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Tinkle Double Digest No 64
A Tinkle Double Digest is two Tinkle Digests in one volume. These include the best stories of Tinkle over the years.
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Tinkle Digest No.280
pril is the month to let your hair down. Exams have ended and summer vacations are just around the corner. Say sayonara to school and turn your life upside down with Tinkle Digest’s Topsy-Turvy issue! The Tinkle world takes a spin for the better as the Defective Detectives are calm and cautious while Sam buzzes around impulsively on a sugar rush. Tantri the Mantri gets his plans crisscrossed and is stuck with caring for a cute and cuddly Baby Hooja, much to his annoyance. Plus! An easy do-it-yourself prank to play this April Fools’ Day! Plus! Jojo the Space Doughnut goes on an adventure to rescue a cronut! Plus! Samson challenges the mean-spirited school scholar to a Hi! School battle!
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Tinkle Digest No.288
Tinkle Digest No. 288 is committed to bringing children the funniest and the most thrilling stories. Filled with the most recognizable Indian comic characters from Suppandi, Shikari Shambu, and Kalia the Crow to the Defective Detectives, Tinkle Digest also features new work by some of India's most exciting writers and artists for children. And that's not all! Each issue comes with loads of knowledge pages, facts and value education. The perfect size to read anywhere, Tinkle Digest will never disappoint.
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Rana Kumbha
Victory for Mewari!' His father's last words seemed to spur the young ruler on to ever greater feats. His success on the battlefield raised Rajput pride as high as the magnificent tower at Chittor, which he completed in 1448. Tirelessly subduing mighty sultans as well as sly traitors, Rana Kumbha ensured that his name was inscribed as one of the land's most worthy sons.
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Roopmati..
The story of Roopmati, the princess of Dharampuri and Baz Bahadur, the Sultan of Mandu, is one of India's greatest love stories. From the day of their fateful meeting with the sultan, the princess loved no one else, sacrificing all just to be one with him. Defying every norm she married him. But their happiness was short lived. The Mughal Emperor Akbar wanted Mandu and commanded his general, Adham Khan to march on it.
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Raja Bhoja
Amidst the many wars he fought, Raja Bhoja, the ruler of Malwa, always found time to listen to poetry of the gifted. Ballala, a poet in his court, has immortalized his patron in his work Bhoja Prabandha which is a romantic tale, written in Sanskrit, partly in verse and partly in prose. Ballala was interested not so much in history as in heroics. In his attempt to magnify Bhoja as a patron of the arts and letters, Ballala has ignored historical facts. The poets, Kalidasa and Bana, who he said adorned Bhoja's court, actually lived much before Bhoja's times.
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Chennamma of Keladi
There was a great consternation in the court of Keladi, when the king married a commoner. But Chennamma, the merchant's daughter, proved to be a born queen. She became an expert rider and archer. She took great interest in the governing of the kingdom. When a scheming minister poisoned and killed the king, Chennamma was forced to take over as ruler. Before she could calm the troubled kingdom, Keladi came under attack from the powerful armies of Bijapur. Undaunted, Chennamma sold her jewelry to finance the battle. Then she marched out to meet the invaders, at the head of her army.
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Beni Madho and Pir Ali
It was a time of turbulence when resentment against British treachery and betrayal was simmering in the people of India. The Nawab of Avadh had been a staunch ally of the British, providing them with money, grain and cattle and yet, Avadh was annexed through the Doctrine of Lapse as were other states like Satara, Sambalpur, Nagpur and Jhansi. The discontent triggered off the first war of Indian Independence. Rana Beni Madho and Pir Ali were two heroes of that period who inspired many to stand up against injustice.