volunteer organisation Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh in the village.


beep

gollark: If you *do* go around using a definition which admits stars and everything else, it's basically meaningless, but ends up bringing all the weird things English ties to "life" and "organisms" along with it anywya.
gollark: Which are mostly for some specific technical context and make sense there. Because it's a hard to define word.
gollark: The broader issue is that when people say stuff like that they generally mean to sneak in a bunch of connotations which are dragged along with "organism" or "life".
gollark: You could *maybe* stretch that to extend to *all* humans, but *also* probably-not-organism things like stars, which also reproduce (ish), process things into usable energy (ish), sort of respond to stimuli for very broad definitions of stimuli, maintain a balance between radiation pressure and gravity, and grow (ish).
gollark: Individual humans are "organisms" by any sensible definition, inasmuch as they... reproduce, think, maintain homeostasis, grow, respond to stimuli, process inputs into usable energy and whatever.
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