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The Granite Throne: Saga of the Cholas

Kanishpriyan
"welcome to the world of TGT..." Synopsis: The Granite Throne The Premise At the turn of the 10th century, the Chola Dynasty is a kingdom on the verge of either total collapse or unprecedented glory. Surrounded by the hostile Pandyas to the South, the fierce Cheras to the West, and the lingering threat of the Rashtrakutas to the North, the young Prince Arulmozhi Varman (the future Raja Raja Chola I) inherits a throne stabilized by his predecessors but hungry for a legacy that will never fade. The Conflict The story follows three primary threads that weave together to form the Chola Golden Age: The Path of Steel (Warfare): Arulmozhi must transform the Chola army from a traditional land force into a terrifying maritime power. The series details the brutal campaigns of Kandalur Salai, where he destroys the Chera fleet, and the daring naval invasion of Ila-mandalam (Sri Lanka). These aren't just wars of conquest; they are strategic necessities to control the Silk Road of the Sea. The Path of Stone (Architecture): Haunted by a dream of a monument that touches the sky, Arulmozhi commissions the Thanjai Periya Kovil. The synopsis follows the impossible engineering feats—moving 80-ton stones without modern machinery, managing thousands of sculptors, and the spiritual battle to build a "Mountain of the South" (Dakshina Meru) that defies gravity and time. The Path of Shadows (Politics): Behind every victory is the sharp mind of Kundavai, Arulmozhi’s sister, who manages the intricate web of spies, temple grants, and land reforms. Internal betrayals, the mystery of his brother Aditya Karikalan’s death, and the challenge of administrative brilliance form the backbone of the Chola court's drama. The Evolution The series is structured to show the evolution of a man into a legend. In Volume 1, we see a warrior-prince securing his borders. In Volume 2, we see a visionary King building a marvel that still stands 1,000 years later. In Volume 3, the torch passes to his son, Rajendra Chola I, who takes the Chola Tiger to the banks of the Ganges and across the oceans to Srivijaya (Southeast Asia). The Theme At its core, The Granite Throne is about the permanence of culture. It explores how a civilization uses its wealth not just for war, but to create art, music, and architecture that speaks to the heavens. It is a story of Tamil pride, demonstrating how a singular vision can unite a people to achieve the "impossible." Series Quick-Facts for Readers Protagonist: Arulmozhi Varman (Raja Raja I) Primary Setting: Thanjavur, South India (10th-11th Century) Major Landmarks: Thanjai Periya Kovil, Kandalur Salai, Anuradhapura, The Bay of Bengal. Tone: Epic, Intellectual, Action-Packed, and Culturally Rich.
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The Extra: Subject 082

Rio only wanted to see how the story ended. Instead, he woke up inside it. Not as the protagonist, not even as a supporting character—but as someone who barely existed in the narrative. An extra with no importance, no future, and no place in the story’s direction. At least, that’s how it was supposed to be. Now in the body of Rio Valen, a disgraced noble exiled from his own house, he finds himself in a region the original story barely touched—one driven as much by advanced technology as it is by arcane power. And buried beneath it, something far worse. The facility he wakes up in shouldn’t exist. The experiments conducted there shouldn’t have succeeded. And whatever was placed inside him was never meant to survive. As fragments of memory return—both his own and the life he inherited—Rio begins to understand the situation he’s in. The world still follows its original course. The key figures are still moving toward the same future. But his existence doesn’t fit anywhere within it. Even so, people begin to notice him. Not because of who he is—but because of something they can’t quite explain. A presence. A flaw. Or something far more dangerous. Some approach out of curiosity. Others, for reasons he doesn’t understand. And a few, simply because staying away isn’t an option. With no role to follow and no clear path ahead, Rio is left with a simple choice: Stay invisible and survive. Or step into a story that was never meant to include him. Because in a world that already has its main character— an extra that shouldn’t exist might be the only thing that can change it. **The cover used is temperoray, I hold no credits towards the art**
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