![]() | This redirect does not require a rating on Wikipedia's
content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | |||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Hi! Please add credible sources, either online or reference books, to support the facts added. Thank You. -- Altruism To talk 12:05, 12 June 2007 (UTC)
@ Callofduty259:, You are turning this page into hagiography, which is all that the Andhra historians do. If Kapaya Nayaka was such a great "patriot", as these sources claim, and threw off the "foreign yoke" by leading confederation of 75 chieftains and all that, he wouldn't have been finished off by another fellow chieftain prematurely. You can't keep pushing these birdy-eyed adulations when other neutral sources exist that provide critical analysis. And, by the way, Malik Maqbul whom Kapaya Nayaka deposed was a perfectly local Warangal man, not a "foreigner". -- Kautilya3 ( talk) 06:38, 7 June 2019 (UTC)
![]() | This redirect does not require a rating on Wikipedia's
content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | |||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Hi! Please add credible sources, either online or reference books, to support the facts added. Thank You. -- Altruism To talk 12:05, 12 June 2007 (UTC)
@ Callofduty259:, You are turning this page into hagiography, which is all that the Andhra historians do. If Kapaya Nayaka was such a great "patriot", as these sources claim, and threw off the "foreign yoke" by leading confederation of 75 chieftains and all that, he wouldn't have been finished off by another fellow chieftain prematurely. You can't keep pushing these birdy-eyed adulations when other neutral sources exist that provide critical analysis. And, by the way, Malik Maqbul whom Kapaya Nayaka deposed was a perfectly local Warangal man, not a "foreigner". -- Kautilya3 ( talk) 06:38, 7 June 2019 (UTC)