Vishwanath Patankar Madhava RaoCIEKaisar-i-Hind (10 February 1850 – 1934) was an Indian administrator and statesman who served as the Dewan of Travancore from 1904 to 1906, then as the 17th Dewan of Mysore from 1906 to 1909, and that of Baroda from 1910 to 1913.
Madhava Rao entered the service of the Kingdom of Mysore in 1869 as a headmaster of the royal school. He was later appointed public prosecutor of Mysore and served in the Judicial and Revenue departments. He also served as Inspector General of Police and later Plague Commissioner, Mysore Kingdom, from 1898 to 1901. Later, he served as Revenue Commissioner from 1902 to 1904 before being appointed Dewan in 1906.
Dewan of Mysore
Rao served as the Dewan of Mysore from 30 June 1906 to 31 March 1909. In 1906, a bill was passed empowering members of the Mysore Legislative Assembly to pass laws. The new legislature was constituted on 6 March 1907. The Land Revenue Code was amended to make the Revenue Commissioner the chief revenue authority and was also given charge of the treasury. Department of Public Health was created and competitive exams for the Mysore Civil Services were revived. Taxes on arecanut were revoked.
Kindergarten schools were introduced in the kingdom and primary education was made free. A number of irrigation projects were undertaken. The Vani Vilas Dam was completed in 1906/1907 and the Cauvery Power Works at Belagola in 1907/1908. The government sanctioned a free grant of land to the Indian Institute of Science at Bangalore.
Electric lighting was introduced in the civil and military station of Bangalore city on 1 January 1908 and for all of Mysore city on 26 September 1908.[4]
^Eugene F. Irschick (1986). Tamil Revivalism in the 1930s. p. 271. V.P. Madhava Rao ( 1850-1934 ) a famous Maharashtrian Madhva Brahman, whose forebears settled in Tanjore and who was among other things successively Diwan of the princely states of Travancore, Mysore, and Baroda.